Every morning, Federal Communication Commissioner Anna Gomez says she checks her email “to see if I am going to work.”
The idea that Gomez can one day wake up on an email that is dismissed is not baseless. Two Democratic Commissioners of the Federal Trade Commission, which were set up to liberate another federal government agency, found that Trump was firing on them-though for no reason, the example of decades-old Supreme Court.
Now that they have only gone to the Gomez and Car Commission, since both Democrat Jeffrey Stars and Republican Nathan Smangton retired last week, the agency no longer has Quorum to vote on important steps. Only three members of the five -member committee can be from the same party, and when Trump has a Republican nominee candidate awaiting confirmation and another rumor, Gomes is not convinced that Trump will eventually move forward to nominate another Democrat. She says, “I haven’t seen her nominating a single Democrat for the entire administration.” Stuffy In a brief interview after a program with the Consumer Technology Association (CTA) in Washington, DC. “I just saw him sack them.”
One can assume that the agency chair on Gomez’s nationwide visit will criticize the office of the office in the FCC. But, she says, it’s actually a “good working relationship” with the car. She says, “This is the only what is.” “He knows I need to speak, and we have a relationship where I can tell him my concerns.” Does he have no sense of why Trump did not try to oust him? “No,” Gomez says.
“I didn’t see him nominating a single Democrat for the entire administration. I just saw him dismissing them.”
But with the loss of quorum in the FCC, more opposition points can be set up until a third commissioner is confirmed by the Senate. The FCC Bureau has been allowed to perform some work, called the Deligious Authority, but it is not considered that they will deal with the issues of the novel to handle the commission level. These are the types of things that Gomez think should wait for the quorum so that the FCC can vote on them, which can make a final decision that it can be reviewed in the court-level-level measures. Gomez has already criticized Verizon’s $ 20 billion Frontier Acquisition Bureau of approval as a “backroom” contract, and has warned that the proposed Sky Dennis contract review of the Paramount should not be handled in the same way.
During the CTA event, Gomez reacted temporarily whether the FCC had appropriate guards to stop conflicts with Musk’s companies, such as SpaceX, which operates Star Link Satellite Internet Network, which can benefit from some agency policy. Until recently, Musk had a comfortable relationship with Trump, and his involvement about it raised questions about the kind of information that he could access with his financial interests (the White House insisted that musky would withdraw from any possible dispute). “I can only imagine that our general advice will be very involved in making these decisions,” says Gomez, “As a commissioner, I do not have the perfect insights about these types of activities, but our chairman is the former general council of the agency and is fully aware of these responsibilities.”
Gomez says, despite his harsh position, he has been encouraged to see the support of people of different ideological backgrounds during his first amendment tour. “This is not a red or blue problem. This is a problem of right or wrong. This is a problem for our democracy and the first amendment.” “I think it is important that we speak and withdraw, because we can’t let it become stagnant.”


