Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Campaign against FCC nominee takes ugly turn

Opponents organize a cynical political ploy to attack a defender of the public interest

- MICHAEL HILTZIK Hiltzik writes a blog on latimes.com. Follow him on Facebook or on Twitter @hiltzikm or email michael.hiltzik@latimes.com.

No one should be surprised that telecommun­ications companies revved up opposition to the 2021 nomination of Gigi Sohn to the Federal Communicat­ions Commission. After all, Sohn was known as an effective critic of the industry’s monopoly power and a defender of the public interest.

Nor was it surprising that the industry would attack Sohn with lies — after all, that’s what corporate lobbyists do for a living. So far, the industry has succeeded in tying up Sohn’s nomination for nearly two years. Thanks to Senate procedures, President Biden has had to submit her name three times, most recently in January, and she has received two hearings.

The holdup has prevented the FCC from addressing crucial issues because it’s locked in a 2-2 Democratic-Republican tie (with two Trump appointees); Sohn would give the body a 3-2 Democratic majority, enough to undo some of the anti-consumer steps undertaken under Trump’s chairman, Ajit Pai.

But in the last couple of weeks, the attack on Sohn, 61, who would be the first LGBTQ member of the FCC, has taken a grotesquel­y ugly turn. An obviously coordinate­d campaign fronted by such rightwing enterprise­s as Fox News, Breitbart and the Daily Mail has painted Sohn as a supporter of sex traffickin­g and an opponent of anti-sex traffickin­g initiative­s.

The core of this loathsome assault is that Sohn serves on the board of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. The EFF is a prominent nonprofit devoted to protecting user privacy and freedom of expression online.

Sohn joined the EFF board, which includes academics from UC Berkeley and Harvard, digital entreprene­urs such as Brewster Kahle, and experts in digital security and telecommun­ications law, in 2018.

Sohn’s associatio­n with EFF is what has put her in the crosshairs of the far right. Among the EFF’s targets, you see, is a pair of laws known as FOSTA/ SESTA, which were enacted in 2018 during a congressio­nal panic over online child sex traffickin­g.

FOSTA/SESTA — the acronyms stand for the Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Traffickin­g Act and the Stop Enabling Sex Trafficker­s Act — have proved to be largely ineffectiv­e for their stated purpose and rife with adverse side effects. More on that in a moment.

In their attacks, all published on Jan. 26 and 27, Fox, Breitbart and the Mail used almost identical headlines stating that Sohn “sits on [the] board” of EFF. All tried to link her with Danielle Blunt, a profession­al dominatrix who has been in the forefront of organized opposition to FOSTA/ SESTA and support for the rights of sex workers, and who received an award from EFF in 2020 for her efforts to fight online censorship.

What’s important here is that Sohn has never spoken about FOSTA/SESTA, and in any event, the FCC has absolutely nothing to do with the laws or their purpose. The commission doesn’t regulate online advertisin­g, and FOSTA/ SESTA doesn’t apply to telecommun­ications.

That exposes the effort to link Sohn to the targets of FOSTA/SESTA and paint her as an advocate of sex traffickin­g as nothing but a cynical political ploy, with an acrid undercurre­nt of homophobia.

What may be even more appalling is that, to date, Democrats haven’t yet called out the perpetrato­rs of this campaign.

“If they remain silent and complicit, this will become a go-to strategy to tank LGBTQ nominees to any public position,” says Evan Greer, director of the digital rights organizati­on Fight for the Future. “Democrats can’t claim to support LGBTQ rights while failing to stand up to blatant bigotry targeting one of their own nominees.”

The defense of Sohn’s nomination has fallen to her supporters outside the political mainstream. The EFF, in a Jan. 31 statement, decried what it labeled an “attempt to twist EFF’s long-held positions and commitment­s into dog whistles against Ms. Sohn.”

The attack on Sohn is one in a line of concerted attacks on Biden nominees feared by big business because of their likely effectiven­ess. It follows attacks on Lina Khan, who survived a business onslaught to become chair of the Federal Trade Commission, and on David Weil, a pro-labor attorney who was driven to withdraw from considerat­ion for a key Department of Labor post last year because of relentless business opposition.

As I reported last year, the telecommun­ications industry’s opposition to Sohn was based on her superb qualificat­ions and her record as a consumer advocate. She was a top aide to former FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler during the Obama administra­tion, when the agency took a distinctly pro-consumer stance.

Subsequent­ly she cofounded and led Public Knowledge, a telecommun­ications consumer advocacy organizati­on. She’s held fellowship­s at USC and an adjunct professors­hip at Georgetown and is widely respected all along the ideologica­l spectrum.

Among the supporters of Sohn’s nomination, in fact, have been such a pillar of right-wing telecommun­ications as Newsmax commentato­r Bradley Blakeman. He wrote in favor of Sohn’s confirmati­on in November 2021, noting that although he and Sohn hold diametrica­lly opposed political views, “I trust Gigi to get it right when it comes to protecting my freedom of speech.”

The latest campaign relies on a knee-jerk assumption that Congress’ effort to eradicate online sex traffickin­g is worthy of admiration and support, despite the shortcomin­gs of FOSTA/SESTA.

The laws were signed in 2018, shortly after the government shut down Backpage.com, a website used by sex workers to connect with clients but also, according to congressio­nal investigat­ors and law enforcemen­t, used by sex trafficker­s. The laws essentiall­y carved out sex-related advertisem­ents as exceptions to the safeguards of Section 230 of the Communicat­ions Decency Act, which renders online platforms immune from liability for user-posted content.

Blunt and others maintain that FOSTA/SESTA increased the dangers for sex workers by censoring online platforms they used to safely screen clients. The laws forced many back to making assignatio­ns on the street or through pimps.

Criticism of FOSTA/ SESTA has also come from the Government Accountabi­lity Office, surely among the most buttoned-down of government agencies, which reported in 2021 that “gathering tips and evidence to investigat­e and prosecute those who control or use online platforms has become more difficult” since the laws’ enactment, “due to the relocation of platforms overseas, platforms’ use of complex payment systems, and the increased use of social media platforms.”

The right-wing attack on Sohn leans heavily on the prurient elements of sex work generally and Blunt particular­ly. In nearly identical phrasing, Breitbart and the Daily Mail noted that Blunt “boasts about urinating on people’s faces.”

Leaving aside the question of what one might imagine would be among a dominatrix’s services, what in heaven’s name does this have to do with Gigi Sohn’s qualificat­ions to serve on the FCC? The answer is nothing.

What is the Democratic­controlled Senate waiting for? Sohn’s accession to the FCC has been held up long enough, and the longer it remains in suspension, the harder it will be for a Democratic majority on the commission to get cracking with the important work of upholding net neutrality on the web, keeping cable operators and other ISPs from taking advantage of consumers and narrowing content choice online.

Let’s start hearing Democrats calling this latest line of attack for what it is: a disgracefu­l, bigoted effort designed, at its core, to keep the big bucks flowing to big business as it tightens its grip on the digital world.

 ?? Pete Marovich New York Times ?? GIGI SOHN, President Biden’s nominee to lead the Federal Communicat­ions Commission, serves on the board of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. She was a top aide to the FCC chairman during the Obama administra­tion, when the agency took on a pro-consumer stance.
Pete Marovich New York Times GIGI SOHN, President Biden’s nominee to lead the Federal Communicat­ions Commission, serves on the board of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. She was a top aide to the FCC chairman during the Obama administra­tion, when the agency took on a pro-consumer stance.
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