6th Circuit Temporarily Puts Net Neutrality On Ice As The Post-Chevron GOP Assault On The Regulatory State Accelerates
from the who-needs-a-functioning-federal-government dept
We recently noted how the telecom industry, with the help of the recent Chevron ruling, was gearing up to deliver what it hoped would be the killing blow to popular net neutrality protections (read: broadly popular FCC rules designed to prevent telecom monopolies from abusing their market power to screw customers and competitors).
AT&T, Comcast, Verizon and friends certainly appear to be having some early success.
In June, the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals won the lottery to hear the industry’s net neutrality challenge; a boon for telecoms given the Republican-heavy makeup of the court (the GOP historically always sides with the policy interests of big telecom).
In mid-July, the Sixth Circuit temporarily paused restoration of the rules. Now the court has granted an extended stay, preventing the rules from being restored until the courts can hash out the legal debate between industry and government, which won’t happen until at least November. There’s a very real possibility that thanks to a corrupt Supreme Court, the rules won’t survive legal challenge.
The court’s stay makes it pretty clear they’re inclined to see things the way of the telecom industry: namely that the FCC lacks the authority to impose net neutrality rules without a more specific new net neutrality law crafted by Congress. It doesn’t appear to matter that previous courts confirmed the FCC has that right, or that Congress is clearly too corrupt to pass more tailored consumer protections.
Courts had previously ruled — several times now — that the Communications Act allows the FCC to impose net neutrality rules — or classify/declassify broadband providers as common carriers under Title II of the Act — provided they based their determinations on some kind of actual logic.
Post Chevron and the successful, corporate-funded attack on the “major questions doctrine,” that painful, multi-decade effort to establish precedent appears trashed, much to the thrill of telecom giants. Major questions doctrine declared that regulators with informed expertise had some leeway within the confines of what’s often vaguely or badly-worded law. Corporations like AT&T, knowing they had Congress under their lobbying thumb, didn’t much like that.
“The final rule implicates a major question, and the commission has failed to satisfy the high bar for imposing such regulations,” the court wrote. “Net neutrality is likely a major question requiring clear congressional authorization.”
There’s several instances in the ruling where Chief Judge Jeffrey Sutton also seems to imply the court is viewing the entire fracas in a way that will be favorable to industry.
“The consistency query makes matters worse,” Sutton wrote. “The Commission’s ‘intention to reverse course for yet a fourth time’ suggests that its reasoning has more to do with changing presidential administrations than with arriving at the true and durable ‘meaning of the law.’”
In short Sutton is implying that the FCC’s constant ping-ponging back and forth between partisan administrations on the issue means we need a new, clearer net neutrality law. You’re to ignore that Congress, which sees an estimated $320,000 in telecom industry lobbying influence every single day, is too corrupt and incompetent to ever actually do that.
Which is to say if the courts shoot down net neutrality, it’s not happening. At least on the federal level. But blocking the FCC from declaring broadband ISPs as common carriers also the Telecom Act also greatly restricts its consumer protection enforcement ability more broadly, the entire reason AT&T, Comcast and friends are pursuing this avenue of attack in the first place.
States could still help fill the void on net neutrality. Precedent (for whatever that’s worth anymore) has repeatedly established that if the federal government abdicates its authority over broadband consumer protections and net neutrality, states have full authority to step in and craft their own laws. For now at least; with fed authority defanged, state authority will be the next target of corporate power.
Only a few media outlets seem to understand the gravity of our new, post-Chevron reality. Regardless of precedent, impact, or logic, GOP-appointed lawyers are keen to dismantle most federal oversight of corporate power. It’s the culmination of a fifty-year vision to ensure the nation’s wealthiest and most powerful can pursue largely unchecked wealth accumulation with a disregard for real-world harm.
Most regulatory effort, rule, or enforcement will be challenged anew, posing grave risks to public safety, corporate accountability, functional infrastructure, and environmental reforms across every agency in America. Despite what should be obvious stakes and impact, most journalists and policy experts are treating concerns about the defanging of the regulatory state as either hyperbole or a real snoozer.
But what you’re seeing play out in telecom (federal corporate oversight defanged, states rushing to fill the void) is going to play out across every industry and sector that impacts your life, flooding the court system with absolute chaos for the foreseeable future. The impact will be historically large, incredibly dire, and absolutely none of it is going to be remotely subtle.
Filed Under: 6th circuit, broadband, chevron, consumers, fcc, high speed internet, net neutrality, supreme court, telecom
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Comments on “6th Circuit Temporarily Puts Net Neutrality On Ice As The Post-Chevron GOP Assault On The Regulatory State Accelerates”
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Kill it dead and burn it with fire, or make a goddamn law already.
What Bode means to say, assuming that he intends to write truthfully, is: “The FCC is no longer allowed to ignore the law and/or make arbitrary changes to it in order to suit itself.”
Again, for you authoritarian far-wing extremists of all types: “popular” don’t mean shit. “Good idea” don’t mean shit. “Bode likes it” don’t mean shit. “LittleCupcakes hates it” don’t mean shit. It’s legal or illegal. It’s not difficult to understand. Want it to be different? Change the goddamn law.
By the way, I would be perfectly satisfied if the stupid and wrong “net neutrality” box of crap were passed by appropriate legislation. I wouldn’t like it, but if it’s done properly, then it shall done and I certainly wouldn’t tendentiously blame “corruption”.
The authoritarian and illegal imposition of “net neutrality” is hopefully finally dead for good. Ding Dong!
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That’s a good point. I wish someone in the last 100 years had thought of passing a law to enable this! Maybe in like, 1934?
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“What Bode means to say”
It’s good to know that Little Fart Cakes is here to interpret what Karl has typed because, obviously, we are all too stupid to read for ourselves and make our own opinions.
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The original arbitrary change was to reclassify Broadband as a Title I information service after originally being classified as a title II telecommunications provider like dial up before it. This change arbitrarily determined that by bundling information services with weaker regulation, like DNS, with telecommunications services that should have stronger regulation like broadband, ISPs could nullify the stronger regulatory protections of title II and only operate under the weaker protections of title I.
Net neutrality is a policy of applying as little of the Title II regulation as possible to achieve state regulatory aims with narrow targeted regulation as opposed to blindly applying Title II. The question is not what is the law. The question is about categorization. And as you may know, a featherless chicken is a human. Which is to say, if you don’t get the reference, actually creating unambiguous buckets for categorization is not something the real world is good for.
There is no writing a law so fullproof in its language you can not twist the letter of the law. Under your standard, no law could be passed, because what is telecommunications can never be defined so tightly as to not be subject to challenge, which by your standard makes such a law impossible.
But Title II of the telecommunications act is a law. Its been legislated. It covers telecommunications services, which an ISP uncontestedly includes. Those services are classified under title II. This is not a dispute about what regulatory powers the law provides. This is a dispute of whether the presence of Title 1 services results in voiding the protection of Title II services, which appears contrary to the facial congressional intent of setting up such a two-tiered regulatory system.
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Well, one could argue that internet service as used by most Americans is an information service running atop a telecommunications service (the “last mile” infrastructure). And while the concept of “net neutrality” goes a little beyond what’s written in the law, there’s a lot of other stuff written there that the big ISPs would absolutely hate—and that the FCC could push, to the public’s benefit, without violating the court’s temporary stay.
You know, it was pretty great in the 1990s when every city had like 10 ISPs, which we could instantly switch between—usually when it became evident that ours was just a couple of people with a hundred phone lines, in way over their heads.
So, let the court dump net neutrality, but the FCC should be looking at a dozen other ways to reign in the ISPs. The return of line-sharing and government rate-setting (both explicitly allowed by the law), anti-trust suits, whatever.
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…hallucinated nobody mentally competent, ever.
Re: *Golf Clap*
You could have used all that time and energy to take a nice relaxing shit and instead dropped a spewed a hot lord of verbal diarrhoea.
I hope california is geared to make these self proclaimed patriots suck a fat one.
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Imagine; California hits a joint, then offers it to you.
debating ? What ?
For a nation that Loves its freedoms, it REALLY loves removing them.
It generally comes to a 1 sided conversation, about what the Congress SEEMS to want over a Bunch of lawyers from the corps that have collected a Bunch of FAKE DATA.
Wouldnt it be interesting to base it on 1 comment. That ALL THOSE phone lines you installed have to be UPGRADED,,,YESTERDAY. with the SAME rights and regulations as from the Original Land lines.
'Well if you're NOT X, then I guess we won't treat you like X...'
I’d love it if the government, whether federal or state side actually took the ISP’s argument and ran with it.
‘Oh you don’t fall under Title II classification? You don’t fall under any of the definitions that the government has put together to handle telecom communications? Alright, so about all those ‘easements’ and ‘subsidies’ that are only meant for companies and services that fall under those categories…’
“Likely to succeed on the merits” says a “court” about a position that has never once in its decades-long existence has ever shown one scintilla of merit.
Not to take away from the rest of your points, but this..
…this is completely insane. This can’t matter due to the separation of powers. Otherwise we’re only a few steps from the following next year.
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6th Circuit Panel Stays FCC Net Neutrality As Likely Unlawful On The Merits
[Fixed the headline for ya.]
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Have you never heard the saying, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it”?
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Liar.