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CBS News declined to renew contract for ‘60 Minutes’ correspondent who clashed with Bari Weiss

By Thomson Reuters May 27, 2026 | 1:38 PM

By Helen Coster

NEW YORK, May 27 (Reuters) – CBS News has not renewed the contract of Sharyn Alfonsi, the “60 Minutes” correspondent who clashed with Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss over a December report on a Salvadoran prison, according to ​an interview published on Wednesday in the New York Times.

CBS pulled the ‌segment – about a mega-prison where the U.S. has sent hundreds of mostly Venezuelan migrants without trial – hours before it was due to air in the U.S., sparking accusations from inside “60 Minutes” and on Capitol Hill that the network was engaging in self-censorship under political pressure.

Alfonsi told the New York ‌Times ​on Wednesday that she continues to be employed at ⁠CBS, albeit without a contract, ⁠and does not expect to return to “60 Minutes,” the storied news magazine show.

The network’s unwillingness to renew her contract “sends a chilling message to the entire newsroom,” Alfonsi told the Times. “I think it was a deliberate choice to penalize a ​journalist for refusing to sanitize accurate reporting.”

CBS is owned by Paramount Skydance. A network spokesperson did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment. Reuters was unable ⁠to reach Alfonsi for comment.

The mega-prison segment spread ⁠online in December, and then aired on CBS a month later.

Alfonsi ​criticized the network’s decision at the time, writing in a note to her team ​that CBS pulled the report for “political” reasons. In a December email to ‌staff defending the decision to hold the piece, Weiss wrote that winning back Americans’ trust “sometimes means holding a piece about an important subject to make sure it is comprehensive and fair.”

Skydance Media, run by David Ellison – the son of longtime supporter of ⁠President Donald Trump, Larry Ellison – acquired Paramount in August and installed Weiss in October as editor-in-chief. David Ellison helped secure regulatory approval for the deal, which created Paramount Skydance, with ⁠the promise that the ‌CBS network would reflect the “varied ideological perspectives” of American viewers.

Trump ⁠has repeatedly pressured the Federal Communications Commission to revoke station ​licenses of ‌major U.S. broadcasters NBC and ABC and charge them for ​using the ⁠public airwaves, as he criticized their news programming.

Prior to the deal, Paramount paid $16 million to settle a 2024 lawsuit Trump filed over a “60 Minutes” interview with former Vice President Kamala Harris, which he said gave a distorted view of his rival for the White House.

The FCC has said the settlement and regulatory review were unrelated.

(Reporting by Helen Coster; ​Editing by Nia Williams)