[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 152 (Tuesday, October 29, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7610-S7611]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NOMINATION OF MR. THOMAS E. WHEELER
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. Madam President, I rise today in support of the
nomination of Tom Wheeler to be Chairman of the Federal Communications
Commission.
No one can question that Mr. Wheeler is a supremely qualified nominee
to lead the FCC. He brings to the job a long and distinguished career
in the communications industry. He was a pioneer in the cable and
wireless industries, having been instrumental in the growth of both
these critical communications sectors. As an entrepreneur, he built
businesses and created jobs.
This collective experience provides Mr. Wheeler with a unique insight
into the challenges facing the Nation's communications regulator. And
it affords him the experience to lead an agency that has the most
challenging and complicated set of issues pending before it since the
Commission implemented the 1996 Telecommunications Act. I do not say
this lightly. The decisions the FCC will make over the next few years
will shape the future of the Nation's telephone network, public safety,
the wireless industry, broadcasting, the Internet, and consumer
protection for decades to come.
The Commission has before it a number of key proceedings to implement
my Public Safety Spectrum legislation that became law last year. Not
only will the agency implement a new tool for identifying spectrum
through voluntary incentive auctions, the revenues from those auctions
will provide critical support for deployment of the long-overdue
nationwide interoperable wireless broadband network for first
responders.
Aside from that work, the Commission is examining the future of the
Nation's voice telephone network, and what the transition of that
network can mean to longstanding, fundamental tenets of communications
policy like universal service, competition, public safety and consumer
protection.
The FCC continues to look at the future of media policy in an era
when online video distribution looks to disrupt traditional business
models and bring more consumer choice to the video industry. The FCC
will need to conclude its work on the E-Rate program and update it to
meet the next-generation connectivity needs of our schools and
libraries. And finally, the FCC will have to implement a decision from
the courts on the FCC's net neutrality rules and potentially on the
Commission's underlying authority to protect consumers in the broadband
age.
I have absolute confidence in Mr. Wheeler's ability to guide the
agency through its consideration of these far-
[[Page S7611]]
reaching issues. This confidence comes in part from my strong belief
that Mr. Wheeler agrees with me that the FCC must always have consumer
protection and the public interest as its primary touchstones.
Acting FCC Chairwoman Mignon Clyburn has done an excellent job as the
steward of the Commission over the last several months. I am proud of
her accomplishments, especially her commencement of a proceeding to
strengthen and expand the hugely successful E-Rate program, something
our Nation's children deserve. But acting chairs of agencies can only
accomplish so much, particularly when they have taken charge of an
agency that lacks a full complement of its members. It is past time for
the Senate to act on Mr. Wheeler's nomination and to put in place the
President's permanent head of this essential agency.
At its core, the FCC is a regulatory agency. Too many have forgotten
that the agency's fundamental responsibility is the regulation of
communications networks. These regulations serve important policy
goals. You cannot have universal service without regulation. You cannot
ensure competition without regulation. You cannot have consumer
protection without regulation. Given his experience and history, Mr.
Wheeler understands the vital role of the Commission and the need for
an active, smart regulator for the nation's communications markets.
The Members of the Senate Commerce Committee have fully vetted Mr.
Wheeler's nomination. And an overwhelming, bipartisan majority of the
committee favorably reported Mr. Wheeler's nomination out of committee
in July. At his nomination hearing in June, Mr. Wheeler ably
demonstrated his knowledge of the issues the FCC will face in the
coming years. Mr. Wheeler answered all of the questions for the record
submitted to him after that hearing--including all 78 questions from
Republican committee Members. And he did so in a substantive and
detailed manner. And honest, thoughtful responses by nominees have
always been sufficient for this body to move forward when they are
eminently qualified for a position and capable of fulfilling their
mission.
It also has not been the practice of the Senate Commerce Committee to
demand that a nominee to an independent regulatory agency like the FCC
prejudge issues that might come before his or her agency. In fact, it
was our colleague and former Commerce Committee Chairman Senator John
McCain who, during consideration of a past Republican FCC Chairman
nominee, said ``Just as it is not appropriate for nominees to the bench
be asked how they will vote on a specific issue that is currently
before, or likely to come before, their court; it is not appropriate
for commissioners who have quasi-judicial responsibilities to pre-judge
cases they must consider.''
As Chairman of the FCC, Mr. Wheeler will be able to use the power of
the FCC to spur universal deployment of advanced technologies, foster
job growth and innovation, and protect consumers. This is an agency
that oversees, by some estimates, nearly one-fifth of the U.S. economy.
This is an agency that has raised over $50 billion for the U.S.
Treasury through spectrum auctions. This is the agency that has,
through smart policy, guided the Nation into the digital age. This is
the agency that has wide-ranging authority over so many communications
services that are a vital part of our daily lives. From broadband to
wireless phones to television content to public safety communications--
this little agency oversees it all.
Because we entrust the FCC with such great responsibility, we expect
a lot from those whom the President chooses to run that agency. I am
pleased to support Mr. Wheeler for Chairman of the FCC, and I call on
my colleagues to do the same today. With all the important issues
before the FCC, it is critical that the agency has a confirmed Chair
and strong leader in place. I am confident, given Tom Wheeler's
extensive experience and capabilities in the communications industry,
he is the right person for this job.
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