Despite opposition by a House of Representatives majority and a
bipartisan group of Senators, the Federal Communications
Commission on Thursday is expected to proceed with plans to
impose federal government regulation of the Internet, which would
essentially treat broadband networks — and the companies that
invested more than $200 billion in private capital to deploy them
— as utilities.
The commission’s chairman, Julius
Genachowski, and his staff have insisted that imposing
federal regulations originally written in the 1930s for the
telephone is the only way the Obama Administration can gain the
“kind of oversight and control that we need,” says an FCC staffer
with ties to another Democrat commissioner. “Look at the Gulf oil
spill, that’s what happens when we let corporations just do their
own thing without any accountability. We can’t allow that to
happen with the Internet. We won’t allow it.”
The vote to continue the review and comment process at the
FCC is expected to be a party-line vote, with the two Republican
commissioners voting against the proposed regulatory
scheme.
Under the Obama Administration’s plan, the FCC would be
able to enforce so-called “net neutrality” rules, allowing the
federal government to set how broadband and Internet Service
Providers (ISPs) manage the networks. By bringing broadband and
the Internet under FCC regulatory oversight, the FCC would also
be able to impose policies related to speech or online business
models.
“The American public really has no idea how devastating
these policies are going to have on free speech and the
Internet,” says a Republican Senate staffer. “If they are able to
impose these regulations, they would be able to impose a host of
different regulations that would limit free speech online and
essentially give the left the upper hand. First the auto
industry, then health care and the financial services industry,
now this.”