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Norms Impact

Wait, why is the White House using Starlink to ‘improve Wi-Fi’?

A “donated” Starlink link routed into the White House rewires a core governance norm: executive connectivity should not hinge on gifts from a politically connected contractor.

Executive

Mar 18, 2025

Sources

Summary

The White House is using Starlink service, piped in from a government data center miles from the White House complex, as part of an effort to “improve Wi‑Fi connectivity.” The Executive Branch is normalizing reliance on a private, politically entangled telecommunications provider for operational connectivity inside the core seat of federal power. The practical consequence is a durable dependency channel—technical and ethical—created through a “donated” service that can reshape procurement norms, security assumptions, and public trust.

Reality Check

A “donated” communications service into the White House sets a precedent where private benefactors can embed themselves into the federal government’s operational bloodstream, eroding procurement integrity and our ability to trust that decisions are made for the public, not patrons. On these facts alone, criminal exposure is unclear without evidence of a quid pro quo, but the risk zone is obvious: federal bribery and gratuities laws (18 U.S.C. § 201) and honest-services fraud theories (18 U.S.C. §§ 1341, 1343, 1346) turn on intent and benefit tied to official action. Even if no chargeable bargain exists, routing executive connectivity through a “donation” from a contractor owned by a figure described as having unusual influence over the Executive Branch violates the basic anti–pay-to-play norm that protects our rights from quiet capture.

Detail

<p>White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the White House is working to “improve Wi‑Fi connectivity,” citing spotty cell service and “overtaxed” Wi‑Fi infrastructure on the property. The New York Times reported that the White House is using Starlink to address the issue.</p><p>The Times described an attempt by Chris Stanley, identified as a SpaceX security engineer, to go to the roof of the Eisenhower Executive Office Building to explore installing Starlink equipment, which triggered a Secret Service alarm. The Times further reported that the White House is not installing rooftop terminals; instead, Starlink service is being routed from a government data center located miles from the White House compound.</p><p>White House officials told the Times that Starlink “donated” the service. The Verge questioned why an additional internet service provider would be used to improve Wi‑Fi coverage rather than changes to internal networking such as additional access points or new cabling.</p>