The Democratic Party’s platform hails a rural broadband project overseen by Kamala Harris, which—despite a $42 billion budget—has yet to connect a single user to the Internet. In 2021, Joe Biden tapped Harris to lead the Biden-Harris government’s taxpayer-funded efforts to subsidize rural Internet infrastructure. However, ground has yet to be broken on a single project—and will not be broken until at least 2025.
Despite the lack of progress, the 2024 Democratic Party’s platform claims that “under President Biden, we’re finally rebuilding our roads, bridges, ports, airports, water systems, electric grids, broadband, and more, paving the way for a great American ‘Infrastructure Decade’ that will create hundreds of thousands of good-paying union jobs.”
According to Federal Communications Commission (FCC) member Brendan Carr, after over 1,000 days, not a single person has been connected to the web through the Harris-led broadband project.
Complicating matters has been the Biden-Harris government’s insistence on burdensome regulations—including climate change mandates, union worker requirements, and Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) policies—which have halted progress on expanding rural Internet access.
Additionally, Internet Service Providers (ISPs) point to attempts by the Biden-Harris Commerce Department to regulate consumer rates in a manner beyond the agency’s authority as compounding the program’s ineffectiveness.
Commissioner Carr has warned that the government estimates for the Harris-led broadband project breaking ground even in 2025 are overly optimistic. According to Carr, the rural broadband projects won’t near completion in many underserved areas until 2030 at the earliest.