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Bush FCC Chair, Kevin Martin, Refuses To Delay Vote On Proposed Rewrite Of Media Ownership Rules: VOTE Tuesday, December 18, 2007 - Bushites' Business As Usual! - RI10 / PASSED!

posted Tuesday, 18 December 2007

Bush FCC Chair, 

 

Kevin Martin,

 

Refuses To Delay

 

Vote On Proposed

 

Rewrite Of Media

 

Ownership Rules:

 

VOTE Tuesday,

 

December 18, 2007 

 

- Bushites’ Business

 

As Usual! - RI10

 

 

 

 

 


 
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December 17, 2007

FCC Chair Kevin Martin Refuses to Delay

Vote on Proposed Rewrite of Media

Ownership Rules

Federal Communications Commission Chairman Kevin Martin has refused to delay a vote on his proposed changes to rewrite media ownership laws. The vote is set for Tuesday. We speak with Craig Aaron of Free Press, a national media reform organization. [includes rush transcript]

Craig Aaron, communications director at Free Press, a national media reform organization. He joins me now from Washington, DC.

This transcript is available free of charge. However, donations help us provide closed captioning for the deaf and hard of hearing on our TV broadcast. Thank you for your generous contribution.
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    * Free Press

AMY GOODMAN: We end up on the Federal Communications Commission. Its chair, Kevin Martin, has refused to delay a vote on his proposed changes to media ownership laws. Martin would increase media consolidation by relaxing the rules for companies seeking to own both a newspaper and television or radio station in the same city. The vote is set for Tuesday.

The FCC Chair says he has suggested a “relatively minor loosening of the ban on newspaper/broadcast cross-ownership.” But there has been a groundswell of public opposition to his proposal. Last Tuesday, the Senate Commerce Committee unanimously voted to block the FCC’s December 18th vote.

But two days later, Martin insisted on moving forward with the vote during a heated exchange with Senator John Kerry at the Committee’s oversight hearing.

Craig Aaron joins us now, communications director at Free Press, a national media reform group. He joins us from Washington, D.C. Welcome to Democracy Now!, Craig.

CRAIG AARON: Good morning, Amy. Thanks for having me on.

AMY GOODMAN: Craig, what do you expect to happen tomorrow?

CRAIG AARON: Well, I’ll say there’s a lot that could happen in the next twenty-four hours. All indications are that Kevin Martin is going to be defiant, ignore the millions and millions of Americans who have contacted the FCC and Congress since 2003 opposing any rule changes that would lead to more media consolidation, going against the wishes of the Senate, which, as you said, a couple of weeks ago passed a bill out of committee, the Media Ownership Act of 2007, that would force a fair process, some accountability. Martin appears to be heading down the road to a vote. However, a lot can happen in twenty-four hours. The last time the FCC met, they didn’t start their meeting ’til nearly 11:00 p.m. at night, so there are negotiations going on, but Martin appears to be, again, going against the popular will, going against what the public wants, to give a big giveaway to a small handful of the biggest media companies.

AMY GOODMAN: The previous chair, Michael Powell, son of Colin Powell, was fiercely rebuked by people across the political spectrum for trying to increase media consolidation. Ultimately, he left and talked about the power he did not expect of the people responding. Why is Kevin Martin, the current chair, doing this?

CRAIG AARON: Well, you know, I think we’re heading into the last year of the Bush administration, and there were probably promises made along the way that this rule change was going to be one of the priorities. Time is running out. We’re heading into a lame-duck administration.

They’re also hoping to push forward, really, before that same kind of public opposition can come together again. You know, nearly three million people contacted the FCC and Congress in 2003, like you say, from across the political spectrum. Commissioner Michael Copps likes to joke that he doesn’t—didn’t know that three million people knew what he FCC was. So we saw this incredible groundswell of public opposition. It’s beginning to stir again. We have hundreds of thousands of comments filed at the FCC, tens of thousands of calls going into Congress. And I think Kevin Martin is trying to rush through these rules by the end of the year, before even more people find out what he’s up to.

AMY GOODMAN: Craig Aaron, who benefits from the media ownership rules changes?

CRAIG AARON: Well, the companies that really want to see this change are companies that already own TV stations and newspapers in different markets. So it’s companies like the Tribune Company, Rupert Murdoch News Corp., Gannett. They’re the ones who have been calling for this change for a long time. They are the ones who own stations and newspapers in these markets, the top twenty markets that Martin has laid out. But the fact is that all of these big media companies would benefit, because there are giant loopholes in Martin’s proposal that would allow more concentration, more consolidation in hundreds and hundreds of markets across the country.

So it is a small handful of media giants that are going to benefit at the expense of the few remaining independent voices in the local news market, at the expense of the few women and minority owners, who tend to own a smaller number of stations or single stations, who are going to be targeted if this rule is pushed through with these giant loopholes.

AMY GOODMAN: Now, last time the rule was pushed through, but then it was fought back, and you had groups like Prometheus in Philadelphia actually stopping the implementation of the rule changes through lawsuit. What about here? What happens after tomorrow?

CRAIG AARON: Well, the fight is far from over, even if the FCC does vote these rules. The last time they tried to pass these, the Senate did actually vote what’s called a resolution of disapproval. It’s a rarely used Senate veto—or a congressional veto. It actually passed the Senate, did not pass the House, but came very close in 2003, before these rules, including this cross-ownership rule, were thrown out by the courts.

So, whatever Kevin Martin does tomorrow at the FCC, it is very likely that you will see action from Congress. In fact, that’s why we’re urging people to contact their senators today, trying to put in 100,000 call to the Senate today, and go to stopbigmedia.com to find out all the information.

If he passes these rules, there is no question that there will be lawsuits. It will go to court. It’s very likely that you could see both public interest groups taking action, as well as the industry, which doesn’t think, in some ways, these rules go far enough. They’re also threatening to sue. So it’s very likely that this will head back to the courts. And, in fact, the appeals court that threw out these rules last time in the Prometheus case would have to review any decision.

AMY GOODMAN: Craig—

CRAIG AARON: And we’ve been collecting—sure, Amy.

AMY GOODMAN: Thanks very much for joining us. We have to leave it there. The end of the show is upon us. Craig Aaron of Free Press.
http://www.democracynow.org/2007/12/17/fcc_chair_kevin_martin_refuses_to



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Tuesday, 18 December 2007 4:13 pm :: http://tabacco.blog-city.com/

FCC Changes Broadcast-Newspaper Owner Ban

2 hours ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Communications Commission in a party-line, 3-2 vote, agreed Tuesday to overturn a 32-year-old ban and allow broadcasters in the nation's 20 largest media markets to also own a newspaper.

FCC Chairman Kevin Martin was joined by his two Republican colleagues in favor of the proposal, while the commission's two Democrats voted against it.

Martin pushed the vote through despite intense pressure from House and Senate members on Capitol Hill to delay it. The chairman, however, has the support of the White House, which has pledged to turn back any congressional action that seeks to undo the agency vote.

On Monday, 25 senators, including four Republicans, sent him a letter threatening that if he goes ahead with the vote, they will move legislation to revoke the rule and nullify the commission's action.

But according to a letter that surfaced late Monday, it is clear the chairman has the full support of the White House. Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez wrote Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid on Dec. 4 expressing the administration's opposition to legislation approved by the Senate Commerce Committee that would have delayed a vote.

The secretary wrote that the "the current ownership rules are significantly outdated in the modern media marketplace" and that the FCC has "crafted changes that appropriately take into account the myriad of news and information outlets that exist today."

Gutierrez wrote that the administration opposes the Senate bill "or any other attempt to delay or overturn these revised rules by legislative means."

The cross-ownership ban was approved by the FCC in 1975 to serve "the twin goals of diversity of viewpoints and economic competition." The FCC at the time noted that "it is unrealistic to expect true diversity from a commonly owned station-newspaper combination."

Opponents of the ban say in the past decade there has been an explosion of news outlets thanks to cable television and the Internet and that such restrictions are no longer necessary. Ban supporters say there may be new outlets, but there has been no corresponding increase in news gatherers and producers, especially at the local level.

The agency first tried to loosen the ban in 2003, but the move was rejected by a federal appeals court. Since then, the commissioners have been trying to craft a new set of rules that will survive judicial scrutiny.

Under Martin's proposal, one entity would be permitted to own a newspaper and one broadcast station in the same market. But it must be among the 20 largest in the nation and following the transaction, at least eight independently owned-and-operated media voices must remain. In addition, the television station may not be among the top four in the market.

Martin's proposal is opposed by Democratic commissioners Michael Copps and Jonathan Adelstein, who also voted against loosening media ownership rules in 2003. The commission's other two Republicans, Robert McDowell and Deborah Taylor Tate, have been more receptive to broadcast media deregulation. http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5hlYj9ojD7umgLJiTK_I0DfwU50iAD8TK11J80

Republished by Tabacco PS This is just one more reason why no thinking person should ever vote Republican!