A4 THE ASTORIAN • SATuRdAy, AuguST 6, 2022 OPINION editor@dailyastorian.com KARI BORGEN Publisher DERRICK DePLEDGE Editor Founded in 1873 JOHN D. BRUIJN Production Manager SAMANTHA STINNETT Circulation Manager SARAH SILVER Advertising Sales Manager GUEST COLUMN Big Tech is steamrolling newspapers G oogle and Facebook have enor- mous economic and politi- cal power in society — espe- cially over the news industry. Many ask if they have played a role in the misin- formation that erodes our free press and plagues our democracy. Google and Facebook have a duopoly of the distribution of digi- tal news content, which drives people to their platforms where they make money. The plat- forms hoard critical data and use clever tactics, like reframing stories in rich previews, to keep BRETT users on their sites – WESNER siphoning off the adver- tising revenue that small and local publishers need and weaken- ing their ability to be rewarded for their own content. Google and Facebook generated $4 million in U.S. advertising revenue every 15 minutes during the first quarter of 2022. That amount could fund hun- dreds of local journalists in every state in the country. It’s no wonder that, despite record news consumption, local newspapers across the country have seen dimin- ished revenues – leading many to lay off journalists or go out of business. Local newspapers simply can’t compete with these national platforms, Google and Facebook. The imbalance of power between these platforms and local newspapers – let alone any single local paper – is so vast that newspapers can- not negotiate the exploitation of news. But antitrust laws shield Google and Facebook from the possibility of news publishers working together to demand better terms. No company should have this much control over the news. Congress must take action to curb undue influence of Big Tech on the news media industry – and the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act aims to do just that. The legislation is specifically designed to address Google’s and Facebook’s anticompetitive prac- tices. The proposal would provide a Jeff Chiu/AP Photo Google and Facebook have a duopoly of the distribution of digital news content. MEMBERS OF CONGRESS ON BOTH SIDES OF THE AISLE AGREE: WE NEED TO PASS THE LEgISLATION TO ENSuRE THAT PUBLISHERS — ESPECIALLY SMALL AND LOCAL PUBLISHERS — ARE TREATED FAIRLY AND CAN SERVE THEIR COMMUNITIES. temporary, limited antitrust safe har- bor for small and local news publish- ers to collectively negotiate with Face- book and Google for fair compensation for the use of their content. The policy also incentivizes and rewards publish- ers who invest in their journalists and newsroom personnel, awarding outlets with demonstrated investments in their staff a larger portion of the funds that result from the negotiations. By addressing Google’s and Face- book’s monopoly power and ensur- ing more subscription and advertis- ing dollars flow back to publishers, the legislation not only protects and pro- motes quality news, but also encourages competition. In today’s partisan political climate, it is rare for Democrats and Republicans to agree on anything — but the Journal- ism Competition and Preservation Act is one important exception. Members of Congress on both sides of the aisle agree: we need to pass the legislation to ensure that publishers — especially small and local publishers — are treated fairly and can serve their communities. Brett Wesner is the chairman of the National Newspaper Association and president of Wesner Publications in Oklahoma. GUEST COLUMN Let’s party like it’s 1854 I f what follows is going to make sense vision. The party’s component tribes — to you, it might help to know I’ve each cherishing its particular sense of vic- timhood more than the general welfare — been a serious student of history since 1969 when a leprechaun-like dean put this demand conflicting priorities. The result? 18-year-old country boy into a grad-level A dozen “top priorities,” which, of course, seminar on the first 26 years of American means no priorities — except winning the constitutional history. next election. From that day until this, history Meanwhile, over the decades, has been the lens through which Republicans continued slouching I’ve tried to puzzle out what’s going toward Berchtesgaden. In my col- lege days, conservatives had been on in our world — and what we distinguished for intellectualism – might do about it. History also explains why, this William F. Buckley, Russell Kirk, year, I’m running for the Oregon Peter Viereck, etc. Legislature without party affiliation. In time, despairing of winning ‘RICK I’ve been around politics all my majorities through ideas, Republi- GRAY The Whig Party splintered in 1854 over slavery. cans embraced mere populism. The life — campaigning for Democrats party of Lincoln degenerated into and Republicans I respected. Until notion of the cataclysm toward which their a party of bigotry, superstition, greed and this year, I’d avoided running myself. But actions tended. adolescent narcissism. In time, this popu- 2022 feels different somehow. It feels, if I lism turned dangerous. Today, few Repub- Increasingly, this book struck me as a may say so, historic. I’ve long regarded America’s two-party licans can be trusted with the machinery of metaphor for our times. system as increasingly dysfunctional, but democracy. I found myself focusing on Chapter 10, as a young man, I tried to find my place And the two-party system? which introduces the only truly successful in it. My father, Frederick T. Gray, served In my youth, Democrats and Repub- third party in American history: the origi- nal Republican Party. And I began to find licans competed to offer alternative — 18 years as a Democratic Virginia state hope. but essentially positive — visions for the legislator, so I grew up in his party. But By 1854, America’s two-party system future. Now, they compete to be merely increasingly, the Democrats struck me as a had grown dysfunctional. The nation was the lesser of two evils. Such a debased ménagerie of tribes, held together by ruth- less, machine tactics. The Republicans competition offers Americans neither bitterly divided, primarily over one com- pelling moral issue, which neither party appeared to have room for a “progressive vision, ideas, nor hope. had the courage to address. Slavery. conservative” — a term coined by Ben- Wherever life took me, I pondered the jamin Disraeli and personified by Teddy Directly related to this moral issue was degeneration of the partisan duopoly. Over Roosevelt. In 1978, a young lawyer with the practical need for economic transfor- time, one volume of history demanded mation: from producing raw materials for ambitions of my own, I switched. repeated study: David M. Potter’s 1976 Republican Gov. John Dalton wel- European markets to industrializing here, Pulitzer Prize-winner, “The Impending comed me — appointing me secretary of feeding new factory towns from small Crisis, 1848-1861.” In his study of the the Commonwealth. I volunteered for John farms and ranches in the West, with every- years leading to the Civil War, Potter tells thing connected by rail. Warner’s U.S. Senate campaign, and got the story of ordinary politicians practic- ing everyday politics with only the vaguest One event finally disrupted two-party to escort his wife, Elizabeth Taylor, to sev- eral events. But within two years, Virgin- ia’s GOP was taken over by Reaganites — LETTERS WELCOME mostly segregationist former Democrats. Reading the writing on the wall, I quit the party. A year later, having pub- Letters should be exclusive to The to other letter writers should address licly opposed President Reagan’s jailing Astorian. Letters should be fewer the issue at hand and should refer to of striking air traffic controllers, I lost my than 250 words and must include the the headline and date the letter was job. writer’s name, address and phone published. Discourse should be civil. Another year on, I found myself in a number. You will be contacted to Send via email to editor@dailyasto- high-school classroom, sharing my love of rian.com, online at bit.ly/astorianlet- confirm authorship. All letters are history with a new generation. ters, in person at 949 Exchange St. subject to editing for space, gram- Since then, I’ve occasionally tried the mar and factual accuracy. Only two in Astoria or mail to Letters to the Democrats, working on behalf of candi- letters per writer are allowed each Editor, P.O. Box 210, Astoria, OR., dates including Gary Hart, Howard Dean month. Letters written in response 97103. and Elizabeth Warren. But it was always awkward. Democrats lack a unifying Kean Collection/Getty Images paralysis. In 1854, the Kansas-Nebraska Act opened all Western territories to slav- ery. Outraged anti-slavery politicians — Whigs and Democrats — quit their respec- tive parties, embraced former enemies and founded a new party. Within seven years, this new third party had put Abraham Lincoln in the White House and captured both Houses of Con- gress. Once in power, Republicans passed the Homestead Act, began building trans- continental railroads, and — aided by wartime demand and federally-chartered banks — began transforming America into the world’s greatest economy. They also won a war and ended slavery. Yet strangely, American students are routinely assured that third parties “cannot succeed” here. History tells us otherwise. A third party can succeed, if only in very specific cir- cumstances. Are these circumstances pres- ent today? Consider: • A broken two-party system? Check. • An urgent moral imperative? Saving our planet for future generations. • A related need to transform our econ- omy? Sustainability. To this student of history, we have arrived, again, at 1854. This is why, at 71, I’ve decided to run for office — independent of both par- ties. To see if my reading of history makes sense to anyone else. But more impor- tantly, for the sake of our future. Frederick “‘Rick” gray Jr. lives in Can- non Beach and is running as a nonaffiliated candidate for state House District 32.