Republican senator criticises potential dual US antitrust tech probes

The decision to divide the work would cause a wealth of problems


Reuters June 13, 2019
The agreement is contingent on the upholding of a verdict in a July 2013 federal court ruling that Apple violated antitrust laws by orchestrating a conspiracy with five publishers to raise e-book prices. PHOTO: REUTERS

WASHINGTON: The Republican chairman of the Senate’s antitrust panel criticised plans by the Justice Department and Federal Trade Commission to potentially investigate four of the biggest US tech firms.

News broke earlier this month that the Justice Department would look at Alphabet’s Google and Apple while the FTC would probe Amazon.com and Facebook to determine if they abused their massive market power, setting up what could be unprecedented, wide-ranging probes of some of the world’s largest companies.

In a statement announcing a hearing on antitrust enforcement set for next month, Senator Mike Lee, a Republican and chair of the Judiciary Committee’s antitrust subcommittee, warned that the decision to divide the work would cause a wealth of problems.

Past enforcement could presage new probe of current digital giants

“Given the similarity in competition issues involved, divvying up these investigations is sure to waste resources, split valuable expertise across the agencies, and likely result in divergent antitrust enforcement,” he said in a statement.

The major technology companies face a backlash in the United States and across the world, fuelled by concerns among competitors, lawmakers and consumer groups that they have too much power and harm users and business rivals.

Senator Amy Klobuchar, who is running for president and is the top Democrat on the panel, said she is pleased with the potential probes.

US gears up for antitrust battles with Big Tech

“It’s critical that we and the American people have a good sense of what the agencies are actually doing to protect competition in this important part of our economy,” she said.

Separately, the House of Representatives Judiciary Committee opened its own investigation of competition in digital markets, with both Republicans and Democrats expressing concern about the power exercised by tech giants.

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