- Wagner-Hatfield amendment
Wagner-Hatfield amendment was a proposed
amendment to theCommunications Act of 1934 aimed at turning over twenty-five percent of all radio channels to non-profit radio broadcasters.Organization of American Historians, [http://www.oah.org/pubs/magazine/communication/mcchesney.html Media and Democracy: The Emergence of Commercial Broadcasting in the United States, 1927-1935] , Retrieved onApril 23 ,2008 ] The amendment, proposed by senators Robert Wagner ofNew York andHenry Hatfield ofWest Virginia , would have given the issue to the newFederal Communications Commission (FCC) to study and to hold hearings on the effectiveness of the amendment and to reported its finding to Congress.The amendment, was designed to take effect within ninety days of the creation of the FCC and was supported by educators who wanted more radio access. The radio lobby attacked the Wagner-Hatfield amendment fiercely. Initially, it appeared that the amendment would pass, but it was defeated on the Senate floor on
May 15 ,1934 by a vote of 42-23, mostly because the clause added to the communications bill that called for the FCC to study the viability of the Wagner-Hatfield proposal and report back to Congress the following year. The passage of the Communications Act of 1934 Congress effectively removed itself from the discussion of broadcast policy issues.References
*cite book | last = McChesney | first = Robert Waterman | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Telecommunications, Mass Media, and Democracy | publisher = Oxford University Press, US | date = 1993 | location = | pages = | url = | doi = | id = | isbn =0195093941
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.