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Rosenworcel Won't Comment on Carr Project 2025 Ethics Probe Request

FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel had “no comment" Thursday when reporters asked her about 16 House Democrats’ request that Inspector General Fara Damelin and federal watchdogs investigate Republican Commissioner Brendan Carr for potential ethics rules violations related to him writing the telecom chapter of the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025 policy report (see 2407170061). During a news conference Thursday, Carr largely repeated an earlier statement that his Project 2025 writing didn’t run afoul of ethics rules. FCC ethics officials “signed off on me” writing the Project 2025 chapter “in my personal capacity, which I did,” Carr told reporters. He also pushed back against lawmakers’ claims that identifying himself as a sitting FCC commissioner violated the Hatch Act. FCC ethics officials found “you are allowed to list your current position” in a biography accompanying text written in a personal capacity “among the other sort of biographical details that would be in a bio,” Carr said: Many of the ideas included in the Project 2025 chapter come from “ideas that I’ve put forward in a lot of different contexts, including testimony and in speeches. It's pretty basic stuff,” which isn’t “that controversial.” He later declined to discuss whether he agreed with a Project 2025 proposal that the FCC exclude stations affiliated with PBS and NPR from being designated as noncommercial educational stations, saying he was speaking during the news conference in his personal capacity. That proposal is included in a CPB chapter of the Project 2025 book that Carr did not write.