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1 1 (January 21, 2021)

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C  o   g  e s  o  a    R esearc   Ser ic


                                                                                        Updated January 21, 2021

The Federal Communications Commission in the Biden

Administration: Issues and New Directions


Introduction
The Federal Communications Commission  (FCC)  in the
new Biden Administration may take different positions on
several key topics than the FCC under the Trump
Administration, including Section 230 of the
Communications  Act of 1934, as amended (Section 230),
net neutrality, and 5G. The recent confirmation of then-
President Donald Trump's nominee to join the FCC,
Nathan Simington, and Chairman Ajit Pai's resignation on
Inauguration Day has left the agency with a 2-2 split
between Democratic and Republican commissioners. The
FCC  typically has five members, with two commissioners
and a chairperson from the President's party. Democrats
have effectively taken control of the Senate majority and
can be expected to confirm President Joe Biden's nominee
for chairperson. On January 21, 2021, President Biden
appointed current commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel as
acting chairperson and she is seen as a possible nominee for
the position.
Topics for Likely F CC Action
Although there are numerous issues that the new FCC may
consider, some issues that are currently under consideration
can be expected to remain active, either to reverse current
FCC  initiatives or to build on existing work.
Section  230
Section 230 broadly protects operators of interactive
computer services and their users from liability for
publishing, removing, or restricting access to another
person's content. Criticism of Section 230 has come from
both Democrats and Republicans over content moderation
decisions; both parties introduced legislation to amend
Section 230 in the 116th Congress.
On May  28, 2020, then-President Trump issued an
Executive Order on Preventing Online Censorship. The
order required the Secretary of Commerce to ask the FCC
to initiate a rulemaking to clarify the provisions of Section
230. Although the FCC began a proceeding on August 3,
2020, it was not finalized prior to President Biden's
inauguration. President Biden has expressed interest in
seeing changes to Section 230 to curb misinformation, but
has stated he would prefer doing so through legislation
rather than the FCC.
For additional information about Section 230, see CRS
Legal Sidebar LSB10484, UPDATE:   Section 230 and the
Executive Order on Preventing Online Censorship.
Net  Neutrality
Net neutrality, the policy that required internet service
providers to offer equal and nondiscriminatory access to
online content, was adopted by the FCC under then-
President Barack Obama in 2015 and repealed by the FCC


under then-President Trump in 2017. The issue may again
be an active issue for the FCC under the Biden
Administration, specifically, repealing the 2017 Restoring
Internet Freedom Order that reversed the 2015 order.
President Biden's net neutrality policy statement, issued
prior to the Democratic National Convention, states that his
administration plans to take strong enforcement action
against broadband providers who violate net neutrality
principles through blocking, throttling, paid prioritization,
or other measures that create artificial scarcity and raise
consumer prices. The current Democratic commissioners
support this position.
Opening the door for a reinstatement of the 2015 rules is a
2019 ruling by the D.C. Circuit Court that stated it would
defer in this case to agency expertise regarding the
interpretation of the Communications Act of 1934 (see CRS
Report R44954, Chevron Deference: A Primer). This would
appear to provide a path for the FCC to reinterpret the law.
If so, it could pass a declaratory ruling to reverse the 2017
RIFO  and reinstate the 2015 Order to reclassify broadband
providers from Title I to Title II services. Title I
information services are subject to fewer regulations than
Title II common carrier telecommunications services.
Some  experts have cited the heightened dependency on the
internet during the pandemic as a driver for the FCC to
move  beyond a simple reinstatement to also include a
prohibition on data caps, interconnection fees, and special
rates through a new net neutrality rulemaking. Any action
by the FCC could be expected to draw legal challenges.
Congress could preempt any FCC action by permanently
classifying broadband as a Title II service or impose net
neutrality requirements under Section 706 of the 1996
Telecommunications  Act. It could also undertake a larger
update to the act.
For additional information about net neutrality, see CRS
Report R40616, The Net Neutrality Debate: Access to
Broadband  Networks.
5G
5G  service deployment enjoys bipartisan support and is
likely to continue to be advanced through the FCC under
the Biden Administration. Planned increases in the
availability of spectrum for 5G services through spectrum
auctions and reallocations are expected to continue, along
with expanded support for wireless broadband (e.g., 4G and
5G) coverage throughout the country. Given recent disputes
over spectrum reallocation, some observers believe that the
FCC  under the Biden Administration may focus more
attention on policies aimed at resolving interagency
differences and interference concerns over spectrum use.


ittps://Crsreports.congress.g


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