Posted on 11/14/2014 11:34:23 AM PST by jazusamo
Full title: Judicial Watch Sues Federal Communications Commission for Records About Critical Information Needs Plan To Question Newsmen, Monitor Blogs
FCC commissioner Ajit Pai warned, the study would thrust the federal government into newsrooms across the country.
(Washington, DC) Judicial Watch announced today that on October 16, 2014, it filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit against the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) seeking any and all records relating to a controversial FCC Critical Information Needs (CIN) pilot study of how news media make editorial decisions on the stories they cover. The lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia ( Judicial Watch v. Federal Communications Commission (No. 1:14-cv-01728)).
According to the FCC, the Multi-Market Study of Critical Information Needs was designed to provide a comprehensive analysis of access/barriers to CINs in diverse American communities with special emphasis on vulnerable/disadvantaged populations. In a letter to the FCC, the National Association of Broadcasters termed the FCC proposal constitutionally questionable. And FCC commissioner Ajit Pai, in a Wall Street Journal op-ed, warned that the study would thrust the federal government into newsrooms across the country. In response to the controversy, the FCC in late February announced that it would suspend the study.
The Judicial Watch lawsuit, filed after the FCC failed to respond to a February 12 FOIA request, seeks the following:
Any and all records in the possession of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) relating to the Multi-Market Critical Information study to be conducted by the FCC, including, but not limited to, studies, memoranda and communications between FCC commissioners and/or staff members related to Multi-Market Critical Information Needs study.
The FCC announced the nationwide CIN study in May 2013, claiming its purpose was to ascertain the process by which stories are selected perceived station bias and perceived responsiveness to underserved populations. In a December 2013 letter to the FCC , House Energy and Commerce Committee chairman Fred Upton (R-MI) termed the CIN study an attempt to control the political speech of journalists and urged the agency to put a stop to this most recent attempt to engage the FCC as the news police. And former FCC commissioner Robert McDowell accused the agency of sticking the governments nose into what has traditionally been privileged and protected ground.
The questions FCC CIN agents were to ask private news media companies included:
The FCC plan also would have had government monitors crawling the Internet sites of newspapers, local governments, blogs, non-profits, and citizen journalists.
Once again we see the heavy hand of the Obama administration hovering over the First Amendments freedom of the press, said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton. Its little wonder that Reporters Without Borders recent survey of world press freedom ranked the United States forty-sixth, below even that of Botswana and Romania and only one position above Haiti. The FCC now says it has killed the study but we are skeptical especially since we now have had to sue in federal court to get information about this issue. Unfortunately, the study is simply the latest version of the Fairness Doctrine, a FCC regulatory scheme ended during the Reagan administration that was used to regulate political speech on radio and television. This time, true to the Obama administrations racialist agenda, the FCC sought to pressure media under the guise of racial diversity and community organizing language. This FCC scandal also echoes the Obama IRS abuse, which illegally targeted groups and individuals based upon their political philosophy. The FCC, which is charged with making sure regulated media companies obey the law, refuses to obey the Freedom of Information Act and tell the American people why it wanted to interrogate newsmen and monitor the blogs of everyday citizens.
Say what you will about Freedom Watch, without their persistence we would not even see the redacted memos and e-mails. The Marxists would run free of any restraint. Picture that world!
Say what you will about Freedom Watch, without their persistence we would not even see the redacted memos and e-mails. The Marxists would run free of any restraint. Picture that world!
And the difference between Obama and “Big Brother” is ...?
I guess I should also ask about the difference between the “big Government Liberal” and the antagonists in “1984” is ...?
Bump
Anyone want to gues whether “demographics” includes political leaning?
That’s where the lack of “diversity” is really obvious.
Yep, the demographics jumped out at me and it’s why I emphasized the questions.
to provide a comprehensive analysis...”
That word has turned into a bright red flag. “Comprehensive” seems to be a dressed-up “totalitarian”.
And remember folks CONGRESS could STOP it Cold if they wanted to. They are Complicit. Why is it that private organizations are forced to do the job of Congress?? They are Complicit.
What a Country
Judicial Watch has done some outstanding work. They're certainly right to compare this FCC scandal to the IRS scandal. Every single federal agency is a nest of vipers.
BTTT
Well done, Judicial Watch!
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