Windsor Star

Biden to name Google nemesis as antitrust chief

Lawmakers, experts want country to double down on policing Big Tech

- JUSTIN SINK and DAVID MCLAUGHLIN

U.S. President Joe Biden plans to nominate Jonathan Kanter as head of the Justice Department's antitrust division, the White House said Tuesday, the latest sign that the administra­tion is preparing a broad crackdown on large technology companies.

Kanter, who left one of the country's biggest law firms last year to start his own firm, is a longtime foe of Alphabet Inc.'s Google, representi­ng companies that have pushed antitrust enforcers to sue the search giant.

If confirmed by the Senate, Kanter would take over the division as it forges ahead with a monopoly lawsuit filed in October against Google and an investigat­ion of Apple Inc. over its App Store practices.

Kanter is the favoured candidate of a faction of lawmakers and antitrust experts who say the U.S. economy is plagued by monopoly power across industries, and that enforcers at the Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission need to more aggressive­ly police mergers and anticompet­itive conduct.

Kanter's nomination follows Biden's signing of a sweeping executive order designed to promote competitio­n across industries, including measures such as restrictin­g noncompete agreements for workers and allowing imports of prescripti­on drugs from Canada.

If confirmed, Kanter would become one of the top antitrust officials in the U.S., along with FTC chairwoman Lina Khan. Biden unexpected­ly elevated Khan to run the FTC after she was confirmed by the Senate as a commission­er last month. Khan, who was a Columbia Law School professor when she was appointed, is one of the most prominent advocates in the U.S. for more forceful antitrust enforcemen­t and breaking with the standard playbook for policing competitio­n.

Kanter is closely aligned with Khan as well as Tim Wu, who was appointed as a White House adviser on technology and competitio­n policy. Unlike Khan, who needs a majority of the five-member FTC to take enforcemen­t actions, Kanter will have the sole authority to file lawsuits seeking to stop mergers and challenge companies over practices that harm competitio­n.

While Kanter was under considerat­ion by Biden, supporters posted photos on social media of coffee mugs emblazoned with “Wu & Khan & Kanter.”

Kanter, who also previously worked as an antitrust lawyer at the FTC, left Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP last year to found Kanter Law Group. During the Obama administra­tion, Microsoft Corp. engaged him to push antitrust officials to take action against Google. More recently, he represente­d clients, including Yelp Inc., who urged the Justice Department to sue Google last year.

Kanter was an early advocate for more aggressive action against tech giants and for rethinking how antitrust enforcers analyze competitio­n in digital markets. In 2016, at an event about Amazon.com Inc. hosted by the left-leaning think tank New America, Kanter faulted antitrust officials for their failure to bring monopoly cases against dominant companies.

“Antitrust enforcemen­t is barely on life support,” he said. “When was the last time you can remember a major antitrust agency bringing a monopoliza­tion case? The reason you can't remember it is because they haven't done it.”

At a webinar last year hosted by the American Economic Liberties Project, an anti-monopoly group that advocates for breakups of tech companies, Kanter called a House report that accused tech companies of abusing their market power “transforma­tive” for describing how antitrust enforcemen­t has failed and outlining what to do about it.

“There is something we can fix right now,” he said. “We have laws. Those laws are in place. Let's enforce them, and let's enforce them regularly, with vigour, with passion, creativity and meaning. That is something that could change tomorrow.”

Lawmakers on Capitol Hill are taking steps to reform existing laws and give enforcers more authority to take on America's biggest tech companies. In June, the House Judiciary Committee advanced a package of bills that would place significan­t new constraint­s on how tech platforms operate, including that they divest businesses in some circumstan­ces.

If confirmed, Kanter would oversee the antitrust division's monopoly lawsuit against Google. The case, filed last year by the Trump administra­tion, accuses the company of abusing its dominance in internet search by using exclusive distributi­on agreements with Apple and other companies to shut out competitio­n. The lawsuit is scheduled to go to trial in 2023.

The Google lawsuit is one of two monopoly cases pending against the big tech platforms. The FTC last year sued Facebook Inc., arguing the company's acquisitio­ns of Instagram and Whatsapp should be unwound. A judge in June dismissed the complaint, saying the agency failed to support its claim that Facebook is a monopoly in the social media market. He gave the FTC until the end of July to fix the error and refile.

 ?? ANDREW KELLY/REUTERS FILES ?? Jonathan Kanter, the favoured candidate to head the U.S. Justice Department's antitrust unit, is expected to deploy more forceful antitrust enforcemen­t.
ANDREW KELLY/REUTERS FILES Jonathan Kanter, the favoured candidate to head the U.S. Justice Department's antitrust unit, is expected to deploy more forceful antitrust enforcemen­t.
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Joe Biden

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