Technology

A political temper tantrum at the FCC

The United States just went through a brutal election season. Politics is a nasty game. But now that the election is over, we must — in the immortal words of Abraham Lincoln — come together and embrace the better angels of our nature.

Unfortunately, Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Tom Wheeler did not get the memo.

{mosads}Two days after the election, Wheeler announced an aggressive agenda for the FCC’s Nov. 17 open meeting to push through some of his remaining high-priority items, including, among other things, mandating a massive rate reduction for Business Data Services without any economic justification for the naked benefit of select constituencies.

As to be expected after a major election where the other party takes control, Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.), the chairman of the powerful Senate Commerce Committee, shortly thereafter wrote a letter to the FCC behooving Wheeler to refrain from acting on “complex, partisan, or otherwise controversial items” during the Presidential transition.

Concurrently, House Energy and Commerce Chairman Fred Upton (R-Mich.) and the Subcommittee on Communications and Technology Chairman Greg Walden urged Wheeler to vote only on “matters that require action under the law” and also to avoid “complex and controversial items” during the transition.

Although Wheeler was under no obligation to comply with these congressional requests, he acquiesced and one day before the Open Meeting dropped every single item from the agenda (all of which by any reasonable definition could be considered “complex” and “controversial”).

Wheeler did not go quietly into the good night, however.

In his post-meeting press conference, the chairman launched into a rant, venting his frustration about the election’s outcome and the likely evisceration of his legacy as chairman: He blamed the Republicans on the Capitol Hill; he blamed the Republicans on the Commission; and, of course, he blamed the “largest incumbent firms” — many of which also are the largest spenders on broadband infrastructure in the world.

Yet while Wheeler was quick to wag his crooked finger at enemies both real and perceived, what Wheeler did not do is to take any responsibility for this toxic political stalemate upon his own shoulders. Clearly, Wheeler did not heed the old proverb that “so shall ye reap, so shall ye sow.”

Throughout his tenure as chairman, Wheeler has eschewed a somber and serious approach to telecom policy in favor of a political approach hatched in the salon of Saul Alinsky.

As I have documented in this space over the past four years, Wheeler’s shenanigans as chairman include, but were certainly not limited to:

Given the above, is there any wonder why the FCC under Wheeler’s tenure has come to be widely regarded as an “economics-free zone“?

Fortunately, Wheeler’s tenure as chairman is rapidly coming to a close. The big question is whether Wheeler’s chairmanship has done irreparable damage to the FCC’s institutional reputation.

To wit, given mounting frustration over the way Wheeler has run the FCC, the House Energy and Commerce Committee has voted on multiple bills that would have dramatically altered the way the Commission conducts its business, effectively imposing a special carve-out for the FCC from the well-established precepts of the Administrative Procedure Act.

But radical changes to the FCC’s rules of practice and procedure are the least of the commission’s problems going forward; given the shenanigans of the last four years, there are also growing calls for outright abolishment of the commission itself, including by two members of President-Elect Donald Trump’s transition team.

Whether or not we see some sort of Communications Act rewrite in the 115th Congress (comprehensive or incremental) remains to be seen. If we do, I hope that any such legislation will be seriously vetted, to the extent practicable, to avoid the proverbial law of intended consequences (a vetting far too often ignored in the sausage-making).

In the meantime, the incoming FCC chairman will need to operate under the constraints imposed by current statutory framework and restore the commission’s reputation as a truly “independent” agency committed to the dispassionate evaluation of the law, economics and facts before it.

For this reason, because the old adage of “policy is personnel” means more now than ever, we can only hope that both the Trump transition team and the Senate Commerce Committee view Wheeler’s chairmanship as a teachable moment: We do not need to replace one ideologue with another.

Telecom policy is a serious business and — as Wheeler’s tenure as chairman amply demonstrates — the public interest is ill-suited by partisan leadership. Instead, Trump should appoint somebody to lead the FCC who truly understands the economics of the business, respects the law and, most importantly, is committed to uphold every American’s basic right to due process.

If not, then just when you think the next chairman can’t be any worse than the last — they will be.

Lawrence J. Spiwak is the president of the Phoenix Center for Advanced Legal & Economic Public Policy Studies, a nonprofit 501(c)(3) research organization that studies broad public-policy issues related to governance, social and economic conditions, with a particular emphasis on the law and economics of the digital age.


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