Antitrust
The Chamber advocates for antitrust laws that benefit all consumers and businesses and do not target specific companies or industries.
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With the trial phase of the United States v. Google case complete, the court must now focus on determining a remedy that addresses specific unfair practices without stifling competition.
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Antitrust laws ensure competition in free and open markets, which is the foundation of any vibrant, diverse, and dynamic economy. Healthy market competition benefits consumers through lower prices, higher quality products and services, more choices, and greater innovation.
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The FTC should evaluate mergers based on the effects on competition — and not with a politically motivated agenda.
The U.S. Chamber submitted a letter to the Financial Times' Rana Foroohar in advance of her conversation with FTC Chair Lina Khan at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace event, “The Future of American Innovation.”
A government shutdown is the latest means by which the FTC plans to assert its politically motivated agenda against lawful, pro-competitive merger activity.
With economic uncertainty and international competition, now is not the time for political interference from states that would jeopardize American free enterprise.
The year ahead is shaping up to be eventful—complete with new faces, major court decisions, and lots of regulations—in the competition and consumer protection space.
The Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission revised final merger guidelines seek to rewrite decades of antitrust policy by declaring structural presumptions against mergers that increase market concentration and by downplaying the possibility of merger efficiencies.
This Coalition letter was sent to the Members of the House and Senate Committees on the Judiciary, on the FTC and DOJ's proposed changes to the premerger notification rules which would reject long-standing Hart-Scott-Rodino (HSR) Act standards.
This timeline shows the ways in which Chairwoman Khan has moved to silence dissent at the FTC and consolidated power in ways that call into question the independence of the agency.