Rumors about the Fairness Doctrine shake up religious and talk radio
Published: August 9, 2008
WASHINGTON

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is making Christian broadcasters nervous.

Pelosi, D-Calif., said recently that she supports resurrecting the Fairness Doctrine, a 1949 Federal Communications Commission policy that required broadcasters who sent out specific messages to set aside time for opposing views.

Such a move would "really make it impossible to preach the whole counsel of God," said Rich Bott, the owner of Bott Radio Network in Kansas, which broadcasts Christian programming across 10 states.

It also, he said, would likely put him out of business.

Put in place nearly 50 years ago, the doctrine was an FCC regulation that policed the airwaves at a time when there were few other sources of information. It never carried the full weight of the law. By the 1980s, with the advent of cable television and multiple opportunities to air differing opinions, the policy fell out of favor and was finally ditched by the FCC in 1987.

Although Pelosi hasn't offered legislation to reinstate the policy, she has signaled that she supports its revival, and said that a bill introduced by Rep. Mike Spence, R-Ind., to permanently kill it will not be considered by the Democratic-controlled House.

If the Fairness Doctrine were to be reinstated by Congress, broadcasters would be legally forced to follow the old protocol -- one-third of the airtime given to one opinion must be offered free of charge to opponents.

"We've been in broadcasting for over 45 years so we remember what it was like under the previous regime of the so-called Fairness Doctrine," Bott said. "What we had to do then would be impossible today."

A half-century ago, Christians were a distinct cultural and political majority, and there were fewer dissenting views to accommodate. Numerically, Christians still hold sway, but they compete against large numbers of other faiths and points of view.

"If someone were to assert that God has ordained marriage as only between a man and woman that would be a controversial statement today," he said. "Someone will ask for time."

Such requests would place a unique strain on broadcasters, said William Van Alstyne, a constitutional-law expert at the William and Mary School of Law in Williamsburg, Va.

"A newspaper can print a reply or an op-ed piece, but with broadcasting it's fixed. It's 24 hours that are divisible into so many minutes, and if you're devoting them to X you can't devote them to Y," he said. "If a broadcaster has to subsidize its opponents, and the station is listener-funded, they're going to lose a lot of money."

Silencing Christian radio is not the goal of legislators who are pushing the "fairness" bill. Their target? Rush Limbaugh and friends.

When last year's immigration bill failed in the Senate, Pelosi and other Democratic leaders blamed its demise on talk-show hosts such as Limbaugh, who they said galvanized the public against it. Former Republican Sen. Trent Lott's complaint that "talk radio is running America" made the rounds on the blogosphere, and conservative radio pundits declared victory.

"Crushing the (immigration) bill had the feeling of a sort of crusade," said Mark Jurkowitz, the associate director of the Project for Excellence in Journalism. In the week before the bill died, nearly 20 percent of time on radio and cable TV talk shows went toward discussing it, according to a study by Jurkowitz's office.

Liberal groups, however, don't necessarily support reinstating the Fairness Doctrine either, and they say the political right's hold on the airwaves can be countered with healthy competition.

"It's not free speech. We don't support it, and most people on the left don't support it," said John Neurohr, the press secretary at the Center for American Progress, a liberal research group in Washington. "The bottom line is that we need to get better at talk radio."

Each weekday, conservative radio tops progressive content by 10-to-1, logging in 2,570 hours a day last year compared to 254 hours of liberal radio, according to a study by the Center for American Progress. Personalities such as Limbaugh simplify "wonky" Capitol Hill jargon for millions of listeners, said Neurohr, while progressives tend to cling to the big ideas. Radio audiences feel the difference, and left-leaning radio still has far to go in catching up with right-wing listenership.

The Fairness Doctrine would create only the illusion of a surge for liberal talk radio, Neuhrohr said, noting that some progressive hosts, such as Ed Schultz, manage to bring in high numbers simply because they're entertaining. Most critics say that the doctrine is unlikely to be reinstated and is being used by the left as an empty threat and by the right as a rallying cry. Still, Christian broadcasters are bracing for its re-emergence, said Frank Wright, the president of the National Religious Broadcasters.

"This is not the time to despair," he said. "If all these bad things happen, we're going to sue immediately."
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