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Critics say Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan wanted to gut antitrust agency as favor to billionaires

Critics say Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan wanted to gut antitrust agency as favor to billionaires

Yahoo05-05-2025

Ohio U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan stands with dozens of people calling for stopping the vote count in Pennsylvania on Nov. 5, 2020 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. (Photo by)
U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio wanted to slip a sweeping measure into a spending bill that would gut the Federal Trade Commission. Critics say it's no coincidence that the FTC is suing mammoth health care conglomerates and tech giants like Amazon.
Jordan is chairman of the powerful House Judiciary Committee. Last week, it released a version of a bill that included tax cuts, federal spending cuts and more spending at the border.
It also contained provisions that would give Trump sweeping new powers to gut government regulations. It would also transfer funds and personnel currently controlled by the FTC to the Antitrust Division of the Justice Department — without the FTC's unique enforcement authority going with them.
The measure was abruptly nixed, but it would have effectively killed antitrust powers Congress created more than a century ago.
Amid abuses to consumers by big corporations, the Federal Trade Commission Act was passed in 1914. Antitrust enforcement by the Department of Justice dates back further, to 1903.
But the Justice Department is overseen by the attorney general, a presidential appointee. Attorneys general traditionally have had a high degree of independence, but Trump is said to be politicizing the Justice Department at a breakneck pace.
The FTC was created in part to be more independent. It's governed by commissioners from both parties who are appointed to fixed terms that can be renewed.
Earlier this year, Trump tried to fire the two Democratic commissioners, but they say the move was illegal, and they're fighting it in court. Antitrust advocates said Trump was doing that as a favor to his billionaire supporters such as Elon Musk.
The two Democratic commissioners, Alvaro Bedoya and Rebecca Slaughter, acted to block the Kroger-Albertson's mega-merger, and they voted to sue Amazon, saying it is 'illegally maintaining monopoly power.'
Under Jordan's leadership, the Judiciary Committee in 2023 attacked the FTC on behalf of Musk. He's the world's richest man, whom Trump is allowing to make deep cuts to federal programs for the elderly, veterans, the poor, and agencies that promote science and health.
'THE WEAPONIZATION OF THE FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION: AN AGENCY'S OVERREACH TO HARASS ELON MUSK'S TWITTER,' read the all-caps title of the Jordan-led committee's report.
A year earlier, the FTC had charged Twitter with using deceptively gathered data from users to target ads at them. If true, it would be added to the fact that an unofficial, Musk-run entity is now collecting much more sensitive government data. It's raised concerns among several federal judges who said such collections invite abuse and likely violate the law.
'One of Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency lieutenants working in the Social Security Administration has been pushing dubious claims about noncitizens voting, apparently using access to data that court records suggest (the so-called Department of Government Efficiency) isn't supposed to have,' NPR reported earlier this month.
The proposal from Jordan to gut the FTC could have halted major initiatives to regulate giant health conglomerates that own powerful pharmacy middlemen, said Bedoya, one of the commissioners Trump is trying to fire.
Jordan's office didn't respond to a request for comment on this story.
Each of the three conglomerates — UnitedHealth Group, CVS Health and Cigna-Express Scripts — is among the 15 largest corporations in the United States. Each owns a top-ten health insurer and each owns a pharmacy middleman known as a pharmacy benefit manager, or PBM.
Combined, the PBMs control nearly 80% of the insured drug transactions in the United States. They decide which drugs are covered and use that power to extract rebates from drugmakers. They also determine varying reimbursements to pharmacies — including ones owned by their parent companies as well as the pharmacies with which they compete. Critics — including four-fifths of state attorneys general — say they have a conflict of interest under the arrangement, and that they abuse it.
Last October, the FTC sued the conglomerates, saying they used their dominance in multiple parts of the marketplace to illegally jack up the price of insulin — a drug millions of diabetics need to survive.
The lawsuit comes after the agency in 2022 undertook a major investigation of the health conglomerates. In January, it released an interim report accusing the PBMs of using their dominance to instigate wild price hikes and possibly steer business to affiliated pharmacies.
Politico recently reported that Jordan said his move to consolidate the FTC into the Justice Department was meant to 'address the cost of over-regulation.'
'Part of our jurisdiction in Judiciary deals with regulatory concerns and so we are looking at … spending and costs associated with certain regulations. That's why that language is written the way it was,' Politico reported him as saying.
Many businesses facing regulation — and their advocates in government — have long focused only on the costs. But government regulation can also protect health, safety, the environment, economic stability and competition. Some researchers have said regulation can always be smarter, but its benefits far outweigh the costs.
In a social media post last week, Bedoya, the FTC commissioner, said Jordan's proposed changes to the agency served another agenda.
'This will gut the FTC,' Bedoya wrote. 'FTC is trying to finish a study that already showed how pharmacy middlemen mark up cancer drugs by up to 4,000%. It's also suing them for allegedly competing to raise insulin prices. If this passes I have no idea what'll happen to that study and lawsuit.'
Bedoya added, 'Take the lawsuit. The draft bill purports to transfer FTC lawyers and lawsuits to DOJ — but it doesn't transfer the laws that FTC enforces, or authority to enforce those laws. Look (at) page 98 — employees, assets, funding — but no authorities.'
Bedoya also said that when it created the FTC, Congress meant to augment the government's antitrust powers. Jordan's changes would remove the government's ability to police 'unfair methods of competition,' Bedoya said, implying that Jordan was trying to slash the government's power to police wealthy corporations in an era when the political influence of the mega-rich is exploding and the wealth gap is yawning.
'The purpose behind the FTC's creation in 1914 was to supplement the existing enforcement mechanism (and enforcement gap created by) the Department of Justice,' Bedoya said on X. 'When FTC was created in 1914, it alone was authorized to stop something called 'unfair methods of competition.' DOJ did not get this' under Jordan's proposal.
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