Coalition: FCC Nominee Gigi Sohn Needs a Second Hearing over Locast & Ethics Issues

Today a coalition of 18 center-right groups sent a letter to the Senate requesting a second hearing on Gigi Sohn’s nomination to the Federal Communications Commission after news broke of her involvement with the Locast settlement, conflicts of interst, lack of candor, and secret recusal agreements.

These are serious issues that senators must have the opportunity to investigate ​wholly in order to make an informed decision on how they will vote.

You can read the letter linked to here, and full text included below.


Dear Chairwoman Cantwell and Ranking Member Wicker:

We, the undersigned, represent a broad coalition of organizations with strong opposition to the nomination of Gigi Sohn for FCC Commissioner due to her conflicts of interest, lack of candor and secret recusal agreements. 

Conflict of interest: Recent reports[1] from Bloomberg Law on her position with Locast[2] show that on October 27, 2021, just one day after President Biden nominated her to serve as a Commissioner at the FCC, Sohn executed a settlement agreement between Locast and broadcasters—entities that she will regulate if confirmed by the Senate—that drastically reduced her organization’s financial liability from $32 million to $700,000.[3] 

Press reports widely discussed her potential nomination as early as the summer of 2021, well before the Biden’s October 26 announcement to nominate her to the FCC.[4]  Sohn knew the announcement was coming, and Sohn knew that the broadcasters knew that she was being considered as the likely nominee to serve as one of their regulators at the exact time when the parties were negotiating the settlement agreement.[5] It is not possible that the parties could have completed their settlement negotiations free from any thought that Sohn would soon be serving as their lead regulator. 

Sohn’s decision to execute the settlement agreement in this context raises a host of new ethical concerns and casts serious doubt on her qualifications to serve on the FCC. As a matter of good government, Sohn should never have been nominated while embroiled in litigation with the very entities she’d be charged to regulate at the FCC.  

Lack of candor: The Bloomberg report also revealed that Sohn appears to have misled the Senate Commerce Committee leaving Senators with the false impression that Locast paid the $32 million in full and that Sohn herself played a minimal role in the settlement.  

Contrary to Sohn’s representations, we now know that the $32 million was never paid because Sohn executed a settlement agreement that greatly reduced the liability to $700,000. 

Sohn chose not to share this information in response to repeated and detailed questions from lawmakers about the settlement.[6] She refused to provide a copy of the settlement agreement, in spite of Senators requests, without ever asserting that she was legally prohibited from providing it. A copy of the settlement agreement was later provided to the Senate by a different entity. Sohn’s evasive answers to the Committee fall far short of the transparent and forthright responses normally expected of nominees. 

Secret negotiations: As these concerns put her nomination in jeopardy, Sohn is trying to sweep them under the rug. According to news reports, Sohn is negotiating a secret deal with Senate Commerce Committee democrats and the broadcast industry to address her biases and conflicts of interest. The deal is rumored to include wide-ranging recusals from a large swath of media issues under the FCC’s jurisdiction. 

While it’s understandable that the broadcast industry would seek preemptive relief from a potentially hostile regulator, no such recusal deal could possibly address, on its own, the myriad ethical problems raised by Sohn’s nomination. Sohn’s attempt to negotiate recusal without disclosing the parameters or circumstances to other members of the Committee, who have the responsibility to cast an informed vote, continues to demonstrate her lack of candor and transparency. Without publicity of the recusal deals, the likelihood of actual recusal drastically decreases. The existence of these negotiations raises questions about what other policy areas under the FCC’s jurisdiction that Sohn would need to recuse from given a history of incendiary attacks against various regulated entities.  

We call on the Committee to hold a second hearing regarding new information on the Locast settlement and to make public the details of any recusal negotiations prior to holding a vote. This information is highly relevant to whether Sohn is fit to serve and worthy of Senate confirmation to the FCC, an agency with tremendous power over our economy and communications networks.  

Regards, 

Grover Norquist 
President 
Americans for Tax Reform 

Thomas Jones 
Founder 
American Accountability Foundation 

Phil Kerpen 
President 
American Commitment 

Edward Longe 
Policy Manager 
American Consumer Institute 

Jeffery Mazzella 
President 
Center for Individual Freedom 

Ashley Baker 
Director of Public Policy 
Committee for Justice 

Roslyn Layton 
Co-Founder 
China Tech Threat 

Jessica Melugin 
Director, Center for Technology and Innovation 
Competitive Enterprise Institute 

Matthrew Kandrach 
President 
Consumer Action for a Strong Economy 

Katie McAuliffe 
Executive Director 
Digital Liberty 

Adam Brandon 
President 
FreedomWorks 

Heather R. Higgins 
CEO 
Independent Women’s Voice 

Andrew Langer 
President 
Institute for Liberty 

Tom Giovanetti 
President 
Institute for Policy Innovation 

Seton Motley 
President 
Less Government  

Tom Hebert 
Executive Director 
Open Competition Center 

James L. Martin 
Founder/Chairman 
60 Plus Association 

Saulius “Saul” Anuzis 
President 
60 Plus Association 

David Williams 
President 
Taxpayers Protection Alliance 

[1] Maria Curi, “Biden FCC Nominee Settles Case That Spurred GOP Senator’s Fight,” Bloomberg,  (January 26, 2022) https://news.bloomberglaw.com/tech-and-telecom-law/fcc-nominees-settlement-undercuts-rationale-for-blocking-her 

[2] A service that was found to be illegally streaming broadcast content in violation of the Copyright Act 

[3] Ailan Evans, “Biden’s FCC Pick Gigi Sohn Cut Sweetheart Deal With Broadcasters One Day After Nomination,” Daily Caller, (January 26, 2022)  https://dailycaller.com/2022/01/26/gigi-sohn-fcc-locast-roger-wicker-joe-biden/ 

[4] Emily Birnbaum, “Speculation around FCC chair pick hits a new frenzy,” Politico, (August 5, 2021) https://www.politico.com/newsletters/morning-tech/2021/08/05/morning-tech-speculation-around-fcc-chair-pick-hits-a-new-frenzy-7; Martin Barwyck, “Six Months in, Biden faces a tricky choice in deciding on a new FCC chairperson,” TelecomTV, (July 22, 2021) https://www.telecomtv.com/content/access-evolution/six-months-in-biden-faces-a-tricky-choice-in-deciding-on-a-new-fcc-chairperson-42023/ 

[5] The Editorial Board, “Senate should take another look at Gigi Sohn,” Washington Times, (January 25, 2022) https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2022/jan/25/editorial-senate-should-take-another-look-at-gigi-/?utm_campaign=shareaholic&utm_medium=email_this&utm_source=email;  

[6] In response to a question for the record from Senator Wicker where he asked where the $32 million came from, Sohn stated, “The settlement funds come from amounts collected to fund [Sports Fan Coalition New York] operations after SFCNY pays its vendors.” She responded similarly to a question from Senator Blunt. These answers left the Committee under the impression that the $32 million judgment had already been paid or would be paid in short order. 

Photo Credit: “Gigi Sohn” by Joel Sage, licensed under CC BY 2.0