US Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), one of Congress’s most outspoken opponents of strict net neutrality rules, has won a US Senate seat. Blackburn won 54.7 percent of the vote in yesterday’s election, defeating Democrat Phil Bredesen, who received 43.9 percent. The vote tally was about 1.23 million to 983,000.
Blackburn has been in the House since 2003, and chairs a key subcommittee that oversees telecommunications. She’ll leave the House and become a senator on January 3, 2019, taking over the seat vacated by Republican Bob Corker, who is retiring.
In her victory speech last night, Blackburn said the campaign shows that Tennesseans “want leaders who are going to be there to work with the president and keep this nation on the path to prosperity that we are on today. I want you to know I’m going to be one of those leaders.”
During the campaign, Bredesen called net neutrality “vital” and said that Internet access is “an essential utility.”
Blackburn’s “Open Internet Preservation Act”
Because Republicans maintained their Senate majority, Blackburn could play a key role in writing net neutrality legislation. Blackburn has authored several net neutrality bills the past few years, including the “Open Internet Preservation Act,” which would ban blocking and throttling but allow ISPs to create paid fast lanes and prohibit state governments from enacting their own net neutrality laws. The bill would also prohibit the FCC from imposing any type of common carrier regulations on broadband providers.


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