NEW YORK - With its Sunday morning political talk show "Face the Nation" doing well in the ratings entering an election year, anchor Bob Schieffer said Sunday the show will match its rivals by expanding to an hour in April.
Both "Meet the Press" on NBC and "This Week" on ABC already air for an hour each week, but Schieffer's show lasts 30 minutes.
"You made it possible," Schieffer told viewers at the end of Sunday's show. "We don't plan to change a thing, no bells and whistles. We'll just keep sitting the key newsmakers down, turning on the lights and asking them questions and then we'll bring in the experts from in and outside CBS News for analysis."
Schieffer spent many years in third place in the ratings. But personnel changes have hurt his competitors: "Meet the Press" is no longer dominant with David Gregory as it was with the late Tim Russert, and Christiane Amanpour replaced George Stephanopoulos on "This Week."
"Meet the Press" still leads this season among all viewers, but in the key news demo of viewers aged 25-to-54, "Face the Nation" is ahead. The Dec. 4 episode of the broadcast had 14 percent more viewers than the same week a year earlier.
"Face the Nation" also has been helped by the strength of CBS' "Sunday Morning" broadcast, which managers have shored up recently by extending host Charles Osgood's contract and adding Mo Rocca as a correspondent.
Schieffer didn't mention it, but the expansion isn't permanent — at least not yet.
CBS News President David Rhodes said the expansion will be for 20 weeks, through the political conventions, and then will be reevaluated.