The revolving door rotates freely in government public relations. At just one federal agency with about 1,700 total employees, at least 14 public relations experts and lawyers who advise on issues including PR came or left during the Obama administration. Careers of PR practitioners exiting the FCC since about Jan. 21, 2009, spanned the gamut. Some job changes resembled the traditional revolving door, with officials leaving for the industries their employer used to regulate, others were so-called reverse revolvers coming to the agency from entities that lobbied the FCC, while other career paths were less orthodox and don't fall under the revolving door rubric at all. That is according to Communications Daily Freedom of Information Act requests, other records and interviews with those who reviewed our database.
Status quo prevailed in 16 of the 17 state regulatory commission races where a winner was clear Wednesday. The Democrats gained one net seat after former New Mexico Public Regulation Commission Chairman Sandy Jones defeated PRC Commissioner Ben Hall, a Republican, by 1,482 votes. The Republicans retained at least 13 seats they held before the election, while the Democrats retained their three seats. The results in one seat on the Louisiana Public Service Commission (PSC) remained unclear. A Republican is assured of winning the remaining Louisiana PSC seat following a Dec. 6 runoff because both of the candidates -- incumbent PSC Commissioner Eric Skrmetta and energy policy advocate Forest Wright -- are Republicans.
CEA is "excited" that Republicans will retake control of the Senate because it will end the reign of Harry Reid, D-Nev., as Senate majority leader, CEA President Gary Shapiro said in an interview Wednesday on the results of the midterm elections and their CE industry implications..
A GOP-controlled Capitol Hill is likely to charge forward on telecom and media overhaul in a powerful way in the 114th Congress, advancing on issues it could never make ground on with two divided chambers, industry lobbyists and observers told us. Expect action on several key priorities, including overhaul of the Communications Act and potentially more partisan measures such as net neutrality and stopping FCC pre-emption of state laws restricting municipal broadband, they said.