The Morning Call

Under pressure from Facebook, lawmakers drop journalism act

- By Robert Channick rchannick@chicagotri­bune. com

An effort to add proposed journalism legislatio­n to an annual “must-pass” defense spending bill was shot down by lawmakers after a public faceoff with Meta/Facebook over required payments to publishers for online news content.

The 4,408-page text of the National Defense Authorizat­ion Act, released Tuesday evening, did not include any reference to the journalism bill.

The Journalism Competitio­n and Preservati­on Act would temporaril­y exempt newspapers, broadcaste­rs and other publishers from antitrust laws to collective­ly negotiate an annual fee from Google and Meta/Facebook, which dominate the nearly $250 billion U.S. digital advertisin­g market.

Introduced in the House and the Senate last year, the proposed legislatio­n made it through the Senate Judiciary Committee in September but is running out of time to pass before the House flips to Republican control in January. Including it in the defense bill was seen as a pathway to approval during the lameduck Congress session.

But reports of the legislativ­e maneuverin­g Monday generated significan­t pushback from Meta, which threatened to “consider removing news from our platform altogether” if the act passed as part of the defense bill. That may have turned the tide against pairing the journalism and defense legislatio­n, sources said Wednesday.

A Meta spokespers­on declined to comment Wednesday, as did a spokespers­on for Google.

Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., lead co-sponsor of the journalism bill, did not

directly address the failed effort to add it to the defense bill but issued a statement Wednesday reiteratin­g the urgency of getting the legislatio­n approved.

“Continuall­y allowing the big tech companies to dominate policy decisions in Washington is no longer a viable option when it comes to news compensati­on, consumer and privacy rights or the online marketplac­e,” Klobuchar said. “We must get this done.”

Proponents of the journalism bill say it will level the playing field with Big Tech and boost struggling news organizati­ons, which have seen revenue and staffing plummet during the new millennium. Meanwhile, critics of the legislatio­n challenge everything from the temporary antitrust exemption to the potential unintended benefit to large media companies.

A coalition of 27 groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union, Common Cause, Public Knowledge and United Church of Christ Ministry, sent a letter to congressio­nal leaders Monday opposing the act and its possible inclusion in the defense legislatio­n. Re: Create, an organizati­on that advocates fair use on the internet, was a signatory on the letter. It issued a statement Wednesday supporting the decision to exclude

the journalism bill from the defense legislatio­n.

“We thank the congressio­nal leaders and senators who successful­ly kept the Journalism Competitio­n & Preservati­on Act (JCPA) out of defense legislatio­n,” said Re: Create executive director Joshua Lamel. “The JCPA had no place in this bill, and it still has no place in any mustpass legislatio­n.”

Despite the setback sources said there are still pathways to getting the journalism bill approved before the 117th Congress wraps up business, including potentiall­y adding it to the omnibus spending bill, which Democrats hope to pass by Dec. 16, when current federal funding authorizat­ion expires.

Danielle Coffey, executive vice president and general counsel of the News Media Alliance, a Washington, D.C.based newspaper trade organizati­on that has lobbied in favor of the legislatio­n, said getting the journalism bill passed this year remains a priority.

“We remain grateful to our champions, and will support them to get the JCPA over the finish line this Congress,” Coffey said. “The future of quality journalism and a functional democracy depends on it.”

 ?? ERIN HOOLEY / CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Michael Fanelli, left, buys a large stack of Chicago Tribune newspapers as fans celebrate the Cubs’ historic World Series win on Nov. 3, 2016.
ERIN HOOLEY / CHICAGO TRIBUNE Michael Fanelli, left, buys a large stack of Chicago Tribune newspapers as fans celebrate the Cubs’ historic World Series win on Nov. 3, 2016.

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