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Special Report
Does Rupert Murdoch's DIRECTV
Own Sen. Ted Stevens?
The
powerful lawmaker pushes for an anti-cable TV provision after
being showered with oddly timed campaign contributions from
Murdoch
employees.
By Phillip
Swann
Washington, D.C. (July 10, 2006)
-- Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), the powerful chairman of the
Senate Commerce Committee, is pushing legislation that could
give the Rupert Murdoch owned-DIRECTV a huge advantage over the
cable TV industry.
Stevens has not explained why he supports the legislation, but
TVPredictions.com has learned that
nearly 10 percent of the senator's 2005-2006 individual
campaign contributions
have come from employees of companies owned by Murdoch, such as
News Corp., Fox and DIRECTV.
In addition:
* On one day alone (June 6, 2005), Murdoch employees gave $28,000
to Stevens' campaign, according to Federal Election Commission (FEC)
records.
* Of the 38 total Murdoch employees who have donated to
Stevens, 27 of them have not contributed to any other candidate
in this election cycle; most of the remaining 11 have donated to
liberal Democrats. Stevens is a conservative Republican.
(Corporations often 'encourage' their most loyal employees to
donate to certain candidates to take advantage of an election
law loophole; see below.)
*
News Corp. -- and employees who work for News Corp-owned
companies -- has donated more money to Stevens' campaign than
any other company, according to a TVPredictions.com analysis of
the FEC records. (Stevens is up for re-election in 2008.)
Federal campaign law prohibits a company from contributing more
than $5,000 to a single candidate per election. But the law permits each
company employee to donate up to $2100 individually, with no
limits on total company employee contributions.
This loophole allows a company to significantly increase
its total contributions to -- and influence with -- a single
lawmaker.
How DIRECTV Would Be Helped
As Senate Commerce Committee Chairman, Stevens is sponsoring a
new telecommunications bill that would require cable TV
operators to carry all Digital TV signals from local stations;
this is known as 'must-carry.'

Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska
The cable industry wants to only carry the station's primary
feed, saying the extra digital signals would take up too much
space on their systems. (The primary feed would offer primetime
network programming and other regularly scheduled shows; the
extra feeds might include special channels for local weather
broadcasts and Video on Demand services.)
But Multichannel News' Ted Hearn reports in this week's issue
that Stevens has inserted language in the bill that cable
operators would have to carry "any digital video signal." The
magazine quotes Stevens as saying the new language is intended
to impose digital 'must-carry' on the cable operators.
But what about the satellite TV providers, EchoStar and the
Murdoch-owned DIRECTV?
Multichannel News reports that Stevens' aides blocked an
amendment by Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) that would permit both
cable and satellite TV operators to carry just the "primary
video" feed rather than "any digital video signal."
Consequently, as Stevens' bill now stands, cable TV operators
would be required to carry all local Digital TV signals while DIRECTV
and EchoStar would not. If the language becomes
law, this would give the satellite TV operators more flexibility
in what channels and services they want to offer.
It also could save DIRECTV and EchoStar considerable money
because they wouldn't have to create space for the extra
channels.
Click for
Part Two: Was Stevens Paid Off?
To read the
Multichannel News
article, click
Stevens
And click
TVPredictions.com
to see the rest of today's Swanni Sez.
© TVPredictions.com
Phillip Swann is
president and publisher of TVPredictions.com. He has been quoted in
dozens of publications and broadcast outlets, including CNN, Fox
News, Inside Edition, The New York Times, The Washington Post, The
Chicago Tribune, The Financial Times, The Associated Press and The
Hollywood Reporter. He can be reached at swann@tvpredictions.com
or at 703-505-3064.
And
click TVPredictions.com to read more news and features on TV
technology.
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