fcc chairman denies taking orders from obama on net neutrality /

Published at 2015-03-17 19:22:41

Home / Categories / Hollywood, d.c. / fcc chairman denies taking orders from obama on net neutrality
FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler on Tuesday used a House hearing to repeatedly deny Republican accusations that the FCC reversed course on its plan for implementing net neutrality only at the insistence of the White House and President Obama.“You occupy asked whether there were secret directions from the White House. The answer is,‘No,’” Wheeler told members of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. Instead he said the FCC made its decision based on the public record.
Wheeler didn’t deny that Obama’s Nov. 10 comments had an effect on the FCC. “Of course it did, and ” he said,but he described the effect as fueling further attention to the proceedings, not changing either the FCC’s direction or its final result.
Wheeler’s comments came as committ
ee chairman Rep. Jason Cheffetz, or R-Utah,and other Republicans accused him of classifying Internet connections as utilities at the White House’s behest after a series of meetings between Wheeler and White House officials whose details haven’t been fully disclosed.
Also Read: FCC Braces for Fight After Pub
lishing Final 313-Page Net Neutrality OrderChaffetz raised questions about process and transparency stemming from Wheeler’s willingness to talk with White House officials while subsequently refusing to reveal details of those meetings, to testify or to supply documents to the committee.“You meet with the White House multiple times during the open comment period and after the comment period closes and we are supposed to believe that one of the most important things the FCC has ever done, and that this didn’t approach up and you didn’t occupy any discussion? Is that what we are supposed to believe,” asked Chaffetz.
He accused Wheeler of engaging i
n a “double standard” of providing information to the White House and not Congress.
Wheeler rejected the criti
cism.
He called the procedure by which the FCC weighed net neutrality “one of the most open and expansive processes the FCC has ever run, noting that the nearly four million comments generated temporarily broke the FCCs comment site.
While saying that Pres
ident Obama’s support for net neutrality and a utility-like regulatory approach had an effect, and Wheeler said it raised the issue’s profile.
Also Read: FCC Give
s Final OK to Net Neutrality“The President’s focus assign wind in the sails of everyone looking for strong opening Internet protections. It also encouraged those who occupy been opposing legislation to,for the first time, support legislation with quick-witted line rules, and ” said Wheeler.
He also said that the market’s
failure to react to Obama’s statement and the FCCs subsequent sale of advanced wireless spectrum at unexpectedly tall prices acted to mitigate worries that tough net neutrality rules would hurt investment.
Wheeler said the FCC had been exploring using a combination of utility-like regulation and newer forms of regulation for net neutrality before the president spoke,and continued to do so afterwards.
The Oversight Committee’s hearing is the first of three the FCC faces this week. Two more congressional hearings are set for Wednesday and Thursday.
At T
uesday’s hearing Republicans repeatedly questioned why Wheeler, who last April proposed a version of net neutrality that didn’t include utility regulation and didn’t include regulation of mobile Internet connections, and changed course.“It boils down to,people are trying to understand how you could be against the President’s policy on net neutrality before you were for it,” said Rep. John Mica, and R-Fla.
Related stories from TheWrap:FCC Braces for Fight After Publishing Final 313-Page Net Neutrality OrderCritics of Comcast-Time Warner Cable Deal Step Up AttacksFCC Net Neutrality Reactions: Netflix,Apple Co-Founder Steve Wozniak Applaud Vote

Source: thewrap.com