On December 17, the Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee is holding an FCC oversight hearing. Conducted properly, oversight hearings can be valuable tools in assisting legislators, and the public too, in understanding an agency's work – what an agency is doing, and why. And, sometimes, an oversight hearing can lead to the subsequent introduction of legislation to reform the agency's enabling statute.
That should be the case regarding the Communications Act – specifically legislation replacing the public interest standard.
But it's a good bet that some Democrats on the committee, perhaps all of them, will use most of their allotted time to lambaste FCC Chairman Brendan Carr, especially regarding his remarks in "l'affaire Jimmy Kimmel." Without rehearsing all the details here, you'll recall that Chairman Carr issued what was reasonably taken to be a threat that, unless Kimmel's show was taken off the air, the broadcast station owners airing it would suffer adverse consequences. After all, by virtue of the licenses the FCC issues requiring that broadcasters operate consistent with the "public interest," the agency exercises substantial power over their operations. And if broadcasters wish to transfer or assign their licenses to another entity, the FCC first must find the transaction is in the "public interest."
At the time of Chairman Carr's remarks regarding Jimmy Kimmel, I said that, regardless of whether they rose to an actual violation of the First Amendment, and despite what I considered to be Kimmel's factually inaccurate and insensitive monologue regarding Charlie Kirk's assassination, I didn't like what appeared to be Carr's threats directed at the broadcasters. I stand by that.
But when the Democrats and those on the Left get in high dudgeon railing at Carr at the hearing or otherwise, the theatre is a bit too contrived. For over the long history of the FCC, it's been Democrats in Congress, and those sitting on the FCC, who have been most persistent and insistent in wielding the FCC's public interest authority to dictate or influence broadcast content. I recited some of the historical evidence here. And, significantly, it was a Democrat-controlled FCC that employed the "Fairness Doctrine," with its requirement that broadcasters present balanced coverage of issues of public importance, as a content regulation sword. Most notably, the Fairness Doctrine was invoked, successfully, to silence conservative broadcasters. See Red Lion Broadcasting v. FCC – which now is ripe for history's constitutional dustbin.
Moreover, with the current focus on the FCC's "news distortion" rule – a prohibition grounded in the FCC's public interest authority – it's worth recalling the April 2018 letter to then-FCC Chairman Ajit Pai signed by twelve Senate Democrats. That letter urged the FCC to consider sanctioning Sinclair Broadcasting Group, including revoking its broadcast licenses and preventing it from acquiring others, allegedly on the basis that Sinclair stations engaged in "news distortion" inconsistent with its public interest obligations. (Some of the twelve Senators who signed that April 2018 letter likely will participate in the December 17 oversight hearing.)
Nevertheless, my purpose today is not to tote up a scorecard demonstrating that one side of the aisle or the other, either political or philosophical, has abused the public interest standard more than the other side. That's backward-looking and likely counterproductive. Rather, consistent with the legislative purpose of an oversight hearing, I want to suggest – as I have many times previously –a more productive way forward.
The Commerce Committee Senators, led by their able, reformist-minded Chairman Ted Cruz, should use the oversight hearing, at least in part, to begin a serious discussion about replacing the FCC's public interest standard, upon which the agency's program content regulation, including its news distortion rule, is grounded. It should be replaced with some form of consumer welfare standard more attuned to the current competitive environment and technological dynamism of the marketplace. To the extent there are special considerations, such as maintaining the availability of communications relating to public health and public safety, or universal service, they can be delineated and dealt with discretely.
As I recounted recently in this recent FSF Perspectives, The Public Interest Standard: The Historical Legislative Context, "for almost two decades now, Free State Foundation scholars have been advocating that any meaningful updating of the Communications Act must include replacement of the public interest standard with one oriented towards a proper assessment of consumer welfare and marketplace competition." You can find links to that advocacy in that paper. And throughout the FCC's website you can find numerous papers each year documenting the dramatic changes, driven by relentless technological innovation, that have occurred in the media and telecommunications marketplace in the last several decades.
The long and short of it is that these conspicuous marketplace changes have rendered obsolete the original anti-monopoly and "scarcity" rationale that was the principal impetus for inclusion of the public standard in the Communications Act of 1934, which itself merely incorporated the standard from even earlier legislation.
The public interest standard, malleable and ambiguous as it is, has been a ready means for expanding the FCC's authority in the hands of those commissioners who wish to use it for that purpose. And, more particularly, for those who wish to use it in this way, it has been the means by which the agency has restricted speech, or preferred some speech over other speech, by regulating program content or threatening to do so. All under the claim of furthering the "public interest."
As far back as 2001, I argued in a law review article that the public interest standard is so indeterminate that it constitutes an unconstitutionally unintelligible delegation of legislative authority. The Supreme Court has yet to agree, but I suspect that Chairman Cruz might be sympathetic to the argument. Justice Felix Frankfurter, a New Deal acolyte, proved my point over six decades earlier in the landmark FCC v. Pottsville Broadcasting Co. (1940) case when he declared that the public interest standard "is as concrete as the complicated factors for judgment in such a field of delegated authority permit."
Read Justice Frankfurter's elucidation again. I challenge you to tell me what it means.
In other words, the public interest standard is standardless. And this means it is inconsistent with the rule of law and invites abuse. The Senate Commerce Committee should begin to consider replacing it with some form of consumer welfare standard fit for the Digital Age.





