Federal Communications Commission (FCC) top Republican Brendan Carr claimed the agency is taking a recent formal complaint seriously over CBS’ alleged “distortion” of its “60 Minutes” interview with Vice President Kamala Harris.

“My FCC colleague, Republican Commissioner [Nathan] Simington, has been very active on this. What he’s pointed out is the news distortion rule is a very, very narrow rule at the FCC. In almost every case, it doesn’t apply because it could get into sort of editorial decisions that are protected by the First Amendment. But what he said is that CBS should release the transcript,” Commissioner Carr said on “Mornings with Maria” Tuesday.

“And the reason why this complaint is not frivolous is because the rules say, for instance, the example we’ve given is, if you take an answer to a question that is a ‘yes’ and you replace the answer of ‘no’ from a different question… that’s something that would potentially fall within the news distortion rule,” he expanded.

Last Wednesday, the Center for American Rights, also known as the CAR, filed a formal complaint with the FCC accusing CBS News of “significant and intentional news distortion.”

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