Dem. and Rep. Senators Introduce Bipartisan Neutrality Bill

January 9th, 2007 by tkarr

The fight for Net Neutrality has resumed in the opening days of the 110th Congress as Sens. Byron Dorgan (D-N.D.) and Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) today introduced the Internet Freedom Preservation Act of 2007.

Olympia Snowe

Olympia Snowe
(R-Maine)

The bill reopens the debate in Congress over Net Neutrality — the fundamental principle that prevents Internet service providers from discriminating online — and comes less than two weeks after AT&T’s concession to Net Neutrality conditions in its planned merger with BellSouth.

SavetheInternet.com applauds Senators Dorgan and Snowe for reigniting the essential Net Neutrality debate on Capitol Hill. Our elected officials now must act to keep the Internet free of gatekeepers who would destroy this revolutionary platform for free speech and economic innovation.

The American public has an overwhelming interest in seeing this bill pass into law, ensuring that the online marketplace of ideas remains open and vibrant.

“This bill represents the appropriate next step following the Net Neutrality condition the Federal Communications Commission placed on AT&T’s merger with BellSouth,” said Mark Cooper, the Consumer Federation of America’s director of research.

Byron Dorgan

Byron Dorgan
(D - N. Dakota)

“With the leadership of Senators Dorgan and Snowe, the Congress should act swiftly to make permanent the Net Neutrality conditions of the AT&T merger and apply them to all broadband providers,” added Jeannine Kenney, senior policy analyst for Consumers Union. “The legislation is the first step towards a national policy that will ensure that all consumers, not just the most affluent, have affordable access to high-speed Internet services.”

The Dorgan-Snowe bill also has the support of Senators Patrick Leahy (chairman of judiciary), John Kerry, Barbara Boxer, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Tom Harkin.

In the House, Rep. Edward Markey (D-Mass.) is expected to reintroduce a Net Neutrality proposal, which seeks similar requirements. An aide to the incoming chairman of a House Internet and telecommunications subcommittee, told Anne Broache of CNET News that it was not immediately clear when Markey would take this action. Meanwhile, House Energy and Commerce Chairman John Dingell (D-Mich.) said on Wednesday that passing Net Neutrality legislation would be a “high priority” this year.

= = = = =
Recommended: Harold Feld’s legal analysis of the Bill

One Response to “Dem. and Rep. Senators Introduce Bipartisan Neutrality Bill”

  1. Why Net Neutrality is Crucial for Entrepreneurship » Ready Fire Aim Says:

    […] I wrote before about the defeat of Senate bill HR5252, which would have dealt a major blow to network neutrality and changed the internet as we know it. There is still an uphill battle to be fought, however things are looking rosier. The November elections ousted many of the congressmen and women that were against net neutrality, a bipartisan neutrality bill has been introduced, and Ed Markey, chairman of the senate subcommittee that oversees telecommunication, has promised to keep the net neutrality ball rolling. […]

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Creative Commons License
Contact Us
Privacy Policy

No corporation, trade group or political party funds the SavetheInternet.com campaign.
Site designed and maintained by Free Press Action Fund | Hosting by SingleHop