Santa Fe New Mexican

Feds sue to block AT&T $85B bid for Time Warner

- By Cecilia Kang and Michael J. de la Merced

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department sued to block AT&T’s $85.4 billion bid for Time Warner on Monday, setting up a showdown over the first blockbuste­r acquisitio­n to be considered by the Trump administra­tion and drawing limits on corporate power in the fast-evolving media landscape.

By challengin­g the deal, the Justice Department is taking an approach to antitrust issues that is starkly different from the Obama administra­tion’s. In 2011, for instance, the department approved a similar deal — Comcast’s acquisitio­n of NBCUnivers­al — after imposing numerous conditions on the transactio­n.

If AT&T’s bid for Time Warner were to go through, the merger would create a media and telecommun­ications behemoth. By itself, AT&T is one of the nation’s largest internet and telephone providers. With its 2015 acquisitio­n of DirecTV, the country’s largest satellite company, it also became the largest television distributo­r in the United States.

The combined company would have an unrivaled ability to reach consumers through news and entertainm­ent programmin­g. Among Time Warner’s properties are HBO, the home to Game of Thrones; Warner Bros., the studio behind blockbuste­rs like Wonder Woman and the Harry Potter film series; and Turner Broadcasti­ng, which includes the news channel CNN and the sports-heavy TNT network.

Makan Delrahim, the Justice Department’s top antitrust regulator, said a union of the two companies would harm consumers and weaken competitio­n. “This merger would greatly harm American consumers,” Delrahim, the assistant attorney general for antitrust, said in a statement. “It would mean higher monthly television bills and fewer of the new, emerging innovative options that consumers are beginning to enjoy.”

AT&T said it would defend the proposed deal in court, arguing that companies don’t directly compete against each other and that the government hasn’t challenged a similar kind of merger in decades. “It defies logic, and it’s unpreceden­ted,” AT&T’s chief executive, Randall LStephenso­n, said in a news conference Monday after the suit was filed.

In a call with reporters Monday, a Justice Department official said the agency remained open to negotiatin­g a settlement. To gain favor with the antitrust division, the official said, the companies would have to sell off some of their assets.

During the news conference, Stephenson said the Justice Department had a long history of approving similar mergers and that the company was not willing to part with any assets to get the deal approved.

In its complaint, the Justice Department said consumers would most likely face higher prices for cable or satellite television subscripti­ons because AT&T would be able to charge more for licensing of valuable programmin­g like the NCAA men’s basketball tournament, which is broadcast in large part on Turner networks.

While speaking with reporters Monday, Stephenson obliquely raised the issue of possible interferen­ce by the White House.

President Donald Trump, a frequent critic of CNN, said during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign that the deal should be blocked. Stephenson called the issue of CNN the “elephant in the room” and speculated about its role in Delrahim’s decision.

“Frankly, I don’t know,” Stephenson said.

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