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Net Neutrality Bill 38 Votes Short In Congress, and Time Has Almost Run Out (arstechnica.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Legislation to restore net neutrality rules now has 180 supporters in the U.S. House of Representatives, but that's 38 votes short of the amount needed before the end of the month. The Congressional Review Act (CRA) resolution, already approved by the Senate, would reverse the Federal Communications Commission's repeal of net neutrality rules. But 218 signatures from U.S. representatives (a majority) are needed to force a full vote in the House before Congress adjourns at the end of the year.

Net neutrality advocates previously said they needed 218 signatures by December 10 to force a vote. But an extension of Congress' session provided a little more time. "[Now that the Congressional session has officially been extended, members of Congress could be in town as late as December 21st," net neutrality advocacy group Fight for the Future wrote yesterday. "This means we have until the end of the year to get as many lawmakers as possible signed on to restore net neutrality."
A discharge petition that would force a vote on the CRA resolution gained three new supports in the past two weeks, but even if all Democrats were on board it still wouldn't be enough to force a vote. Republicans have a 236-197 House majority, and only one House Republican has signed the petition.

9 of 229 comments (clear)

  1. Both sides are bad... Oh wait.. by bit+trollent · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Except that Democrats are overwhelmingly in favor of Net Neutrality, while republicans are 99% opposed.

    Hmm it's almost like there is a clear difference between the parties an a critical issue at impacts all of us.

    You might even say that the bothsiderism that people who are stupid or intellectually dishonest constantly engage in is absolute fraudulent nonsense.

    1. Re:Both sides are bad... Oh wait.. by bit+trollent · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If by that you mean that I am able to correctly differentiate between the politicians looking out for our interest and the politicians who seek to destroy our internet, our country, and the concept of basic decency - then yes I have fallen into that trap.

      Perhaps you should try a little basic observation combined with critical thinking sometime.

      Unless you still haven't gotten bored of erroneously saying "both sides are bad"...

    2. Re:Both sides are bad... Oh wait.. by 110010001000 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Bullshit. Both parties were on board with Iraq, including Clinton. And we are still there and in Afghanistan. Democrats were on board with that one too. I can't believe anyone is this naive in 2018.

    3. Re:Both sides are bad... Oh wait.. by bit+trollent · · Score: 4, Informative

      The only real opposition for the war in Iraq came from Democrats, and very few outlier republicans.

      Obama opposed it, as did most Democrats.

      And it was the republicans in the Bush / Cheney that intentionally cooked up the intelligence on WMD that ensured the biggest war of the last generation was fought on a lie.

      But again, you would have to be able to see the obvious and distinguish between vastly different actions from different parties.

  2. Domocrats support NN, Republicans oppose by bit+trollent · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, lets see, almost all votes for NN are from Democrats, including centrist democrats. Only one single republican supports this legislation.

    So when you say to vote out the Clinton democrats you are telling us to vote out the people who actually signed their name to this legislation, while fail to even acknowledge that the republican party is 99% against net neutrality.

    This ridiculous claim that both sides are at fault when one is at fault while the other works to protect us is the exact reason that our country is in the mess we are in.

    I hope Bernie Sanders gets last place in the primary, tied with some other sore loser who can't tell the difference between his allies and his adversaries.

  3. Re:Wrong by Powercntrl · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Republicans favor the Net Neutrality we have today.

    Yeah, it's so fucking awesome to have a single choice of broadband provider, one which now has carte blanche to implement whatever means they deem necessary to squeeze more profit out of a market they've monopolized.

    Government regulation is not the best solution, but voting for regulation is all that remains when voting with your wallet is not an option. The fault is not with those of us who were forced into a corner and vote "left". The fault lies with businesses who have chosen not to play fairly at the game of capitalism. We're simply demanding they be held accountable.

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  4. Re:Still don't get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    That's not at all what it's about. It's the concept that your ISP should be considered as a telecommunication utility rather than a content provider. As such, they should not be allowed to selectively throttle your connection based on what media you consumed, but rather treat all bits as equal. We're paying for the connection already, and the entities we're connecting to are paying for theirs -- nobody is trying to get anything for free.

    They can still have data caps, but things like 0-rating to make their own content more desirable would also be illegal. Since most consumers only have 1 or 2 broadband choices, letting them take advantage of their natural monopolies does not lead to a competitive market.

    The repeal has far-reaching implications, as with it providers are free to throttle their competitors or even block any content they want to discourage -- we have to take them at the word for it that they won't. And we've actually seen them throttle competitors before, which is the entire reason NN was enacted in the first place.

  5. Re:Still don't get it by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 4, Informative

    What you described has nothing to do with net neutrality. NN is what keeps Microsoft from paying Comcast so that Bing loads faster than Google. It's horrible for start ups, as it puts a giant cost in the way of using their service. Plus, who wants Comcast deciding which sites they get to use at regular speeds, and which get arbitrarily slowed down.

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  6. More correction needed by hyades1 · · Score: 4, Informative

    It looks like the recent kick in the teeth Republicans got at the polls wasn't enough to educate them about what happens when Americans get annoyed with their government. Perhaps in a couple of years another electoral kick, this time straight to the balls, will get through to them.

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