I must strongly disagree. Both the law and accepted convention takes the viewpoint that radio broadcasting is very valuable and so it gets protection and preference by law. It is the electronic gadget that is suffering the overload interference that must cope with the radio station, not the other way around.
It is safe to say that makers of consumer electronics equipment tend to design their devices for only so much protection from interference, enough to deal with the majority of circumstances. The OP is, unfortunately, not within that majority and now has to deal with this problem himself.
I mentioned the term "overload interference" because this is the most likely kind that the OP is suffering. The other kind might be spurious signals and perhaps this is what you are thinking of. A radio station has to meet rules about the amount of spurious signals they send out and these spurious signals might cause interference, but this is rarely the case. It is almost always overload interference that is causing the problem and the radio station is not responsible for that.