Categories
Politics

AT&T employed ally of Commerce Secretary Raimondo to foyer Biden infrastructure plan

John Stankey, CEO of AT&T

Mike Segar | Reuters

Telecom giant AT&T hired an ally of Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo to lobby officials over President Joe Biden’s infrastructure plan.

A lobbying registration report shows that AT&T hired Jon Duffy, the president of Rhode Island-based marketing firm Duffy & Shanley, in April. The document doesn’t say whether he will lobby congressional lawmakers or administration officials.

Duffy was a co-chair of Raimondo’s transition team after she was first elected in 2014 to be governor of Rhode Island. Records show that Duffy had never registered to lobby until his recent agreement with AT&T.

The lobbying report says that AT&T hired Duffy to focus on “issues related to broadband and The American Jobs Plan.”

Biden’s $2 trillion infrastructure proposal includes a $100 billion investment in expanding broadband access. The Senate Republicans’ most recent counteroffer included $65 billion for broadband.

The infrastructure lobbying comes during a pivotal time for AT&T. The company announced a $43 billion deal this month to merge its WarnerMedia division with Discovery.

AT&T so far in 2021 has spent just over $2.6 million on lobbying expenditures, according to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics. AT&T lobbyists have engaged with the Commerce Department, the Executive Office of the President and the Vice President’s Office, among other agencies.

In response to questions about the Duffy hire, AT&T told CNBC on Friday that it plans to focus lobbying efforts in part on working toward “accessible, affordable and sustainable broadband connectivity.”

“During the pandemic, U.S. networks performed much better than other countries,” a company spokesman said. “The country’s broadband networks rose to the challenge due to policies that promoted private sector investment in multiple technologies and networks. Americans are paying less and getting more.”  

Duffy’s public relations company already lists AT&T as a client on its website. Other corporate clients listed include Intel, Dunkin’ Donuts, Hallmark and Staples. Duffy did not respond to a request for comment.

AT&T announced in April a $2 billion commitment to help make broadband more affordable.

Raimondo has been a fierce advocate for investments into expanding broadband access.

“We need transformational investments in broadband to ensure that all Americans finally have access to affordable, reliable, high-speed Internet service. During the pandemic we have seen that high-speed broadband service is not a luxury, but a necessity for jobs, education, and health care,” Raimondo said at an April hearing in front of the Senate Committee on Appropriations.

The Commerce Department’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration announced earlier this month a $288 million grant program for wide-scale broadband infrastructure.

Categories
Business

France Employed McKinsey to Assist in the Pandemic. Then Got here the Questions.

In recent years, France has increased the use of consultants and created special budgets that the agencies can use to bring in external consultants if necessary. In 2018 McKinsey was selected as one of several consultants who can be hired by French agencies under a EUR 100 million pool contract. This meant that each of the agencies could choose one of the companies without having to get quotes for work.

The December contracts and another contract in mid-January totaling EUR 4 million originated from this combined agreement. McKinsey was asked to help define the distribution channels for the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, which must be kept at temperatures as low as minus 80 degrees Celsius during transport and storage. The company would compare France’s performance with other European countries. McKinsey experts would also help coordinate a task force on vaccination of officials from numerous agencies, with some decision-making chains involving up to 50 agencies.

Additional contracts saw Accenture, the global information technology consultant, implement the campaign’s surveillance systems, while Citwell, a French consultant, and the French arm of JLL, a UK-based company, were hired to provide “logistical support and assistance” for vaccine distribution . “

The government’s strategy focused on delivering the vaccines to 1,000 distribution points in France, from where the cans would be shipped in supercooled trucks to nursing homes, clinics and local mayor’s offices. Local distribution was seen as a way to overcome the caution of up to 40 percent of the population about vaccination.

In Germany, the program was simpler: the authorities decided to give the vaccine in 400 regional centers.

France had a million doses of vaccine in hand by the first week of January, but the delay in getting them into people’s arms became public knowledge. The campaign continued to lag as Pfizer and Moderna temporarily slowed additional supplies.

The pace has increased recently. More than three million of France’s 67 million people have now received at least one dose of vaccine and over 923,000 have been fully vaccinated. According to a New York Times database, France still lags behind neighbors like Germany and Italy with 4.7 doses per 100 people.