February 6, 2015
CONTACT:
Matthew
Berry (202) 418-2005
Email:Matthew.Berry@fcc.gov
STATEMENT OF
FCC COMMISSIONER AJIT PAI
ON PRESIDENT OBAMA’S PLAN TO REGULATE THE INTERNET
ON PRESIDENT OBAMA’S PLAN TO REGULATE THE INTERNET
Last night, Chairman Wheeler provided his fellow
Commissioners with President Obama’s 332-page plan to regulate the
Internet. I am disappointed that the
plan will not be released publicly. The
FCC should be as open and transparent as the Internet itself and post the
entire document on its website. Instead,
it looks like the FCC will have to pass the President’s plan before the
American people will be able to find out what’s really in it.
In the coming days, I look forward to continuing to
study the plan in detail. Based on my
initial examination, however, several points are apparent.
First,
President Obama’s plan marks a monumental shift toward government control of
the Internet. It gives the FCC the power to micromanage
virtually every aspect of how the Internet works. It’s an overreach that will let a Washington
bureaucracy, and not the American people, decide the future of the online
world. It’s no wonder that net
neutrality proponents are already bragging that it will turn the FCC into the
“Department of the Internet.” For that
reason, if you like dealing with the IRS, you are going to love the President’s
plan.
Second,
President Obama’s plan to regulate the Internet will increase consumers’
monthly broadband bills. The plan explicitly opens the door to billions
of dollars in new taxes on broadband.
Indeed, states have already begun discussions on how they will spend the
extra money. These new taxes will mean
higher prices for consumers and more hidden fees that they have to pay.
Third,
President Obama’s plan to regulate the Internet will mean slower broadband for
American consumers. The plan contains a host of new regulations
that will reduce investment in broadband networks. That means slower Internet speeds. It also means that many rural Americans will have
to wait longer for access to quality broadband.
Fourth,
President Obama’s plan to regulate the Internet will hurt competition and
innovation and move us toward a broadband monopoly. The
plan saddles small, independent businesses and entrepreneurs with heavy-handed
regulations that will push them out of the market. As a result, Americans will have fewer
broadband choices. This is no
accident. Title II was designed to
regulate a monopoly. If we impose that
model on a vibrant broadband marketplace, a highly regulated monopoly is what
we’ll get. We shouldn’t bring Ma Bell
back to life in this dynamic, digital age.
Fifth,
President Obama’s plan to regulate the Internet is an unlawful power grab. Courts have
twice thrown out the FCC’s attempts at Internet regulation. There’s no reason to think that the third
time will be the charm. Even a cursory
look at the plan reveals glaring legal flaws that are sure to mire the agency in
the muck of litigation for a long, long time.
And sixth, the American
people are being misled about what is in President Obama’s plan to regulate the
Internet. The rollout earlier in the
week was obviously intended to downplay the plan’s massive intrusion into the
Internet economy. Beginning next week, I
look forward to sharing with the public key aspects of what this plan will
actually do.
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