Los Angeles Times

Warren bill would ban ‘mega mergers’

The proposal would also direct regulators to review deals going back 20 years.

- By Eric Newcomer and Joshua Brustein Newcomer and Brustein write for Bloomberg, whose majority owner, Michael Bloomberg, is also seeking the Democratic presidenti­al nomination.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) is drafting a bill that would call on regulators to retroactiv­ely review about two decades of “mega mergers” and ban such deals going forward.

Warren’s staff recently circulated a proposal for sweeping anti-monopoly legislatio­n, which would deliver on a presidenti­al campaign promise to check the power of Big Tech and other industries. Although the Trump administra­tion is currently exploring their own antitrust probes, the proposal is likely to face resistance from lawmakers.

According to a draft of the bill reviewed by Bloomberg, the proposal would expand antitrust law beyond the so-called consumer welfare standard, an approach that has driven antitrust policy since the 1970s. Under the current framework, the federal government evaluates mergers primarily based on potential harm to consumers through higher prices or decreased quality. The new bill would direct the government to also consider the impact on entreprene­urs, innovation, privacy and workers.

Warren’s bill, tentativel­y titled the Anti-Monopoly and Competitio­n Restoratio­n

Act, would also ban non-compete and no-poaching agreements for workers and protect the rights of gig economy workers, such as drivers for Uber Technologi­es Inc., to organize.

A draft of Warren’s bill was included in an email Monday from Spencer Waller, the director of the Institute for Consumer Antitrust Studies at Loyola University Chicago. Waller urged fellow academics to sign a petition supporting it. He said Warren was working on the bill with Rep. David Cicilline (DR.I.), the most prominent voice on antitrust issues in the House. Waller declined to comment on the email.

In Washington, there is some support across the political spectrum for increased antitrust scrutiny of large technology companies. Warren positioned herself as a leader on the issue this year while campaignin­g on a plan to break up Big Tech. She has repeatedly called for unwinding Facebook Inc.’s acquisitio­ns of WhatsApp and Instagram, along with Google’s purchase of YouTube and advertisin­g platform DoubleClic­k.

It’s not clear when a bill would be introduced or whether it would move forward in its current form. Cicilline has said he would not introduce antitrust legislatio­n until he concludes an antitrust investigat­ion for the House Judiciary Committee in early 2020.

Amy Klobuchar, a senator from Minnesota who’s also vying for the Democratic nomination, has pushed legislatio­n covering similar ground. Klobuchar plans to introduce additional antitrust legislatio­n soon, according to a person familiar with the matter who wasn’t authorized to discuss the plans and asked not to be identified.

Any proposal would face significan­t hurdles to becoming law, and Warren’s version could be particular­ly problemati­c because it promotes the idea that antitrust enforcemen­t is equivalent to being against big business, said Barak Orbach, a law professor at the University of Arizona who received a draft of the bill. “The way I read it is that Elizabeth Warren is trying to make a political statement in the course of her campaign,” Orbach said. “It’s likely to have negative effects on antitrust enforcemen­t, so I just don’t see the upside other than for the campaign.”

The bill proposes a ban on mergers in which one company has annual revenue of more $40 billion, or both companies have sales exceeding $15 billion, except under certain exceptions, such as when a company is in immediate danger of insolvency. That would seemingly put a freeze on many acquisitio­ns for Apple Inc., Alphabet Inc., Facebook, Microsoft Corp. and dozens of other companies. The bill would also place new limitation­s on smaller mergers.

Chris Sagers, a law professor at Cleveland State University, said the proposal would serve as an effective check on corporate power. “I don’t think you’ll have new antitrust policy until Congress says the courts have incorrectl­y interprete­d the statutes,” he said. “Someone has to do what Elizabeth Warren is doing.”

 ?? Scott Olson Getty Images ?? THE DRAFT BILL would extend anti-monopoly law, potentiall­y checking the power of Big Tech.
Scott Olson Getty Images THE DRAFT BILL would extend anti-monopoly law, potentiall­y checking the power of Big Tech.

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