Press Release: Thune Holds Inaugural Hearing as Chairman of Commerce Committee

Thune Holds Inaugural Hearing as Chairman of Commerce Committee

Regulating the Internet like a public utility monopoly will harm its entrepreneurial nature, chill investment, and lead to prolonged litigation. I believe the most enduring way to protect both the Internet and individual Internet users is through legislation that establishes clear rules of the digital road as well as clear limits on the FCC’s regulatory authority.”

WASHINGTON, D.C.—U.S. Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.), chairman of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, yesterday held his inaugural hearing as chairman entitled, “Protecting the Internet and Consumers through Congressional Action.” The hearing focused on insights into government regulation of the Internet and fears that the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is about to chart a course that will lead to overregulation that harms investment and job creation in the digital economy.

Last week, Thune and Representative Fred Upton (R-Mich.), Chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, released a discussion draft on principles for bipartisan legislation to provide clear rules of the road for open and unfettered access to the Internet.

Thune also invited Tom Simmons, Senior Vice President of Public Policy at Midcontinent Communications (Midco), to testify before the hearing. Tom spoke to his first-hand knowledge of the current light touch regulatory approach that has sparked innovation and driven success at Midco. Video of Mr. Simmon’s statement is available here, and his written testimony is attached.

Video of Thune’s opening statement is here and text is below:

“Today we convene the committee’s first hearing of the 114th Congress to consider an issue that has divided policymakers for more than a decade – how best to protect the open Internet. The Federal Communications Commission believes it already has the answer – impose public utility regulations on the Internet. But there is well-founded fear that regulating the Internet like a public utility monopoly will harm its entrepreneurial nature, chill investment, and lead to prolonged litigation.

“Instead of using outdated regulations, I believe the most enduring way to protect both the Internet and individual Internet users is through legislation that establishes clear rules of the digital road as well as clear limits on the FCC’s regulatory authority. Certainty about how consumers will be protected and certainty about the government’s role in the online world is critical to preserve the Internet as an engine for innovation, creativity, economic growth, and free expression.

“I want us to pass legislation providing certainty that users will have unfettered access to the entire Internet. I want us to pass legislation that provides certainty for creators at the edge of the Internet, so that they can continue to reach users across the Internet without interference. I want us to pass legislation that provides certainty for Internet service providers about precisely what rules they will be required to follow. I want us to pass legislation that provides certainty for the FCC, so that it can enforce legally-sound open Internet rules that survive beyond the current administration. The entire Internet needs this kind of statutory certainty, and only Congress can provide it.

“Last week, I put forward a set of eleven principles that I believe can be the framework for a bipartisan consensus.

“Prohibit blocking
“Prohibit throttling
“Prohibit paid prioritization
“Require transparency
“Apply rules to both wireline and wireless
“Allow for reasonable network management
“Allow for specialized services
“Protect consumer choice
“Classify broadband Internet access as an information service under the Communications Act
“Clarify that Section 706 of the Telecommunications Act may not be used as a grant of regulatory authority
“Direct the FCC to enforce and abide by these principles

“The discussion draft that Chairman Upton and I released is our attempt to turn these principles into statutory text. The details matter greatly in this debate, and we felt there could be no progress toward a solution until legislators started discussing those details. I do not expect our draft to be a final product, but I also believe that it is not a partisan starting point to the conversation. We have put forth a good faith proposal to find common ground between the parties. We hope today’s hearings will facilitate a serious conversation around a long term solution.

“I am willing to discuss how the eleven principles will be implemented, and I am eager to get to work with my colleagues, many of whom I have already spoken with. But I also want to be clear that I will not compromise these principles, particularly if doing so would leave the FCC’s authority unbounded or would leave open the possibility for harmful regulatory burdens being leveled on the Internet.

“Chairman Upton, Chairman Walden, and I have been working with our colleagues on the Commerce Committees and across the aisle since late last year to find a lasting resolution that protects the open Internet. My colleague, the new ranking member of this committee, Senator Bill Nelson of Florida, has been serious and substantive in discussions with me. I appreciate his efforts, and they underscore that there is a bipartisan interest in finding a legislative solution.

“In the absence of clear legislative guidance, the FCC has floundered for more than a decade to forge its own regulatory powers from legal authorities crafted prior to the emergence of the Internet as the most consequential communications platform of our lifetime. We have now reached an unfortunate point where both the president and the chairman of the FCC feel compelled to move forward using a tool box built 80 years ago to regulate a literal monopoly. And they do so without any apparent interest in working with Congress to solve the FCC’s legal dilemma.

“Even if the executive branch seems willing to go alone down a politically toxic and legally uncertain path, I sincerely hope that a willingness to collaborate develops within the legislative branch. After a decade of failure and wasted taxpayer resources, we should not continue to leave this issue to a five-member regulatory agency. Congress needs to reassert its responsibility to make policy, and let the FCC do what it does best – enforce clear statutory rules. I want to work together with my colleagues to finally settle the question of the FCC’s authority over retail Internet service. If Chairman Wheeler moves ahead as planned, however, the only certainty is that the FCC will again find itself tangled up in court for years to come.

“Before I finish my remarks, I want to put forward a challenge to the members of this committee. Let’s find common ground and forge a permanent solution. I have offered the president an opportunity to engage, I have spoken with Chairman Wheeler on numerous occasions, and I will engage any senator who wants to find a workable legislative solution. Having the FCC regulate the Internet as a public utility while Congress sits idly on the sideline is an outcome that will prove to be short-sighted. Let’s find a consensus solution that none of us have to call a ‘compromise.’

“I look forward to hearing from our diverse panel of experts, and also to working with my colleagues in the coming days and weeks.”

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14 thoughts on “Press Release: Thune Holds Inaugural Hearing as Chairman of Commerce Committee”

  1. On the face of it, one might think that Thune is trying to do the right thing here. But the dark underbelly of his attempt here is that given Thune’s history (and that of his Republican colleagues), he is striving for more corporatization – now of the Internet.

    I’ll wait for the experts to weigh in on the specifics. That analysis should be out soon. In the meantime, I will continue my mistrust of Thune and the rest of the bought-and-paid-for politicians in Washington.

    Thank goodness President Obama said he was going to protect Internet neutrality. Hard to say what Hillary will do in 2017.

    1. Why do people like you always think government can do it better. They usually just put a massive tax on whatever it is then give the bottom wage earners it all for free this just using a in-direct income redistribution model. I’m waiting for milk to be based on ability to pay and one person will get $5 to drink their milk and I’ll have to provide a Income tax statement and pay $20. That’s your perfect world, right?

      1. Let me condense these thought to bumper sticker logic for you.

        1. Although Thune is trying to act like he is doing the right thing, many people think he is doing a back-door deal with the communications companies to put more profits in their pockets and advance the Republican corporatism agenda. At your expense.

        2. I am glad that President Obama said he would protect net neutrality so Thune can’t advance the Republican corporatism agenda.

        3. I don’t trust these bought-and-paid-for politicians.

        4. In case you didn’t notice, Thune IS part of the government.

        5. I think you posted this comment on the wrong thread. It doesn’t have anything to do with my post.

        6. Hillary will probably be easier to work with in 2017.

        1. Bumper sticker logic, I love it! Sadly, Ymous isn’t smart enough to understand that. Mr. Insurnace seller believes he must contradict every statement – even though he never makes sense – that goes against Republicanism.

  2. i imagine in 2017 hillary will renew her aarp card and plant a garden or some other retired-person thing

    1. interesting fact – if she runs, hillary will be the same age that the ancient decrepit ronald reagan was when he ran in 1980. if anything the bias against females in the national electorate hasn’t improved much and the bias against the elderly has gotten worse.

        1. unfortunately for hillary, the party that tends to annoint a candidate who has ‘earned’ the right to run, is the republican party (dole, mccain, etc). hillary is less able in 2016 to fend off a hungry dark horse candidate than she was in 2008 when obama defeated her. and warren has some of the same baggage plus far less name recognition. so it’ll be interesting to see who suddenly rises to run like her husband rose up in 1992.

          1. the last democrat to get the nomination by precrushing everyone in advance was albert r. gore.

        2. i don’t dislike hillary, but i know you’re just using her name on this blog to make people froth and foam with rage. admit it.

          1. No. If I wanted the natives in here to rage, I would just type “President Obama” over and over. I’m actually predicting a Hillary Clinton win in the 2016 Presidential election. She’ll win by a larger margin than Obama dispatched Romney in 2012, too.

            It’s simply demographics at work here. The Republican party has decided to not take the steps necessary to understand and adjust to that reality. Oh well…

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