NPR is facing a storm of criticism for its decision to fire Juan Williams after his comments about Muslims on Fox News, with several prominent conservatives calling for NPR's government funding to be cut and refusing to appear on the network anymore.
Speaking on Fox News, both Bill O'Reilly and former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich called for Congress to investigate NPR and cut its government funding in the wake of Juan Williams' firing from the organization.
Williams, who said Monday that he gets "nervous" when he sees Muslims on planes, also spoke out Thursday morning, telling Fox News' "Happening Now" that nobody at NPR had spoken to him before making the choice to terminate his contract.
Speaking on the same program, O'Reilly told host Jon Scott that NPR had been trying to get rid of Williams for some time, due to his dual role as a contributor to Fox News.
He called NPR a "left-wing outfit that wants one opinion," and went on to say that, if NPR were an entirely private institution, he would have no issue with that. But, he said, since NPR gets government funding, he thought that money should be frozen.
"I'm calling immediately...for the immediate suspension of every taxpayer dollar going into the National Public Radio outfit," he told Scott. "We're gonna get legislation, we're gonna freeze it down...they don't get any more money."