 Hi, I'm Kevin Trennicosta, a policy analyst with the Electronic Frontier Foundation. And I'm Ernesto Falcone. I'm the legislative counsel for EFF. And we're here to talk because the Senate just passed a resolution to save the 2015 open internet order, which was the FCC order that enshrined protections for net neutrality, abandoned blocking, throttling, and paid prioritization. So Ernesto, with this vote passed, what does that mean? So it's huge. I mean, it's huge because the United States Senate has officially put its stamp on where they think policy should be. And what that means next, now it's up to the House representatives to take it on from here. And we're currently in the House. 160 representatives have stated affirmatively that they'll vote for this, right? So it's really important that if you live somewhere where your representative hasn't come out in favor of voting for this, that you go and tell them. EFF can tell you where your representative stands at checkyourreps.org. So now that this vote has happened and it's moved to the House, what's the time frame? What's the timeline going forward? Most importantly, by June 11, the SEC's repeal of net neutrality takes effect. So once that day hits, then we will no longer be able to use protections. And the ISPs will then be free to engage in things like blocking, throttling, and I think probably most critical to them, picking winners and losers through paper monetization. What are the possible outcomes? So if it goes to the House and they say yes or no, and if they say yes, what happens? If they say no, what happens? So if the House, if 200, so going back a step, the means of forcing a vote in the House of Representatives right now is your House member has to sign what's called a discharge petition. The reason they have to do that is because Speaker Ryan has officially said that he personally will not allow this come up for a vote. That doesn't mean the House of Representatives will just not vote on it, it just means a majority of the House can override the Speaker. And as Kathy mentioned, 160 members of the House have already pre-committed to signing that discharge petition to move the bill forward. So we're looking at 58 more yes votes, positive affirmative commitments to vote on this bill. And at that point, we're gonna get to the president next. And with 86% of Americans in favor of net neutrality and a majority across party lines, it should be, you would think, a no-brainer. And so you should call and tell your representatives absolutely that you're in favor of net neutrality like millions of Americans are. So if it gets to the president, what happens? Do we know? So no one knows exactly how President Trump will decide on this. And that's to our benefit, right? He hasn't come out and said he will veto this once it gets to his desk. And I think that's because the fact that it's not just popular with one side of the aisle or the other, it's popular with Trump voters too. I mean, this is something when you're talking about 86% of the people are on one side of an issue, there's very few things in Congress that have that kind of lopsided public opinion. And that really comes down to, but a caution, don't take that for granted. What needs to happen from this point forward is you have to talk to your member of the House and demand that they vote yet, they have a vote on the Congressional Review Act. If enough members of the House feel pressure from people back home, which means going to their town hall, picking up the phone and calling their office, writing them an email and going to their district office. I mean, taking those steps to personally weigh in as they're constituent, that you expect them to be voting on this, those are the things we all have to do across the country to make this happen. A lot of people are gonna say, there's no way it's ever gonna come up to the House, but they underestimate, one, the internet freedom movement, I think, we're talking about millions and millions of people across the country. And it's still a political process at the end of the day. And so, with that, that neutrality is incredibly important. We're really excited that it passed the Senate and we wanna use that momentum to put pressure on the House. You can learn more at eff.org and you can check on the position of your representative at checkyourreps.org.