"We
strongly urge the agency to only pursue consensus and
administrative matters that are non-partisan for the remainder
of your tenure," House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman
Frank Pallone wrote in letters to the two agencies joined by the
subcommittee chairs overseeing the agencies, Representatives Jan
Schakowsky and Mike Doyle.
The FTC held a meeting last month to discuss a pending antitrust
investigation into Facebook Inc, but the commission has not
decided yet whether to file a complaint, a person briefed on the
matter told Reuters at the time. It is not clear what impact the
letter may have on the probe.
Pai said last month he would move forward to set new rules to
clarify the meaning of a key legal protection for social media
companies after a demand by President Donald Trump and over the
strong objections of Democrats on the panel.
Trump lost his bid for re-election as media outlets declared
former Vice President Joe Biden, a Democrat, the winner.
Representatives for Pai and Simons did not immediately comment.
The two Democrats on the five-member FCC called on Pai to abide
by the letter.
"I urge FCC Chairman Ajit Pai to follow this past practice in
order to ensure an orderly transition of agency affairs," FCC
Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel said. "I look forward to
continuing to work on the routine and consensus matters
currently before the agency."
Fellow Democratic FCC Commissioner Geoffrey Starks agreed. "Our
congressional leaders have called for Chairman Pai to respect
this precedent, and I expect that he will abide by their
request," Starks said.
On Jan. 17, 2017, three days before Trump was inaugurated, the
two Democrats on the FTC voted to sue chipmaker Qualcomm Inc,
accusing it of breaking antitrust law. Republican Maureen
Ohlhausen voted against the measure. The other two seats were
empty. In September, the FTC filed a motion to rehear the
lawsuit it lost on appeal against Qualcomm.
(Reporting by David Shepardson and Diane Bartz; Editing by Chris
Reese and Jonathan Oatis)
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