Tim Karr
Free Press
8 May 2018
Since December of last year — when the Federal Communications
Commission voted to strip internet users of their Net Neutrality
protections — millions of advocates of every political stripe have been
organizing to nullify the ruling and restore the safeguards we expect
every time we go online.
Pai continues to declare that his decision was based on proof that Net Neutrality rules had hobbled investment and innovation — and yet he’s failed to produce a shred of evidence to support these claims. That’s because none exists.
Since then we’ve worked tirelessly to build our case against the legal, factual and moral failings that the FCC majority used to prop up its unjustified decision.
Source: https://www.freepress.net/our-response/expert-analysis/explainers/red-alert-net-neutrality-what-you-need-know
Free Press
8 May 2018

Starting this Wednesday, Net Neutrality supporters will raise the alarm in defense of an open internet.
This week and next, we’re joining with
organizations and online companies calling on the Senate to pass a
“resolution of disapproval.” If both chambers pass it and the president
signs it, the resolution would reinstate the Net Neutrality protections we won in 2015.
These baseline open-internet rules prevent companies like AT&T,
Comcast and Verizon from interfering with our rights to connect and
communicate.
But how did we get to where we are today,
and what can people do to stop the Trump administration and big phone
and cable companies from killing Net Neutrality?Here’s the rundown.
How did we lose Net Neutrality?
We won Net Neutrality protections in 2015 after
a decade-long battle to determine whether internet users or the
companies that sell online access would control the internet.
A 2015 FCC ruling created
the legal foundation for real Net Neutrality, giving internet users the
right to choose what they do, where they go and who they connect with
online.
This victory was an unprecedented win for the
public interest against the forces of an immensely powerful corporate
lobby that had spent hundreds of millions of dollars on lawyers, PR
firms, lobbyists and campaign contributions in a failed bid to take over
the internet.
But in 2017 the Trump administration put in place a new FCC chairman — former Verizon lawyer Ajit Pai — who from day one declared his intention to do the bidding of phone and cable companies and repeal the historic 2015 rules.
On Dec. 14, 2017, Pai’s FCC voted along party lines to dismantle Net Neutrality protections,
abdicating the agency’s legal authority to safeguard internet users,
and clearing the way for internet providers to block or throttle online
content.
Pai pushed through this ruling despite the flood of support from tens of millions of people who favored keeping the Net Neutrality protections.
He even defied the wishes of his own political base. Poll after poll after poll after poll shows large majorities of Republican voters in opposition to repealing Net Neutrality protections.
Pai continues to declare that his decision was based on proof that Net Neutrality rules had hobbled investment and innovation — and yet he’s failed to produce a shred of evidence to support these claims. That’s because none exists.
How do we plan to win it back?
From the day of the 2017 vote to repeal Net Neutrality, open-internet advocates have fought to restore our rights.
Free Press and our allies are taking the FCC to court —
challenging its reversal on the proper definition of broadband, its
flawed justifications for tossing out the rules, and the many process
fouls that plagued the FCC’s 2017 proceeding.
Since then we’ve worked tirelessly to build our case against the legal, factual and moral failings that the FCC majority used to prop up its unjustified decision.
The suit has been assigned to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, with oral arguments expected to occur by the end of the year.
We’re confident that the judges reviewing the Trump FCC’s wrongheaded
decision will rule against its conclusions and the way Pai conducted the
proceeding.
Meanwhile, members of the House and Senate have
introduced a resolution of disapproval under the Congressional Review
Act, which would overturn the FCC decision and restore the Net
Neutrality rules. The resolution — led in the Senate by Sen. Ed Markey (D–Massachusetts) and in the House by Rep. Mike Doyle (D–Pennsylvania) — has gained hundreds of co-sponsors.
Throughout the year, members of Team Internet — a
campaign run by Free Press Action Fund, Demand Progress and Fight for
the Future — have been rallying outside the local offices of lawmakers
to gain support for the resolution.
In addition, more than 30 states are
weighing legislation to restore the Net Neutrality rules. The governors
of Hawaii, Montana, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island and Vermont have
signed executive orders prohibiting their states from doing any business with internet providers that violate Net Neutrality.
The mayors of more than 110 cities, representing more than 25 million people, have signed a similar pledge.
What can I do?
In early May, the three groups leading Team Internet — which are also behind the organizing hub BattlefortheNet.com —
announced “Red Alert for Net Neutrality,” actions designed to drive
constituent calls and emails to lawmakers ahead of the Senate vote. The
groups are launching the days of action in the expectation that the
Senate will soon vote on Markey’s resolution reinstating the
open-internet safeguards.
Beginning on May 9 and continuing every day until the
Senate votes, internet activists, major web companies, online forums and
small businesses will “go red”
for Net Neutrality, displaying banners on their websites and via social
media, and urging everyone to tell their senators to vote for the
resolution.
All 49 members of the Senate Democratic Caucus, as well as Republican Susan Collins,
have announced their support for the resolution, meaning that, at most,
just one more vote is needed to ensure passage in the Senate. If the
measure passes there, activists will ramp up the fight in the House,
where about 160 reps have signed on to a companion bill.
Congress has the opportunity to unwind the Trump FCC’s
terrible and unpopular decision. You can get your lawmakers to speak up
for real Net Neutrality — and to stand on the right side of history —
by calling on them to vote for the resolution of disapproval.
Tens of millions of people have joined the fight for Net
Neutrality. If we don’t raise the alarm now we could lose the one
principle that keeps the internet open and available to everyone.
Source: https://www.freepress.net/our-response/expert-analysis/explainers/red-alert-net-neutrality-what-you-need-know
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