OTI Statement on Ajit Pai鈥檚 Resignation from the FCC
On Wednesday, Ajit Pai will resign as chairman of the Federal Communications Commission. Pai joined the FCC in 2012 as a commissioner, and was elevated to chairman by President Trump in January 2017.
OTI opposed Pai鈥檚 actions on a range of issues, from his 鈥weed-whacker鈥 approach to consumer protection laws to his rubber-stamping of mergers that will raise prices and kill jobs. OTI sued to overturn Pai鈥檚 2017 decision to repeal net neutrality and the FCC鈥檚 authority over internet service providers. In 2018, OTI issued a report card on Pai鈥檚 first year, finding that he had weakened his agency鈥檚 ability to serve the American people. In September 2020, OTI sent Congress an updated review of Pai鈥檚 鈥渇ailed leadership.鈥
This week, OTI published on the legacy of Pai鈥檚 four-year assault on the Lifeline program, which helps low-income Americans afford phone and internet service. The paper also outlines a blueprint for the program鈥檚 recovery and growth under new leadership.
The following statement can be attributed to Joshua Stager, senior counsel at 国产视频鈥檚 Open Technology Institute:
鈥淲hen Ajit Pai became chairman in 2017, we said the American people needed an FCC that fights for them. Unfortunately, that鈥檚 not what we got with Chairman Pai. For the past four years, he embraced a radical agenda that rolled back consumer protections, rubber-stamped corporate wish lists, and even weakened his own agency鈥檚 legal authority.
鈥淭he full catalogue of Pai鈥檚 attacks on the public interest could fill a book. His four-year is just one example of the doggedness of his anti-consumer agenda. A federal judge called his approach to internet regulation鈥攚hich included repealing net neutrality鈥斺榰nhinged.鈥 All of this left the FCC toothless to help people when disasters struck, whether it was California firefighters battling wildfires or trying to connect after Hurricane Maria. Perhaps worst of all, he has been asleep at the wheel while millions of people suffer through the COVID-19 pandemic without access to the internet.
鈥淧ai was also an ardent opponent of transparency. He aggressively fought numerous FOIA lawsuits, concealing everything from about net neutrality to at least 2,000 complaints about people鈥檚 internet service during the pandemic鈥攁n ongoing concealment that Congress is .听
鈥淲e look forward to turning the page on this chapter of FCC history and urge new leadership to set a new course. The American people still need an FCC that fights for them.鈥