When the NFL says 87% of their games are free:
-That doesn't appear to be true based off the Committee's oversight
-What about the other 13% of games???
Fans aren't getting what was promised to them when SBA was enacted.
🔥@RepFitzgerald and @ClayTravis
When the Sports Broadcasting Act was enacted in 1961, the rationale was simple: to expand access to sports broadcasting.
But 65 years later, this has turned into professional sports leagues facilitating exclusive streaming agreements that force sports fans to pay more for less.
Consumers are rightly frustrated with how many subscriptions they need just to keep up with their sports teams. It's becoming an affordability issue.
The @JudiciaryGOP report released yesterday on the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961 makes it clear Congress should review it.
Conservative, pro-family groups that advocate for diverse viewpoints are not bigoted or hateful.
The SPLC knows this.
Yet it labels legitimate organizations as hate groups to silence dissent and chill First Amendment rights.
🎥: @RepFitzgerald
Please join me for tonight’s Telephone Town Hall! Looking forward to speaking with constituents about all the pressing issues facing WI-05.
Visit: fitzgerald.house.gov/live
Sports fans should not have to subscribe to multiple different streaming services on top of cable just to watch their favorite teams.
This segmentation is driving up costs and hurting fans, and it stems from the antitrust exemption granted under the Sports Broadcasting Act of
The NFL's Sunday Ticket is expensive.
Many fans pay hundreds of dollars for large NFL game packages but still miss some of their favorite team's games.
Read the Committee's new report on the Sports Broadcasting Act and its impact on American sports consumers ⬇️
The Chinese Communist Party has spent years exploiting the American economy to advance its own technological and military ambitions.
That’s why I introduced the Prohibiting Adversarial Patents Act alongside @RepMoolenaar and @repdarrellissa.
This legislation closes the door on
WATCH: @RepFitzgerald on incorporating non-bank competitors into the assessment of the market concentration:
“… [I]n recent years, merger reviews have often been conducted using competitive effects analysis that treat insured depository institutions as if they operate in an