Los Angeles Times

Senator blasts Obama role in Internet ruling

President pressured the FCC over net neutrality regulation­s, GOP lawmaker says.

- By Ji m Puzzangher­a jim. puzzangher­a @ latimes. com

WASHINGTON — President Obama “unduly inf luenced” federal regulators to adopt tough net neutrality regulation­s for online traffic last year, according to an investigat­ion by a Republican senator.

Tom Wheeler, chairman of the Federal Communicat­ions Commission, and his staff were finishing work on a less heavy- handed approach in November 2014 when Obama publicly called for the agency to take a more aggressive and controvers­ial direction, said a report released Tuesday from Sen. Ron Johnson ( R- Wis.), chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee.

Obama urged the independen­t FCC to put broadband providers in the same legal category as more highly regulated convention­al telephone companies.

Public interest groups and many top Democrats were urging such a move, which was strongly opposed by Internet service providers and Republican­s.

After Obama’s statement, an internal email from FCC staffer Paula Blizzard to other agency employees said “not sure how this will affect the current draft and schedule — but I suspect substantia­lly.”

Plans to f inish work on the rules were delayed, and several weeks later, Wheeler released a proposal that mirrored Obama’s sugges- tions, the report said.

“This investigat­ion has convinced me that the White House overrode the FCC’s decision- making apparatus,” Johnson said.

“It is concerning that an independen­t agency like the FCC could be so unduly inf luenced by the White House, particular­ly on an issue that touches the lives of so many Americans and has such a significan­t impact on a critical sector of the United States economy,” he said.

Obama is allowed to publicly express his views to an independen­t agency but is not supposed to direct its actions.

Wheeler has said there were “no secret instructio­ns” from the White House and that his views on net neutrality regulation­s evolved from his original proposal in early 2014.

Responding to the Senate report, FCC spokeswoma­n Kim Hart said the agency “ran a transparen­t and robust rule- making process.”

“It’s no secret that 4 million Americans, including the president, urged the FCC to protect a free and open Internet,” she said, referring to a f lood of public comments during the agency’s rule- making process.

Obama appointed Wheeler, a Democrat, as FCC chairman. The agency’s Democratic majority pushed through the net neutrality regulation­s by a 3- 2 vote in February 2015.

The rules prohibit Internet service providers from discrimina­ting against legal content f lowing through their wired or wireless networks, such as by charging websites for faster delivery of video and other data to consumers.

To enforce those rules, the FCC reclassifi­ed broadband as a more highly regulated telecommun­ications service under Title 2 of the Telecommun­ications Act.

Internet service providers opposed the reclassifi­cation and have a suit pending in federal court. Republican­s on the FCC and in Congress criticized the agency’s action as unnecessar­y and warned that heavy- handed regulation­s could stif le investment in expanding broadband networks.

Congressio­nal Republican­s have been pushing legislatio­n to reverse the FCC’s net neutrality rules.

 ?? Mark Wilson Getty I mages ?? TOM WHEELER, chairman of the Federal Communicat­ions Commission, listens to testimony before a vote on net neutrality regulation­s last year.
Mark Wilson Getty I mages TOM WHEELER, chairman of the Federal Communicat­ions Commission, listens to testimony before a vote on net neutrality regulation­s last year.

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