CBS News finds itself embroiled in significant internal conflict and external scrutiny following its controversial decision to abruptly pull a prepared segment from its flagship ’60 Minutes’ program. The report was poised to investigate the Trump administration’s deportation of approximately 250 Venezuelan men to El Salvador’s Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT), where allegations of brutal and torturous conditions have been documented by multiple news organizations.
The last-minute cancellation, ordered by newly-appointed Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss, triggered immediate backlash from within the network. Correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi, who led the investigative team, circulated a private memo characterizing the move as ‘political’—a document that subsequently leaked to media outlets. Alfonsi revealed that despite formal requests to the White House, State Department, and Department of Homeland Security, government officials had uniformly declined interview requests for the segment.
In an official statement, CBS maintained the segment required ‘additional reporting,’ with Weiss emphasizing that holding stories for further context ‘happens every day in every newsroom.’ She affirmed the network’s intention to air ‘this important piece when it’s ready.’
This controversy emerges against the backdrop of CBS’s recent corporate transformation. The network’s parent company Paramount was acquired earlier this year in a deal personally guaranteed by Larry Ellison—tech billionaire and Trump ally—whose son David Ellison now leads the media conglomerate. The Trump administration approved this takeover after Paramount settled a $16 million lawsuit regarding a previous ’60 Minutes’ interview with Kamala Harris.
As part of regulatory approvals, David Ellison committed to installing an independent ombudsman and ensuring diverse viewpoints in programming. His October appointment of Weiss—a vocal critic of partisan media trends—signaled intended editorial shifts at CBS News. The current incident has drawn criticism from political figures including Democratic Senator Brian Schatz, who denounced the decision as ‘a terrible embarrassment’ that risks handing the administration a ‘kill switch’ for inconvenient reporting.
