Speaker
Ryan’s Article One moment of truth By
Rick Manning, 8/15/16
When is a defund not a defund? Apparently,
whenever the Obama Administration decides it is inconvenient.
That is the issue that will likely
be at stake over the next six weeks as the Department of Commerce’s National Telecommunications and
Information Administration (NTIA) is
likely to proceed with their ill-conceived plan to give away governance over
certain Internet functions in the face of an express mandate that defunded the
activity.
Article One of the U.S. Constitution
gives the Congress the power of the purse, as a means to control and direct the
Executive Branch’s administration of the laws of the land.
Speaker Paul Ryan’s outline of his
vision for leading America forward explains the power of the purse in his
outline for his leadership called, “A Better Way” where he promises to “Give Congress and the people the
most say — and the final word — over who is spending their money, what it’s
being spent on, where it’s being spent, when it’s being spent, and why it’s
being spent.”
In the next six weeks, Ryan’s words
are going to be put to the ultimate test as NTIA intends to hand over Internet
governance to the government vendor, the Internet Corporation for Assigned
Names and Numbers (ICANN) which has heretofore managed the functions with
government oversight simply by not renewing their contract and ceasing to
perform the government’s oversight function.
The House Appropriation’s
Subcommittee Chairman responsible for NTIA’s budget, John Culberson (R-Texas),
is outraged
that the specific mandate against the
transfer in both of the past two spending bills signed into law by President
Obama has been effectively ignored.
In a letter to Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker, Culberson very
directly expressed Congress’ intent that the Internet giveaway not occur
writing, “Section 539 of the Fiscal Year 2016 Omnibus prohibits funds provided
in the Act from being used to relinquish the NTIA’s responsibility for the
authoritative root zone file and the IANA functions, and I will ensure this
section is fully enforced. As we have previously discussed, I continue to
oppose the use of any funds to plan for, prepare for, work on [the] transition
[of] the Internet Domain Name System functions.”
The Chairmen of both the Senate and
House Judiciary Committee’s, Senator
Chuck Grassley and Representative Bob Goodlatte respectively, jointly expressed their concerns about the
Obama Administration’s Internet giveaway writing on June 27, 2016,
“Despite the Fiscal Year 2016
Omnibus spending bill’s prohibition on NTIA using any funds in furtherance of
the transition, NTIA has been working to transfer the IANA functions by
devoting staff time and commissioning outside studies on the subject. Specifically
Section 539 of the FY2016 Omnibus states that funds provided in the Act may not
be used to relinquish NTIA’s responsibility for the Internet domain name system
functions, including responsibility with respect to the authoritative root zone
file and the IANA functions.
However, in NTIA’s recent ‘IANA
Stewardship Transition Proposal Assessment Report,’ NTIA states that, among
other actions, it ‘utilized a number of resources and tools’ to review and
assess the IANA stewardship proposal. Further NTIA states that it
utilized the DNS Interagency Working Group, comprised of 15 government
agencies, to ‘engage U.S. federal government agencies on matters related to the
IANA Stewardship Transition, including proposal review and assessment.’ As we
are sure you are aware, it is a violation of federal law for an officer or
employee of the United States Government ‘to make or authorize an expenditure
or obligation exceeding an amount available in an appropriation or fund for the
expenditure or obligation.’ It is
troubling that NTIA appears to have taken these actions in violation of this
prohibition [emphasis added].”
Yet in spite of the direction of
both the appropriator responsible for writing the defund which became law, and
both Judiciary Committee Chairmen, President Obama’s team at the Commerce
Department are highly likely to not renew the ICANN contract on August 15 with
the intention to transition these Internet functions against the express will
of Congress and the law itself.
The Administration’s dodge is
expected to be that they are not spending money by not renewing the contract,
which has the obvious flaw that the terms of the
October 1, 2012 National Telecommunications and Information Administration
(NTIA) contract with ICANN states:
“All deliverables under this contract become the property of the U.S.
Government.”
This means that failure to renew the
contract with ICANN would necessarily mean that the NTIA would have to assume
the functions that their vendor previously performed and take over the auctions
for new domain names and the management of existing domain name contracts,
functions that the federal government performs in other areas of its authority.
However, NTIA has no intention of taking over the work, instead, they are planning on giving ICANN the property of
the United States by walking away from Internet governance altogether. And this
is Speaker Ryan’s problem.
If Speaker Ryan allows the Obama
Administration to directly ignore Congress’ spending directives now, then any
future words about Article One and protecting the power of the purse are
rendered meaningless.
The Speaker has a simple choice. Stand
up for his appropriators, his Judiciary Committee chairman and indeed the
Constitution, by using every power at his disposal, including filing suit in
federal court to stop the administration’s giveaway, or set the precedent that
the power of the purse only matters when the executive branch chooses to follow
it.
While it won’t be on the front pages
of the national media, this time of choosing for Speaker Ryan is about much
more than Internet governance, it goes to the heart of whether Congress matters
at all, because if those whose powers are usurped won’t fight for them, they
don’t exist. Speaker Ryan, what say you?
The
author is president of Americans for Limited Government.
http://netrightdaily.com/2016/08/speaker-ryans-article-one-moment-truth/
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