Press Release
Pinasabog ng Karaniwang Dahilan ang FCC sa Pagkabigong Ipatupad ang Sariling Mga Panuntunan
Iniiwasan ng Federal Communications Commission (FCC) ang responsibilidad nitong ipatupad ang matagal nang pederal na batas na nangangailangan ng mga broadcasters na ibunyag ang "tunay na pagkakakilanlan" ng mga sponsor ng political advertising, sabi ng Common Cause ngayon.
The nonpartisan government reform organization urged the FCC to revisit a recent staff-level decision rejecting a proposal that it enforce the statute, Section 317 of the Communications Act of 1934. The Georgetown University Institute for Public Representation is representing Common Cause, Sunlight Foundation, and the Campaign Legal Center in the filing.
Since its ratification in 1934, Section 317 has empowered the FCC to write rules governing “sponsorship identification” so that voters may know the “true identity” of political ad sponsors. The Commission has not updated its rules in decades, so they are inadequate in the post-Citizens United and McCutcheon environment of unlimited anonymous political advertising.
“It’s one thing that congressional gridlock precludes passage of laws to right the many wrongs our special interest political culture faces,” said former FCC Commissioner Michael Copps, now serving as special adviser to Common Cause’s Media and Democracy Reform Initiative.. “It’s quite another, and infinitely worse, to ignore laws already on the books that enable us to tackle these problems. What a crying shame! Where is the full Commission on this?”