A year and a half after the United States curtailed its government funding for independent media, support has fallen across the board — and the gap left behind is being occupied by actors aligned with authoritarian regimes. That is the central finding of The Authoritarian Utopia: The impact of funding cuts on independent media, a report published on 24 June 2026 by Free Press Unlimited, a Netherlands-based organisation and a partner of the National Union of Journalists of Ukraine.
The authors warn that the consequences reach well beyond the newsrooms directly affected, with implications for the security and geopolitical standing of Europe itself.
A survey across seven regions
The report is built on a survey of the organisationʼs media partners which records how the cuts were experienced inside the outlets themselves. Fifty-seven partners responded, drawn from Central Asia, Eastern Europe, Latin America, the Middle East and North Africa, South and Southeast Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa and Western Europe. They were asked which kinds of journalism they could no longer sustain, and which new actors had stepped forward to offer money in place of the departing Western donors.
The decline, the report stresses, is not confined to Washington. Funding has also fallen from Sweden, the Netherlands, Germany and France – a simultaneous withdrawal that left outlets with little room to absorb the shock.
Survival under threat
Two-thirds of the surveyed partners said the impact was either significant or a direct threat to their survival. More than a quarter reported that over half of their annual budget had been cut. Eighty percent had to reduce staff and salaries.
The human cost is described plainly. Mass layoffs have stripped newsrooms of qualified experts and narrowed the diversity of skills within teams. Journalists have left the profession altogether under the weight of salary reductions and hiring freezes, while those who remain face heavier workloads and growing burnout. The forms of journalism that suffer most are the resource-intensive ones: investigative reporting, local monitoring of governance, and thematic coverage of environmental justice, politics, minorities, and gender and LGBTQ+ issues.
Community media have been hit disproportionately, especially outlets serving rural areas and vulnerable populations. Competition over a shrinking pool of funding, the report notes, has pushed organisations to align more closely with donor priorities, sometimes at the expense of their independence or their local focus.
Impunity rises as documentation falls
With fewer resources, partners are less able to document abuses which, the report observes, favours the impunity of repressive structures and reduces the international pressure that documentation can generate. Fact-checking platforms can no longer operate at scale after laying off staff. Several partners reported a rise in harmful and misleading content, including the use of deepfake technologies and the mass sharing of fabricated news, which draws significant public engagement precisely because credible sources capable of rapid verification have been thinned out.
“Overall, these shifts contribute to a more fragile information ecosystem, where accountability is weakened, public trust declines, and space for independent, critical journalism becomes increasingly restricted,” one of the organisationʼs Syrian partners is quoted as saying.
Where independent media decline, authoritarian interests move in
The reportʼs most pointed conclusion is political. Across continents, partners describe the same dynamic: as independent outlets weaken, donors aligned with authoritarian agendas establish their own channels and promote narratives favourable to the regimes they serve. In Pakistan, partners report that Chinaʼs ability and willingness to export its governance model have grown.
A partner in Sudan described the ambiguity of the new funding landscape: “Following funding cuts from the USA and European donors, some alternative donors have stepped in, but their impact has been mixed […]. Donors aligned with authoritarian interests have sought to establish their own information channels, promoting narratives favourable to the regime.”
The result, the authors argue, is a self-reinforcing erosion. Silencing the media gives authoritarian elites greater scope to dismantle other institutions, and the loss of reliable information as a democratic counterweight leaves citizens more exposed to state propaganda and censorship. By this account, cuts made by Western governments have indirectly widened the opportunities available to autocratic forces worldwide.
A strategic question for Europe
The report frames its recommendations as a matter of self-interest. Support for independent media, the authors contend, should be understood as strategic infrastructure (as essential to democratic resilience as election support, rule-of-law programming, anti-corruption work or cyber defence). For Europe, they conclude, cutting this support would cost far more than maintaining it – the real risk lies in stepping back, not in paying the bill.
NUJU Information Service

THE NATIONAL UNION OF
JOURNALISTS OF UKRAINE
















Discussion about this post