The Wireless Infrastructure Association urged Congress Thursday to “reintroduce and pass” the 2024 Spectrum Pipeline Act backed by Senate Commerce Chairman Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D. It would restore the FCC’s lapsed auction authority and proposes requiring NTIA to identify at least 2,500 MHz of midband spectrum the federal government can reallocate within the next five years (see 2403110066). Congressional GOP leaders are eyeing using a coming budget reconciliation package to address spectrum issues, including reauthorizing the FCC’s mandate (see 2501070069). WIA also urged NTIA to “accelerate” the national spectrum strategy. “We need to move beyond studies and get to solutions that meet industry needs while respecting critical government functions,” it said. WIA urged lawmakers to refile the American Broadband Deployment Act permitting package that the House Commerce Committee approved in 2023 (see 2305240069). The measure, which groups together more than 20 GOP-led connectivity permitting bills, drew unanimous opposition from House Commerce Democrats, and local government groups continued lobbying against the measure last year (see 2409180052). “A consistent permitting framework set at a national level, but flexible enough to accommodate local needs and interests, is the key to sustained success for wireless infrastructure deployment,” WIA said. The group “values and respects the need for local permitting processes; the reforms WIA proposes all build upon that premise, but with safeguards built in where the level of review becomes unpredictable, untimely, disproportionate, or unworkably opaque.”
A proposal by Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, to relocate 30% of the workforce of every executive agency to outside the Washington, D.C., area wouldn’t affect the FCC or FTC. Both are classified as independent agencies and therefore fall outside the bill’s scope. Ernst filed the Decentralizing and Reorganizing Agency Infrastructure Nationwide To Harness Efficient Services, Workforce Administration, and Management Practices Act earlier this week. It could affect NTIA, part of the Commerce Department, if enacted.
USTelecom, NTCA and the Competitive Carriers Association congratulated Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, Tuesday night and Wednesday for his official accession to become Senate Commerce Committee chairman (see 2501070083). Cruz “has long shared the broadband community’s deep commitment to ensuring the United States remains a global leader in innovation and connectivity,” USTelecom CEO Jonathan Spalter said. “Together, we can and will advance the promise and power of broadband innovation across all corners of America.” CCA CEO Tim Donovan said Cruz “has been dedicated to fostering growth, innovation, and U.S. leadership in the telecommunications marketplace, including in rural America. We look forward to continued collaboration with him and the entire Commerce Committee to preserve and expand connectivity nationwide for all Americans.” NTCA and its members “look forward to working with the chairman and the entire committee to advance and sustain connectivity in rural America,” said CEO Shirley Bloomfield.
The Senate Republican Conference ratified Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas Tuesday as Commerce Committee chairman, as expected (see 2411040049). Cruz said in a statement his top priority remains “pursuing policies that will create jobs and spur economic growth,” including by “expanding commercial access to electromagnetic spectrum.” Cruz is among the congressional GOP leaders eyeing using a coming budget reconciliation package to address spectrum issues, including restoring the FCC’s lapsed auction authority (see 2501070069). “I look forward to continuing to work with” Senate Commerce ranking member Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., “and our colleagues on both sides of the aisle to find common ground and deliver results that will make a difference in the daily lives of the American people,” he said. The panel will have 15 Republicans during this Congress, including freshman Sens. John Curtis of Utah, Bernie Moreno of Ohio and Tim Sheehy of Montana (see 2412230014). There will be 13 Democrats, including three new party members (see [Ref:2501030050}).
House Commerce Committee Chairman Brett Guthrie, R-Ky., said Monday Kate Harper will continue serving as Communications Subcommittee chief counsel for this Congress. The subpanel’s Republican chief counsel since October 2019, Harper was previously NTIA chief of staff and deputy director-congressional affairs during President-elect Donald Trump’s first administration and an aide to Senate Commerce Committee member Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska. Guthrie said he’s named Giulia Leganski as Commerce, Manufacturing and Trade Subcommittee chief counsel. Leganski was previously a House Communications aide.
House Commerce Committee Chairman Brett Guthrie, R-Ky., and Communications Subcommittee Chairman Richard Hudson, R-N.C., on Monday hailed the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals’ ruling last week (see 2501020047) vacating the FCC’s April net neutrality order. “The American people” in the November elections “voted to reject Democrats’ heavy-handed regulatory agenda,” Guthrie said in a statement. “Now, the courts are finding that the Biden-Harris Administration’s net neutrality rules were unlawful in the first place.” Republicans “are ready to move on from misguided, burdensome approaches to internet regulation and support innovations leading to increased speeds and investment,” he said: “I am thrilled by this decision, which is a precursor to many more pro-innovation developments still to come.” Hudson said he will “work with [President-elect] Donald Trump to ensure faster, more reliable, and more affordable internet access for all Americans. The court’s decision to strike down these Obama-era regulations is good news for the American people.”
Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer of New York announced ahead of the Friday start of the 119th Congress that he’s adding three Democrats to the Commerce Committee roster. Sen. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania is joining, as are freshmen Sens. Lisa Blunt Rochester of Delaware and Andy Kim of New Jersey. There will be 13 Democrats on Senate Commerce, to 15 Republicans (see 2412230014). Four Democratic caucus members who served on Commerce during the last Congress have left it, including Sens. Raphael Warnock of Georgia and Peter Welch of Vermont. Jon Tester of Montana lost reelection, while Kyrsten Sinema, I-Ariz., retired. Meanwhile, Sen. Jon Ossoff of Georgia is the only Democrat leaving the Senate Judiciary Committee. Freshman Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., joined the panel in December after winning a special election to complete the term of deceased Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein.
Incoming House Commerce Committee Chairman Brett Guthrie, R-Ky., said Thursday he's naming Joel Miller, former chief of staff to former FCC commissioner Mike O’Rielly, as the panel’s chief counsel. Miller, who was previously Guthrie’s deputy chief of staff and legislative director, since leaving the FCC worked at LinkedIn and the Information Technology Industry Council. As chief counsel, Miller will manage "the policy and legislative strategy" of House Commerce and oversee the Communications Subcommittee and other subpanels, Guthrie’s office said: He will also “coordinate the Committee’s policy and legislative work with Members, leadership, and the broader Republican Conference to advance the House Republican legislative agenda.” Guthrie said he’s naming former House Oversight Committee Deputy Staff Director Jessica Donlon as Commerce’s general counsel and former Small Business Committee Communications Director Matt VanHyfte as Commerce's communications director.
Free State Foundation President Randolph May said this week that Senate Commerce Committee member Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., was wrong to argue (see 2412120066) that the U.S. Supreme Court’s July overturning of the Chevron doctrine in Loper Bright v. Raimondo was detrimental because it removed consistency from the regulatory process. Klobuchar made the argument during a Broadband Breakfast event earlier this month. The lawmaker “is right that stability in the law is important for businesses so they can intelligently plan investments and judiciously execute other business decisions,” May said Tuesday in a Washington Times opinion piece. But she “and others who take the same line should know better, especially those … who are familiar with communications law and policy. They have witnessed firsthand how reliance on the Chevron doctrine has promoted instability in the legal regime governing broadband internet providers under the guise of ‘net neutrality.’ The back-and-forth ‘switcheroos’ between the imposition of heavy-handed public utility regulations and a light-touch regulatory regime is a prime example.” Each time there has been a Democratic majority over the past decade, the FCC “has adopted stringent utility regulations for broadband providers,” while “each time the Republicans regained control, the FCC reinstituted a deregulatory regime,” May said: That’s likely to happen again when President-elect Donald Trump returns to office Jan. 20.
Incoming Senate Majority Leader John Thune of South Dakota said Friday night he’s added three Republican freshmen to the Commerce Committee roster for the next Congress, bringing the panel’s GOP membership to 15. The new Senate Commerce GOP members are: John Curtis of Utah, Bernie Moreno of Ohio and Tim Sheehy of Montana. All other current panel Republicans save Vice President-elect JD Vance, will remain members in the next Congress. Former Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., will rejoin the panel. Three other Republicans will also join the committee: Katie Britt of Alabama, Mike Crapo of Idaho and Eric Schmitt of Missouri. Current Judiciary Republican Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas is leaving the committee at the end of this Congress.