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Outgoing FCC chair: Don't go backward on net neutrality
Tom Wheeler. Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg
Tom Wheeler. Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg

Federal Communications Commission chairman Tom Wheeler is in line to have his signature accomplishments demolished by the Trump administration, so he understandably sounded a little irked in his final speech as FCC chair.

At an appearance at the Aspen Institute Friday morning in Washington, Wheeler made a case for preserving net-neutrality regulations that was rooted both in American history and in the economics of today and tomorrow.

“It now falls to the new FCC—and to those who advocate before it and the Congress—to determine the road they want to take from here,” Wheeler said. “One path leads forward, and the other leads back to re-litigating solutions that are demonstrably working.”

Neutering net neutrality

Wheeler spent most of his talk defending the net-neutrality rules that ban internet providers from blocking or slowing legal internet applications and sites, charging them for priority delivery of their bits, or otherwise using their control of connectivity to help some sites or hinder others.

The FCC’s adoption of these rules in early 2015 represented a stunning reversal of years of steadily weakening open-internet protections. Ever since, Big Telecom has been battling to undo those rules. An appeals court ruling last year upholding them seemed to end that argument—but then the election happened.

Lori Erlendsson attends a pro-net neutrality Internet activist rally in the neighborhood where U.S. President Barack Obama attended a fundraiser in Los Angeles, California, U.S. July 23, 2014. REUTERS/Jonathan Alcorn/File Photo
Lori Erlendsson attends a pro-net neutrality Internet activist rally in the neighborhood where U.S. President Barack Obama attended a fundraiser in Los Angeles, California, U.S. July 23, 2014. REUTERS/Jonathan Alcorn/File Photo

January 20 will bring Wheeler’s resignation as FCC chair and Donald J. Trump’s inauguration as president, leaving the commission with a Republican majority—and a GOP majority in the House and Senate—free to start clicking the “undo” button on the net-neutrality rules.

In Friday’s speech, Wheeler implored them not to do that.

“Where’s the fire?” he asked. “What happened since the Open Internet rules were adopted to justify uprooting the policy?”

Historical and business cases for an open internet

Net neutrality as a political argument is fairly novel—the term only entered wide circulation after a 2003 paper by Columbia University law professor Tim Wu—but Wheeler argued that net neutrality is not a new concept.

“The idea of an open network ‎goes back as far as the ‘first-come-first-served’ traffic management of the telegraph,” said Wheeler, who years before leading the FCC wrote “Mr. Lincoln’s T-Mails,” a 2009 history of President Abraham Lincoln’s use of that communications technology.

“Telephone networks’ common carrier status was an extension of this concept that was warranted by a behavioral legacy and a demonstrated exercise of monopoly power,” he said, adding that an open phone network “allowed America to go online.”