Santa Fe New Mexican

Breaking from tech giants, Democrats consider becoming antimonopo­ly party

- By David Weigel

A messy, public brawl over a Google critic’s ouster from a Washington think tank has exposed a fissure in Democratic Party politics. On one side there’s a young and growing faction advocating new antimonopo­ly laws, on the other a rival faction struggling to defend itself.

At issue is a decadeslon­g relationsh­ip between Democrats and tech companies, with Democratic presidents signing off on deregulati­on and candidates embracing money and innovation­s from companies like Google and Facebook.

Now, locked out of power and convinced that same coziness with large corporatio­ns cost them the presidency, Democrats are talking themselves into breaking with tech giants and becoming an antimonopo­ly party.

The argument had a breakthrou­gh last week when it was reported that Barry Lynn, a monopoly critic and longtime scholar at the Google-funded New America Foundation, was leaving and taking his 10-person initiative with him.

Lynn, who has been critical of Google, had praised European regulators for hitting the company with a $2.7 billion antitrust fine. The foundation, which has received more than $21 million from Google, removed Lynn’s comments from its website.

“A lot of people see this as a tipping point,” Lynn said of his departure in an interview. “This is something that’s upset people on both sides of the aisle.”

Soon after, Lynn’s new project, Citizens Against Monopoly, launched with a website that asked people to protest “Google’s unethical behavior” and pledged that “Google’s attempt to shut us down will fail.” New America’s president, Anne-Marie Slaughter, pushed back, warning that Lynn was starting a family feud at a moment when Democrats could not afford it.

“Barry’s new organizati­on and campaign against Google is the opening salvo of one group of Democrats versus another group of Democrats in the run-up to the 2020 election,” Slaughter wrote on Medium. “I personally think the country faces far greater challenges of racism, violence, a broken political system, and geographic and partisan divisions so great that we are losing any common sense of what we stand and strive for as a country.”

The Democrats’ anti-monopolist­s have quietly been winning the argument inside the party. During the Obama years they’d been routed, as Google’s executive chairman, Eric Schmidt, strongly supported the president, and the FTC abandoned an antitrust case against the company. Over the years, Schmidt gave $842,900 to Democrats, and less than half as much to Republican­s.

“Google was Obama’s Halliburto­n,” said Luther Lowe, the vice president of public policy at Yelp.

A shift began when Democrats began to look for their next president.

In October 2015, fending off a primary challenge from Sen. Bernie Sanders, Vt., Hillary Clinton wrote an op-ed for the business site Quartz in which she promised to “take a page from Teddy Roosevelt” and “stop corporate concentrat­ion in any industry where it’s unfairly limiting competitio­n.”

In June 2016, Lynn organized a conference where Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., argued that the next president, which most assumed would be Clinton, could reverse the Obama administra­tion’s lax antitrust policy. Democrats needed to consider the long-term implicatio­ns for consumers, for jobs, and for wages, she suggested.

“How do we get more competitio­n? And how do we do it without new legislatio­n that would require cooperatio­n from a Congress awash in campaign contributi­ons and influence peddling?” Warren asked. “We can start with a president and an executive branch willing to once again enforce our laws in the way Congress originally intended them to be enforced.”

Antitrust issues garnered almost no attention during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign. In April, Hart Associates conducted polling, circulated among Democrats and think tanks, that found an enormous opening for antimonopo­ly politics. The polling, which surveyed 1,120 voters overall and 341 from the decisive Rust Belt states, found just a slim majority saying Democrats favored “average Americans” over “large corporatio­ns and banks.”

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