C. Twight, WHAT CONGRESSMEN KNEW AND WHEN THEY KNEW IT - FURTHER EVIDENCE ON THEORIGINS OF US BROADCASTING REGULATION, Public choice, 95(3-4), 1998, pp. 247-276
This paper presents richer contemporaneous evidence of Congress's role
in the passage of the Radio Act of 1927, the act which established th
e basic statutory framework that still governs federal regulation of b
roadcasting in the United States. Recent analysis finding the court's
decision in Tribune Co. v. Oak Leaves Broadcasting Station to have bee
n the cause of Congress's action on the radio bill is shown to rest on
an inaccurate chronology of congressional decisionmaking. More closel
y examining the actions of legislators upon whose votes passage of the
radio act depended, this paper contributes new evidence of strategic
orchestration surrounding the perceived ''chaos of the airwaves'' that
stimulated broadcasting regulation. Original congressional documents
show that, in a political context characterized by costly information,
intra-congressional manipulation of information costs was an importan
t factor in the adoption of the Radio Act of 1927. Personal ties betwe
en executive branch officials are shown to have spawned a key legal op
inion that prompted passage of the radio bill.