Nadler & Pallone Raise Concerns Over T-Mobile/Sprint Merger Approval Process
Washington, D.C. โ Today, House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) and Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ) sent a letter to Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Ajit Pai concerning the troubling lack of transparency, and an apparent lack of appropriate process, leading up to the FCC's approval of the T-Mobile/Sprint merger. Nadler and Pallone are troubled by the allegation that the original analysis drafted by the FCC's merger task force may have been supplanted later with an analysis that downplayed the competitive harms of the merger. The Chairmen believe the FCC provided an insufficient opportunity for public review and comment on material changes in the record based on the consent decree between the parties and the Department of Justice, as well as additional information submitted by the parties to the Commission. "We are particularly concerned that the underlying analysis drafted by the merger task force based on the evidence submitted into the docket was altered by the Commissioners and replaced with an analysis that downplays the competitive harms of the merger," Nadler and Pallone wrote. "In addition, the failure to seek additional public comment after the parties entered into a consent decree with the Department of Justice raises additional procedural concerns." Nadler and Pallone also expressed concerns about ex parte conversations that took place between representatives of T-Mobile and the FCC Commissioners, the filings of which may not have complied with the FCC's ex parte rules. "Despite the clarity in the FCC's rules, many of the filings documenting those 25 ex parte conversations only include a listing of the subjects discussed. These descriptions are devoid of 'arguments,' as required by 47 C.F.R. ยง 1.1206, and run counter to the letter and spirit of the FCC's ex parte rules," Nadler and Pallone continued. "Simply from a public policy perspective, permitting the parties to provide such scant reporting in the record is a gross abrogation of FCC responsibility, and undermines the critical transparency that is a necessary part of this process." Nadler and Pallone are requesting answers to the following questions or requests by January 6, 2020:
To read the letter, click HERE. |
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