Telecommunication deregulation; not as bad as it could have been
In January 1993, a few weeks after Clinton was inagurated, Alan Greenspan told the Clinton administration that the Federal deficit was 300 billion dollars. It was going to be impossible for Clinton to borrow more money unless he was willing to risk crashing the American economy. Horrified, Clinton decided to not enact the "tax cuts" he had promised the middle class who voted him into office. Those voters were angry. As a result, the 2004 congressional elections were won soundly by Republicans, led by Newt Gingrich's "Contract on America", which promised Americans the exact same tax cuts Clinton considered irresponsible.
This was a sea change in American politics. For the first time, voters were acting like consumers, not citizens. Getting what they personally wanted was their reason for voting, the overall well-being of the nation was barely addressed in the 1994 election. This was the Republican winning strategy, pandering people's personal desires, not building a strong nation.
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 came at a time when the Republican congress was undoing as much of Clinton's budgetary constraints as possible. getting anything done in such an obstructionist Washington is nearly impossible. ironically, George Bush is getting a lot more done today than Clinton was getting done in his second term with a Republican congress.
If it's any consolation, the version of the Telecommunications Act that was signed by Clinton was much less damaging than "Contract with America" version. Stipulations were negotiated by Clinton that cable and telephone companies would be mostly excluded from deregulation, and that new internet technologies would be open to new businesses rather than established monopolies. Also, cheap and guaranteed internet for schools and colleges were written into the legislation. Communacation technology for the disabled were also guaranteed as a national policy.
Politics is all about negotiating and in a hostile congressional climate Clinton successfully negotiated some improvements. The price was high, as the corporate sponsors of the bill pretty much got what the wanted. I believe, however, that the unregulated internet we have today is a result of Clinton's foresight. It is fortunate that the Telecommunications Act of 1996 happened whan it did. If it had happened just a few years later the internet would be a very different thing today.
So what we essentially did was use the radio stations as wampum in return for a free internet. In my opinion, we are much better off letting the corporations have the broadcast, since that is nearly obsolete technology anyway.