Chattanooga Times Free Press

FCC chairman backs deal between T-Mobile, Sprint in key endorsemen­t

- BY TALI ARBEL AND MICHELLE CHAPMAN

A key federal regulator says he backs T-Mobile’s $26.5 billion takeover of rival wireless carrier Sprint, a crucial step for the deal’s approval.

Federal Communicat­ions Commission Chairman Ajit Pai said Monday he supported the deal because the two companies promised to expand mobile internet access in rural areas and roll out 5G, the next generation of mobile networks.

While Pai’s backing is important, further steps remain. The full commission of three Republican­s and two Democrats must still vote, and the Justice Department must also clear it. State attorneys general also may move against the combinatio­n.

Pai said Monday that the combinatio­n will help bring faster mobile broadband to rural Americans.

The companies have made

promises on building out 5G and expanding rural broadband before, but now they are attaching timelines and agreeing to penalties if they fail to meet their commitment­s. For instance, the companies promise to make fast internet available to 99% of

Americans within six years after the deal’s close.

T-Mobile US Inc. and Sprint Corp. also said Monday that they would sell Sprint’s prepaid cellphone brand Boost Mobile to address antitrust concerns.

Several public- interest advocates dismissed the companies’ promises Monday as not solving the issues posed by industry consolidat­ion. Along with labor groups, the advocates argued that the deal will lead to price increases and job cuts. Democratic lawmakers have also been skeptical of the companies’ promises.

Just because the FCC seems ready to approve the deal doesn’t mean the Justice Department will, as the two agencies have different criteria. The Justice Department evaluates deals on whether they harm competitio­n and raise prices for consumers, while the FCC examines whether a merger fulfills “public interest” goals. Expanding internet access to more people could count as one such goal, for example.

David Cicilline, a Rhode Island Democrat who heads the House antitrust subcommitt­ee, called on the Justice Department to require that Sprint and T- Mobile show that the deal won’t harm consumers.

“Empty promises will not make this transactio­n a good deal for American workers and consumers,” he said.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ EVAN VUCCI ?? Federal Communicat­ions Commission Chairman Ajit Pai speaks during an April 12 event with President Donald Trump on the deployment of 5G technology in the United States in the Roosevelt Room of the White House.
AP PHOTO/ EVAN VUCCI Federal Communicat­ions Commission Chairman Ajit Pai speaks during an April 12 event with President Donald Trump on the deployment of 5G technology in the United States in the Roosevelt Room of the White House.

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