A Republican senator isn’t happy with plans by the Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to divide a potential investigation into the biggest US tech firms.
Earlier this month, the DOJ and the FTC came to an agreement over the jurisdiction of potential antitrust probes into Facebook and Google. The FTC is going to lead a Facebook investigation, and the DOJ will take the lead in an investigation of Alphabet, Google’s parent company. The probes will be over competition concerns.
The Facebook investigation will look into whether it has taken part in illegal monopolistic operations, while the Alphabet query will follow a similar path. The FTC also has jurisdiction over a potential probe into Amazon while the DOJ has Apple.
The agreement between the two agencies, however, doesn’t mean that one gets to handle a whole company, but rather that both agencies agree to handle certain issues. Both the DOJ and the FTC have performed oversight of Google and Amazon in the past.
But in a statement announcing a hearing on antitrust enforcement, Senator Mike Lee, chair of the Judiciary Committee’s Antitrust Subcommittee, warned that dividing the work would cause a variety of problems.
“Given the similarity in competition issues involved, divvying up these investigations is sure to waste resources, split valuable expertise across the agencies, and likely result in divergent antitrust enforcement,” he said in a statement, according to Reuters.
However, Se
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