Brendan Carr (lawyer)

Brendan Thomas Carr (born January 5, 1979) is an American lawyer who currently serves as a commissioner of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).[7] He previously served as an aide to FCC member Ajit Pai and as the FCC's general counsel. Carr also worked as a telecommunications attorney at the law firm of Wiley Rein.[8]

Brendan Carr
Commissioner of the Federal Communications Commission
Assumed office
August 11, 2017
PresidentDonald Trump
Preceded byTom Wheeler
General Counsel of the Federal Communications Commission
In office
April 2017[1]  August 2017[1]
Acting: January 2017-April 2017[1]
PresidentDonald Trump
Preceded byJonathan B. Sallet[2][3]
Succeeded byJennifer B. Tatel (acting)[4][5]
Personal details
Born
Brendan Thomas Carr[6]

(1979-01-05) January 5, 1979[1]
Washington, D.C.[1]
Political partyRepublican
Spouse(s)Machalagh[1]
EducationGeorgetown University (B.A.)
Catholic University of America (J.D.)

Biography

Carr holds a B.A. from Georgetown University and a J.D. from the Columbus School of Law at the Catholic University of America. He was a law clerk for Judge Dennis Shedd of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit.[9] He worked in private practice at Wiley Rein before becoming a legal advisor to Federal Communications Commission member Ajit Pai, whom he advised on wireless, public safety, and international issues. In January 2017, Carr became general counsel of the FCC. President Donald Trump nominated Carr to become a commissioner of the FCC in June 2017, and in August 2017, Carr was confirmed by the United States Senate.[10]

gollark: I also do this, but:- how often do the search queries contain things you dislike- how hard is it to scroll past it or whatever, given that average queries probably won't bring up much of that
gollark: I do not think search is a significant issue, and the logreading thing can be fixed.
gollark: I mean, you could shunt it to an archive channel via webhook things after however long, but that would have its own issues.
gollark: The precise time is tunable, after some amount of time it would probably cease to be discussed. And why should they *not* exist? The logreading issue is fixable as I said, search... maybe less so, but I'm not sure how many search queries actually turn up that stuff *now* and how big an issue it would be.
gollark: For logreading, it could probably put in a divider of some kind.

References

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