Democrats’ net neutrality bill would fully restore Obama-era FCC rules

Democrats’ bill has good chance in House but faces tough odds in Senate.

WASHINGTON, DC - MAY 16: Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-NY), with House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) looking on, speaks at a press conference at the Capitol Building on May 16, 2018 in Washington, DC. The Senate voted and passed a Resolution of Disapproval to undo President Trump and FCC Chairman Ajit Pai's repeal of net neutrality rules.

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Democrats in Congress today introduced a net neutrality bill that would fully restore the Obama-era rules that were repealed by the FCC’s current Republican majority.

The “Save the Internet Act” is just three pages long. Instead of writing a new set of net neutrality rules, the bill would nullify FCC Chairman Ajit Pai’s December 2017 repeal of the FCC order passed in February 2015 and forbid the FCC from repealing the rules in the future.

“A full 86 percent of Americans opposed the Trump assault on net neutrality, including 82 percent of Republicans. That’s hopeful,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said at a press conference announcing the bill today. “With the Save the Internet Act, the Democrats are honoring the will of the people.”

“People understand that their ISPs have far too much control over their connection to the Internet and the services they care about,” Rep. Mike Doyle (D-Penn.) said. “Whether it’s slowing down Netflix, blocking access to innovative mobile services, or adopting anti-competitive zero-rating policies, the track record for ISPs on this issue is clear. And consumers and small businesses want the protections and certainty that strong net neutrality rules provide.”

Bill faces uphill battle in Senate

If the Democrats’ bill becomes law, home Internet and mobile broadband providers would once again face common-carrier regulation under Title II of the Communications Act, including prohibitions on blocking, throttling, and paid prioritization. The bill is therefore nearly identical to one that was approved by the US Senate in May 2018 but never voted upon by the House.

This time around, there’s a strong chance the bill could pass in the House but not the Senate. Democrats won a House majority in the November 2018 elections, so they can ensure that their net neutrality bill will receive a full vote in that chamber. But forcing a vote in the Senate will require more cooperation from Republicans than last year.

Last year’s legislation was a Congressional Review Act (CRA) resolution, a type of bill that gets some special parliamentary privileges. Despite being the minority party, Democrats were able to force a vote of the full Senate with a discharge petition and ultimately passed the bill with the help of three Republicans who voted for it.

But CRA resolutions that nullify an agency decision can only be passed in the same Congressional session in which the agency decision was made. Because a new Congressional session began in January, a CRA resolution nullifying Pai’s December 2017 repeal order is no longer an option. This time, Democrats had to file a regular bill that must go through the normal committee process, which in the Senate is still controlled by the Republican majority. Even getting a simple majority will be tougher than last year because Republicans gained two seats in the Senate and now hold a 53-47 advantage.

“Last spring, our colleagues in the United States Senate were given the choice to side with the average person rather than big special interests,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said today. “Unfortunately, all but three Senate Republicans voted on behalf of special interests, but Democrats voted on behalf of the American people… now we have a Democratic House and Republicans will have a second chance to right the Trump administration’s wrong.”

Pai and broadband industry fight bill

Republican leaders in Congress have consistently opposed the FCC’s 2015 net neutrality rules and supported Pai’s repeal of those rules. Republicans have pledged support for some type of net neutrality law, but not one as strong as the repealed FCC rules.

Today, Democrats accused Pai’s FCC and Congressional Republicans of ignoring Americans’ pleas to maintain net neutrality.

“Average folks understand that they do not want their costs of using the Internet to go up, and they do not want their freedom to be constricted,” Schumer said. “If they should decide to start up a business, they want to be on an equal playing field with the big boys. There are so many reasons we need net neutrality.”

While consumer advocates and providers of Web services welcomed the Democrats’ legislation, free-market think tanks and broadband industry lobbyists that generally oppose regulation of ISPs are already fighting against it.

Pai railed against the Democrats’ bill in a statement claiming that his net neutrality repeal should remain in place because it “has unleashed private investment, resulting in more fiber being deployed in 2018 than any year before and download speeds increasing by an astounding 36 percent.” In reality, FCC data on Internet speed only goes up to the end of 2017, so it doesn’t show any increase after the net neutrality repeal, and broadband deployment during Pai’s term has continued at about the same rate as in the Obama administration. The new fiber builds touted by Pai were also largely from projects that began during the Obama years, including an AT&T project that was mandated by the FCC in 2015.

Tell Congress to Stand Up for Real Net Neutrality Protections

When the FCC announced its intention to repeal the 2015 Open Internet Order, Americans spoke up. When the FCC ignored the fact that most Americans support net neutrality, Americans spoke up again, asking Congress to reverse the FCC’s decision.

The post Tell Congress to Stand Up for Real Net Neutrality Protections appeared first on Global Research.

Web Activists Keep Hope for Net Neutrality Alive as Open Internet Defenders Take the FCC to Court

Tomorrow, net neutrality will get it’s day in court. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit will hear oral arguments in the legal challenge to Ajit Pai’s reckless and resoundingly unpopular repeal of open Internet

The post Web Activists Keep Hope for Net Neutrality Alive as Open Internet Defenders Take the FCC to Court appeared first on Global Research.

Fight for Net Neutrality Continues as Congress Exposes Its Own Corruption

As the new Congress is sworn in, the clock has run out for sitting lawmakers to sign on to the Congressional Review Act (CRA) resolution to reverse the FCC’s resoundingly unpopular repeal of net neutrality. But the fight to restore

The post Fight for Net Neutrality Continues as Congress Exposes Its Own Corruption appeared first on Global Research.

The Happening w/ Dave Cruz and Special Guest Dec. 17/17

This Sunday Dave Cruz discusses various topics the first hour of the show: Disclosure finally coming out of the Pentagon?, The ‘Woke’ trend that is sweeping the mainstream. Net Neutrality and what it really means. EBE Ollie: the extraterestrial being entity that has been in conscious contact with Ilona and Ivana Podhrazska. Second hour special guest with Jeffrey Boyd Jr. and Farooq Ali. Both gentlemen have been guests on ‘Ground Zero’ w/ Clyde Lewis. Call into the show 1-415-891-9083 and tell us your thoughts.

Farooq Ali resident of NJ USA, cyber security professional for financial services by profession, environmental sciences by education, independent researcher into origin of mankind on planet earth and connecting anthropology, archaeology and linguistics and connecting dots across a wide range of historical evidence across many cultures.
Jeffrey Boyd Jr. is a Chemical Metallurgist, founder of the Independent Research Society, and as of this year a speaker at the Symposium (ASEAN). Believes he has answered THE mystery of Giza…how the pyramids were built…no theories…proof. It is time to put scientific method back Archaeology MN It is only when we stray from the path of those who came before us when we make real discovery . WE are answering these questions, Mysteries, with hard science. We can rewrite our future by rewriting out past. Jeff believes the answers in Egypt and Bosnia can change the world by giving us free energy. With the truth embargo establishment it is a race to discovery!

Senate in party-line vote rejects measure to overturn FCC net-neutrality rules

By Gautham Nagesh, Josiah Ryan and Brendan Sasso | The Hill

The Senate rejected a bid to overturn the Federal Communications Commission’s controversial net neutrality rules on Thursday in a party-line vote.

The measure passed the House in April, but failed in the Senate on a vote of 52 to 46. It needed 51 votes to pass and was not subject to a filibuster. The White House threatened earlier this week to veto the measure if it cleared the Senate, which came as no surprise since President Obama made net neutrality part of his campaign platform.

The rules approved by the Commission in December would prevent Internet service providers from discriminating between two similar websites or content providers.

“Without net neutrality, Americans’ access to the Internet would hinge not on our right to free speech but on the whims of the corporations that would control it,” said ACLU legislative counsel Christopher Calabrese.

To read more, visit:  http://thehill.com/blogs/hillicon-valley/technology/192899-senate-rejects-bid-to-overturn-net-neutrality-rules

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