National Post (National Edition)

Antitrust chief barred from Google cases in recusal push

Kanter prior worked for Alphabet rivals

- LEAH NYLEN

The Justice Department's top antitrust official has been barred from working on monopoly investigat­ions of Alphabet Inc.'s Google as the department wrestles with whether he must recuse himself because of his previous work for the search giant's rivals, according to sources.

Jonathan Kanter, a longtime advocate for antitrust enforcemen­t against Google, was brought in by the Biden administra­tion to tackle difficult antitrust investigat­ions into tech giants like Google and Apple Inc. that began under former president Donald Trump.

In November, Google urged the Justice Department to review whether Kanter should be recused from all actions involving the company because of his past work representi­ng its critics.

No decision has been made in the nearly six months since Kanter started the job on Nov. 16, while the department continues to waver over whether his involvemen­t represents a conflict of interest, one of the people said.

The department sued Google in October 2020 for allegedly abusing its dominance of the online search market in the most significan­t antitrust case against an American company in two decades. It's also preparing a second monopoly lawsuit over the company's digital advertisin­g business, Bloomberg has reported.

In private practice, Kanter represente­d News Corp., Yelp Inc. and Microsoft Corp., among others, who offered evidence to Justice Department antitrust officials that the companies said showed how Google's conduct harmed their business.

A Justice Department spokeswoma­n declined to comment, citing a department policy against confirming recusals. A Google representa­tive also declined to comment.

Federal ethics rules require an official “to avoid an appearance of loss of impartiali­ty in the performanc­e of his official duties.” But those conflicts, as well as a separate ethics pledge by the White House, can be waived on a case-by-case basis. Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar, for example, was granted a waiver to participat­e in a Supreme Court case regarding Harvard University's admission despite having been a lecturer at Harvard Law School.

Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta, Kanter's boss, will decide on whether or not he should be recused from the Google cases, two of the people said. Gupta herself received a waiver to oversee civil rights cases despite having lobbied both Congress and the Justice Department on behalf of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights.

In the meantime, Kanter's top deputy, Doha Mekki is acting as the decision maker on both the Google lawsuit and the active investigat­ion, two people familiar with the issue said.

Mekki, a seven-year veteran of the antitrust division, has already stepped into the deciding role in other cases where Kanter is recused, such as the agency's challenge of UnitedHeal­th Group Inc.'s proposed US$7.8-billion purchase of Change Healthcare Inc. and antitrust litigation between Apple Inc. and Epic Games Inc. Kanter represente­d rival health insurer Cigna Corp. and a yoga app whose executive testified in the Apple-Epic case before he became the top U.S. antitrust official.

The Justice Department's antitrust suit against Google is slated for trial in September 2023. The department has asked Judge Amit Mehta in Washington to sanction Google for improperly shielding sensitive business documents from regulators through an overly broad reading of attorney-client privilege. Google denies any wrongdoing. Both sides are to finish interviewi­ng executives and gathering documents later this month.

Kanter's possible recusal has been a hot-button issue that's straining relationsh­ips between the Biden administra­tion and progressiv­e Democrats, who advocate for aggressive action against the technology companies.

In January, Rep. Pramila Jayapal, a Washington State Democrat, and Senator Elizabeth Warren, a Massachuse­tts Democrat, criticized Google for what they called the company's attempts to bully Kanter into recusal.

On Tuesday, Warren criticized Google's attempts to persuade the Justice Department to recuse Kanter.

Laurence Tribe, a prominent constituti­onal law scholar at Harvard, wrote a public defence of Kanter, saying Google's recusal efforts “have little legal basis and strain common sense.”

Meta Platforms Inc. used similar conflict of interest arguments seeking to recuse Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan, but a judge dismissed those in a January opinion. “It is natural that the president will select a candidate based on her past experience­s and views, including on topics that are likely to come before the commission during her tenure, and how that administra­tor will implement the administra­tion's priorities,” Judge James Boasberg said.

Kanter “was a consistent proponent of vigorous antitrust enforcemen­t in the private sector,” said Jeff Hauser, founder of the Revolving Door Project. “In that world, it's not problemati­c to be on the same side. The Biden administra­tion found in Kanter somebody with a proven track record taking a set of concerns seriously that the administra­tion wanted to take seriously.”

 ?? VALERIE PLESCH / BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Jonathan Kanter, assistant attorney general of antitrust for the U.S. Department of Justice, entered his new job with an eye on reversing decades of lax enforcemen­t.
VALERIE PLESCH / BLOOMBERG FILES Jonathan Kanter, assistant attorney general of antitrust for the U.S. Department of Justice, entered his new job with an eye on reversing decades of lax enforcemen­t.

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