BY Brenden AckermanMarch 16, 2026
1 month ago
BY 
 | March 16, 2026
1 month ago

CBS settled Trump's lawsuit for over $30 million, and its own journalists are calling it a collapse

Scott Pelley, one of the longest-tenured correspondents at "60 Minutes," publicly torched the previous owners of CBS for settling President Trump's election interference lawsuit.

Speaking at the National Press Foundation Annual Journalism Awards Dinner last week, Pelley didn't mince words.

"Our previous owners at CBS faced political pressure and crumbled."

The remark, reported by The Guardian's Jeremy Barr, came as Pelley introduced former "60 Minutes" executive producer Bill Owens at the event. Paramount Global and CBS settled Trump's $20 billion lawsuit for a sum expected to exceed $30 million, including $16 million upfront for Trump's presidential library, Fox News reported.

The journalists at CBS are treating this like a tragedy. It's worth remembering why the lawsuit existed in the first place.

The edit that started it all

In the final stretch before the 2024 presidential election, CBS aired a "60 Minutes" interview with then-Vice President Kamala Harris. A preview clip on "Face the Nation" showed Harris delivering what conservatives mocked as a "word salad" answer to a question about Israel. When the full primetime special aired the next evening, that answer appeared to have been swapped with a different, cleaner response.

That's not a minor production choice. That's editorial intervention on behalf of a presidential candidate weeks before an election. Trump filed a $20 billion lawsuit accusing the network of election interference.

CBS never adequately explained the discrepancy. The network never released the full, unedited transcript. And when the legal pressure mounted, Paramount chose to settle rather than fight.

The martyrdom routine

Now CBS journalists are framing themselves as victims of corporate cowardice. Lesley Stahl reportedly said of former executive producer Bill Owens's resignation:

"We would have followed him off the cliff, but he urged us not to."

Owens himself resigned last April, telling colleagues in a memo:

"Over the past months, it has become clear that I would not be allowed to run the show as I have always run it, to make independent decisions based on what was right for 60 Minutes, right for the audience."

Notice the framing. The "independent decisions" Owens wants to protect are the same editorial decisions that produced the suspicious edit in the first place. The newsroom that swapped out a candidate's embarrassing answer for a better one now wants credit for editorial independence.

This is the contradiction the CBS journalists refuse to confront. They aren't defending journalistic integrity. They're defending their right to exercise editorial judgment without accountability, even when that judgment looks indistinguishable from partisan assistance.

Accountability isn't oppression

Pelley's language is revealing. He said CBS "crumbled" under "political pressure." But a lawsuit isn't political pressure. It's a legal claim, filed in court, subject to the same rules of evidence and procedure as any other dispute. Paramount's lawyers presumably assessed the merits, weighed the risks of discovery and trial, and decided settlement was the smarter path.

If CBS did nothing wrong, why not fight it? If the edit was a routine production decision, the unedited footage would prove it. The fact that Paramount chose to write a check rather than open its files tells you everything Pelley's speech didn't.

The media class wants to occupy two positions simultaneously. They want the power to shape how tens of millions of voters perceive a presidential candidate in the final days of a campaign. And they want immunity from consequences when someone calls them on it. You can have editorial authority or you can have unaccountability. You cannot have both and still call it journalism.

What the settlement really proved

CBS did not respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment. That silence tracks with the network's posture throughout this saga: speak loudly about principles at awards dinners, go quiet when pressed for specifics.

The settlement didn't silence CBS. It held CBS accountable. Those are different things, and the fact that veteran journalists can't tell the difference is exactly why trust in media sits where it does. Pelley called it crumbling. Millions of Americans would call it a rare moment of consequence.

Written by: Brenden Ackerman
Brendan is is a political writer reporting on Capitol Hill, social issues, and the intersection of politics and culture.

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