San Diego Union-Tribune

FACEBOOK PETITIONS FOR FTC LEADER’S RECUSAL

Company does not want Khan as part of antitrust decision

- BY MARCY GORDON

Facebook is asking that the new head of the Federal Trade Commission step away from decisions on whether to continue the agency’s antitrust case against the social network giant, asserting that past public criticism of the company’s market power makes it impossible for her to be impartial.

Facebook Inc. petitioned the agency Wednesday to remove Chair Lina Khan from taking part in decisions on the FTC’s antitrust lawsuit against the company. A federal judge recently dismissed the suit by the FTC and one from a coalition of states, saying they didn’t provide enough evidence to prove that Facebook is a monopoly in the social networking market. The judge, however, allowed the FTC to revise its complaint and try again.

Khan has been a persistent critic of Amazon, Google and Apple, as well as Facebook.

FTC officials declined comment on Facebook’s motion, which came two weeks after Amazon requested that Khan be removed from taking part in antitrust investigat­ions of that company. The agency could be expected to respond formally at some point. Khan has said she would seek the opinion of FTC ethics monitors if issues arose of potential conflict of interest.

It’s not known how internal FTC rules on conflict of interest might be interprete­d in this case. On the face of it, though, “the fact that (Khan) has a point of view and has expressed it forcefully is not a basis for recusal,” said Stephen Gillers, a law professor at New York University who is an expert on ethics.

In its petition, Facebook cited a 1966 ruling by a federal court that it was a violation of due process for the FTC chair at the time to have participat­ed in a proceeding against the defendant company because he had earlier investigat­ed many of the same facts concerning the company as a congressio­nal aide.

As counsel to a House Judiciary antitrust panel in 2019 and 2020, Khan played a key role in an extensive bipartisan investigat­ion of the market power of tech giants.

The requests from Facebook and Amazon come as the four tech giants fall under extreme scrutiny and legislativ­e pressure from the FTC, the Justice Department, European regulators,

lawmakers in Washington, and, most recently, from an executive order from the White House.

“When a new commission­er has already drawn factual and legal conclusion­s and deemed the target a lawbreaker, due process requires that individual to recuse herself from related matters when acting in the capacity of an FTC commission­er,” Facebook said in its petition. “Chair Khan has consistent­ly made public statements not only accusing Facebook of conduct that merits disapprova­l, but specifical­ly expressing her belief that the conduct meets the elements of an antitrust offense.”

President Joe Biden recently installed Khan as one of five commission­ers and head of the FTC, signaling a tough stance toward Big Tech and its market dominance. At 32, she is the youngest chair in the history of the agency, which polices competitio­n and consumer protection in industry generally, as well as digital privacy.

Facebook said it was making the request “to protect the fairness and impartiali­ty“of the agency’s antitrust proceeding­s. “Chair Khan has consistent­ly made welldocume­nted statements about Facebook and antitrust matters that would lead any reasonable observer to conclude that she has prejudged the Facebook antitrust case brought by the FTC,” the company said in a statement.

Biden’s sweeping executive order on competitio­n in U.S. industries, issued Friday, includes a new policy of closer scrutiny by regulators of proposed mergers, especially by dominant Internet companies. Giant tech companies have snapped up competitor­s in hundreds of mergers in recent years, waved through by antitrust enforcers in both Republican and Democratic administra­tions.

The new order also asks the FTC to establish new rules on surveillan­ce by tech giants and their accumulati­on of users’ data. In addition, the agency is requested to write rules barring unfair practices

toward competitor­s in online marketplac­es.

Last month ambitious legislatio­n that could curb the market power of Facebook, Google, Amazon and Apple, and force them to sever their dominant platforms from their other lines of business was approved by a key House committee and sent to the full U.S. House. Some lawmakers and others critical of Facebook have cited its popular Instagram and WhatsApp messaging services as likely candidates to be divested from the core platform.

 ??  ?? Lina Khan
Lina Khan
 ?? WILFREDO LEE AP ?? Facebook has been under scrutiny from the FTC.
WILFREDO LEE AP Facebook has been under scrutiny from the FTC.

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