
Republican, Democratic FCC commissioners stepping down this week
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON: Two members of the
Federal Communications Commission
said Wednesday they plan to resign this week giving President Donald Trump two more seats to fill on the U.S. telecom regulator.
Republican
Nathan Simington
was confirmed in December 2020 to the five-member
FCC
after he led a regulatory effort during Trump's first term in office seeking to rein in social media companies, and could have stayed on until the end of the year.
Democratic FCC Commissioner Geoffrey Starks, who could have stayed until 2028, said he plans to step down this week.
Meanwhile the Senate has not yet voted on the nomination of Senate aide Olivia Trusty to serve on the panel. That could temporarily leave the FCC with one Republican and one Democratic commissioner.
Turnover at the FCC is common during changes in presidential administrations.
The departures come as Trump has pressured Republican FCC Chair Brendan Carr to strip CBS of its broadcast licenses after Trump sued CBS News seeking $20 billion over its editing of a "60 Minutes" interview in October 2024 with then-Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris.
Trump has fired Democratic commissioners on other independent agencies including the Federal Trade Commission.
Carr has rejected a bid from CBS, which is owned by Paramount Global, to dismiss the complaint alleging the Harris interview violated the FCC's "news distortion" rules. Paramount is seeking FCC approval for an $8.4 billion merger with Skydance Media.
He has given no timeframe for when the FCC might act on the merger.
In April, the long-time executive producer of "60 Minutes" Bill Owens said he was stepping down over concerns about editorial independence.
In January, Carr reinstated complaints about the "60 Minutes" interview with Harris, as well as complaints about how Walt Disney's ABC News moderated the pre-election TV debate between then-President Joe Biden and Trump.
The FCC also reinstated complaints against Comcast's NBC for allowing Harris to appear on "Saturday Night Live" shortly before the election.
Carr also pressured Verizon to roll back its diversity, equity and inclusion program before the FCC agreed to approve its $20 billion deal to acquire fiber-optic internet provider Frontier Communications.
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Time of India
40 minutes ago
- Time of India
‘Ready to facilitate for a reasonable fee': Russia mocks Donald Trump-Elon Musk feud, offers 'peace talks' & business haven for Tesla CEO
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Time of India
40 minutes ago
- Time of India
Trump, Musk, and the Big Beautiful Breakup
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First Post
43 minutes ago
- First Post
Why Trump and Nasa cannot afford to cut SpaceX contract over Musk feud
The feud raised questions about how far Trump, an often unpredictable force who has intervened in past procurement efforts, would go to punish Musk, who until last week headed Trump's initiative to downsize the federal government read more Elon Musk and President Donald Trump's violent feud on Thursday might have a significant impact on many US space initiatives and jeopardise around $22 billion of SpaceX's federal contracts. Musk's criticism of Trump's tax-cut and spending legislation, which started last week, was the starting point of the dispute, which swiftly got out of hand. When Musk talked in the Oval Office, Trump snapped at him. Then, Musk attacked Trump in a string of X postings, threatening to revoke federal contracts with Musk's businesses. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Musk took the warning seriously and announced that he would begin 'decommissioning' SpaceX's Dragon spaceship, which is used by Nasa. Hours later, however, Musk appeared to reverse course. Responding to a follower on X urging him and Trump to 'cool off and take a step back for a couple of days,' Musk wrote: 'Good advice. Ok, we won't decommission Dragon.' Still, Musk's mere threat to abruptly pull its Dragon spacecraft out of service marked an unprecedented outburst from one of Nasa's leading commercial partners. Under a roughly $5 billion contract, the Dragon capsule has been the agency's only US vessel capable of carrying astronauts to and from the International Space Station, making Musk's company a critical element of the US space program. The feud raised questions about how far Trump, an often unpredictable force who has intervened in past procurement efforts, would go to punish Musk, who until last week headed Trump's initiative to downsize the federal government. If the president prioritized political retaliation and canceled billions of dollars of SpaceX contracts with Nasa and the Pentagon, it could slow US space progress. 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In addition to not being in US interests, former Nasa Deputy Administrator Lori Garver said cancelling SpaceX's contracts would probably not be legal. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD But she also added, 'A rogue CEO threatening to decommission spacecraft, putting astronauts' lives at risk, is untenable.'