FCC wants to know if changes Pai pushed aided Sinclair-Tribune merger
Last April, the Federal Communications Commission, led by its Trump-appointed chairman Ajit Pai, eliminated a restriction that had capped how many stations media companies could own. Weeks later, Sinclair Broadcast Group announced a long-suspected deal to acquire Tribune Media for $3.9 billion. Anyone finding that timing suspicious wouldn’t be alone: For two months, the FCC’s internal watchdog has been investigating whether Pai and his aides improperly pushed to change the rules and timed it to help Sinclair, Representative Frank Pallone (D-NJ) confirmed to The New York Times.
For months I have been trying to get to the bottom of the allegations about Chairman Pai’s relationship with Sinclair Broadcasting. https://t.co/JGmRQp4VoN
— Rep. Frank Pallone (@FrankPallone) February 15, 2018
The extent of the investigation is unclear, as is whatever could result. The office of the FCC’s nonpartisan inspector general didn’t comment on “the existence or the nonexistence of an investigation” to The New York Times. In addition to Pallone, two aides to Democratic lawmakers confirmed the investigation on condition of anonymity.
The merger would’ve been subject to rules repealed last April, which prevented one company from owning stations that captured more than 39 percent of US households — aimed at preventing monopolies on markets. The Sinclair deal adds Tribune’s 42 American TV stations to the conglomerate’s 173, which would reportedly reach 72 percent of the country. While Sinclair currently plans to divest some of those to comply with remaining FCC rules, though it will likely have to part with fewer after chairman Pai trimmed regulations even more in November.
The FCC’s investigation is supposedly looking into whether Pai eased the rules explicitly to pave the way for Sinclair’s ambitions. According to a New York Times investigation published last August, the chairman of Sinclair met with Pai days before he was named FCC commissioner in January 2017 — reportedly, the former requested the latter reduce crackdowns on media consolidation. Soon after, Pai eased the first of what would be many regulations affecting ad revenue and growth limits for media companies.
Critics are especially concern since Sinclair has a clear political agenda that it has no issue presenting as “news.” The company has come under fire for pushing pre-packaged segments on local affiliates that promote a conservative agenda, but are never clearly identified as editorial or commentary. Instead are simply slipped into news broadcasts like any other report. In fact, John Oliver devoted an entire episode of his show Last Week Tonight to explaining its market dominance and agenda:
Source: The New York Times



