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| REWRITING THE RULES | |
September 16, 2003 |
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Terence Smith looks at the various legislative methods Congress is pursuing to undo all or elements of the new FCC rules, and considers the Senate-approved resolution's prospects in the House and the White House. The NewsHour Media Unit is funded by a grant from the Pew Charitable Trusts |
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TERENCE SMITH: On June 2, the Federal Communications Commission, in a controversial and bitterly partisan decision, moved to loosen rules governing media ownership. FCC CHAIRMAN MICHAEL POWELL: Those commissioners voting in favor of the item signify by saying aye. FCC COMMISSIONER: Aye.
But the shouting -- and letter-writing, and e-mailing -- from citizens and a broad array of public interest groups spanning the political spectrum have helped turn the tide against the FCC decision, in the process making a seemingly obscure regulatory issue into a political hot potato. |
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| Legislative roadblocks to the new media rules | ||||||||||||||||||||
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TERENCE SMITH: A series of legislative and legal roadblocks has arisen over the summer, placing the implementation of the new rules in doubt.
CONGRESS SPOKESPERSON: On this vote, the ayes are 55, the nays are 40. TERENCE SMITH: Today the Senate passed a resolution of disapproval of the FCC decision, a rarely used parliamentary maneuver. Senator Byron Dorgan, Democrat of North Dakota, introduced the measure, which would send the entire ruling back to the commission for reconsideration.
TERENCE SMITH: Nevada Republican Senator John Ensign is a vocal proponent of the FCC ruling. SEN. JOHN ENSIGN: As long as people have the choices of where they view the market will determine where they get their information based on people choosing which stations that they choose to watch. That seems to me to be the American way. TERENCE SMITH: The resolution now must be approved in the House, where it faces a tough road, and signed by the president, a supporter of the FCC plan. White House spokesman Scott McClellan raised again the possibility of a veto. SCOTT McCLELLAN: The vote appears to show that there would not be enough votes there to overturn a possible veto. REPORTER: You said a possible veto. Is the veto threat still on for that...
TERENCE SMITH: The Senate is also waiting to consider Appropriations and Commerce Committee measures that would block portions of the FCC ruling. HOUSE FLOOR COUNT: The yeas are 400. The nays are 21. TERENCE SMITH: The House, in a hugely lopsided vote in July, passed the appropriations bill, which funds the Commerce, Justice, and State departments. A provision in that bill would block implementation of the part of the FCC ruling that increased television station ownership caps. The congressional actions were a resounding rebuke of FCC Chairman Michael Powell. |
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| Unlikely alliances protesting the FCC vote | ||||||||||||||||||||
| TERENCE SMITH: The
newfound drive to overturn the FCC action sets up another potential showdown
with the White House, which has threatened to veto the appropriations
bill as well. The drive to reverse the FCC decision has made for some
extraordinary alliances on Capitol Hill between congressmen, senators
and interest groups who do not ordinarily see eye to eye. Senate Minority
Leader Tom Daschle pointed up the unusual assembly of opponents.
SEN. THOMAS DASCHLE: The list of organizations is strangest list of bedfellows you'll ever see. Opponents include Walter Cronkite, William Safire, the National Rifle Association, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, the National Organization for Women, Senator Jesse Helms. TERENCE SMITH: Also on that list: Mississippi Republican Senator Trent Lott, a self-professed advocate of deregulation on many other matters.
And sometimes you have to back up and say, "Wait a minute here; is this affecting people's rights, people's access, people's constitutional rights, freedom of the press?" Free speech. |
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| The derailment of Powell's plan? | ||||||||||||||||||||
| TERENCE SMITH: For
his part, Chairman Powell has spent the latter half of the summer defending
the rules in television appearances and in op-ed articles.
He responded to today's Senate action with a statement, saying in part: "This resolution, if passed by the House and signed by the president would only muddy the regulatory waters." Amidst the public and congressional outcry, Powell announced at a recent press conference the formation of a task force to review the local obligations of media companies, something his critics say should have been done before the rules were passed.
TERENCE SMITH: But the task force will have to wait. On September 3, a three-judge panel of the third circuit court of appeals in Philadelphia blocked the entire FCC ruling from taking effect the day before its official implementation. So with the FCC decision stymied in the courts and on Capitol Hill, Michael Powell's push to realign the media landscape remains in limbo. |
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