[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 143 (Wednesday, September 21, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H5720-H5721]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FIND A SOLUTION SO ALL AMERICANS CAN HAVE CONTINUED ACCESS TO AN OPEN
AND FREE INTERNET
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Iowa
(Mr. Young) for 5 minutes.
Mr. YOUNG of Iowa. Mr. Speaker, America is a compassionate country.
We are a very giving country. America gives a lot. But I am not sure we
need to be giving away a free and open Internet.
If Congress does not act soon, our free and open Internet is going to
be handed over by our President to a global bureaucratic body, a body
that may not respect the freedom of information and speech that we
experience today, a body that may sensor what Americans have to say or
how journalists can receive information and cover certain stories on
governments, on current events.
What does handing the Internet over to a global bureaucracy mean for
privacy? for freedom of information? commerce? national security? The
question is really: What is the need to do this, to hand over the
administration of a working, free, and open Internet to a global
bureaucracy? And why the rush?
Now, my colleagues, the gentleman from Wisconsin (Mr. Duffy) and we
[[Page H5721]]
just heard from the gentleman from Wisconsin (Mr. Sensenbrenner), are
supporters of a great bill Mr. Duffy introduced called the Protecting
Internet Freedom Act, H.R. 5418. It has many sponsors on it. There are
efforts in the Senate as well to do the same thing to protect the
Internet.
In 2014, the National Telecommunications and Information
Administration, the NTIA, announced its intention to relinquish, to
give away, its procedural authority over Internet domain and functions
to the global Internet stakeholder community. Many of the Iowans I
represent, and I know many others around the country, are incredibly
concerned about this--and rightly so--about shifting U.S. oversight and
giving authority to regimes that have repeatedly censored the Internet.
As a member of the Appropriations Committee, I have worked with my
colleagues to try to block funding for the administration's appeal to
do this, this bogus plan, and I am hopeful U.S. Internet protections
will remain in any final spending bill coming up. Mr. Speaker, the
proper place for debate over important issues like this, like the
integrity of the Internet, is here in Congress, not behind closed doors
at the NTIA, a Federal agency, with these unilateral actions.
I urge my colleagues and I urge my fellow Americans to reach out to
the Members of Congress and tell them and ask them and plead with them
to protect the Internet, to make sure it is free and it is open, and to
find a solution so that Iowans and all Americans have continued access
to an open and free Internet, uncensored, where information can
flourish and speech can flourish.
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