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FTC head Lina Khan fighting Big Tech, Big Pharma and Big Groceries | 60 Minutes

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As the youngest ever Federal Trade Commission chair, Lina Khan has taken on scores of companies and preached the perils of business monopolies. 

Her pursuit of big business represents a policy shift after a decades-long FTC hands-off approach  allowing most mergers and acquisitions. Under President Biden, however, the FTC and Justice Department have unleashed a crackdown and sued scores of big companies, including TicketMaster, Nvidia, Meta, Microsoft, Apple and Amazon. Some worry going after tech giants could have a domino effect, destabilizing the economy.

“But we also should worry about the destabilizing effect that can arise from companies believing that they’re above the law, and they can be reckless, take massive risks in ways that can crash the economy and then they can get away with just a slap on the wrist,” Khan said in a recent 60 Minutes interview with correspondent Lesley Stahl. “And that creates a destabilization, too.”

The shift in antitrust policy

The Federal Trade Commission was established to protect consumers and promote competition between businesses.

Since President Ronald Regan’s time in the White House, antitrust regulators have done little to interfere in many mergers and acquisitions. It was a policy adopted by all presidents since then, including former Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama. Then President Biden put an end to it. 

“We are now 40 years into the experiment of letting giant corporations accumulate more and more power, and what have we gotten from it? Less growth, weakened investment, fewer small businesses,” Mr. Biden said in 2021 — the same year he appointed Khan to the FTC.   

Lina Khan
FTC Chair Lina Khan

60 Minutes


It’s a revolution and Khan is its face. While still a law student, she wrote a paper for the Yale Law Journal called “Amazon’s Antitrust Paradox,” contending that even though its prices are low, Amazon is still a monopoly. 

Less than five years later, President Biden made Khan, 32 at the time, head of the agency that polices Amazon. 

Taking on the Big Five tech companies

Last year, the Federal Trade Commission and 17 state attorneys general filed an antitrust case against Amazon, alleging the retailing giant illegally wields monopoly power to maintain higher prices, hurting customers and weakening competition.

“Our investigation uncovered that Amazon’s illegal practices were actually raising prices for consumers because it had illegally muscled out rivals, locked them out of the market in ways that if you had more competition that Amazon hadn’t squashed, consumers would be even better off,” Khan told 60 Minutes. 

Amazon denies doing anything illegal and says if Khan wins, prices will go up.

Khan and the FTC have blocked, or tried to block, a number of Silicon Valley’s big companies from buying smaller companies. 

“In the technology markets, we went through a couple of decades where we saw over 800 acquisitions by the five big players, not a single one of which was blocked. And some of those we realize ended up leading to significant harm,” Khan said. 

Khan said the FTC has identified a string of mergers that were not blocked or challenged by previous FTC administrations, even though the current FTC under her leadership — and operating under Biden’s mandate — believe they are illegal.

Confronting pushback from companies 

The courts don’t always side with the FTC, and Khan lost a couple of big cases, including one against Microsoft and another against Meta.

While Khan is feared and loathed in many corporate boardrooms, and even viewed by some as a zealot and a bully, she says the FTC is doing its job by enforcing the law, adding that of the thousands of deals proposed every year, the FTC and DOJ collectively investigate “maybe 2% or 3%.”

That might not sound like a lot, but startup founders complain that she’s spooking investors so much that she’s stifling innovation. Others fear Khan chasing the tech giants will cause a domino effect. Earlier this month, the stock market plunged after it was reported that Khan’s counterpart at the Justice Department subpoenaed chip maker Nvidia.

FTC Chair Lina Khan
FTC Chair Lina Khan

60 Minutes


Khan is also facing lawsuits from corporations who want the FTC to be reined in, setting up a possible showdown at the Supreme Court over the fate of the agency.

“I think one challenge that agencies can face is when they shrink their own powers and authorities by not actually using the authorities that Congress has given them,” Khan said.

Khan’s fans — both liberals and conservatives

Even while dealing with pushback, Khan has fervent admirers. She attends events around the country that she calls her “listening tours.” She’s often swarmed by young people taking selfies, small business owners giving her cards, progressive politicians and union members. 

She’s also surprisingly popular with some MAGA Republicans. Sen. JD Vance, the Republican nominee for vice president, has expressed some admiration for Khan. 

“I don’t agree with Lina Khan on every issue, to be clear, but I think that she’s been very smart about trying to go after some of these big tech companies,” he previously said.

There’s even a nickname for conservatives who support Khan: Khan-servatives. 

Still, Khan is unlikely to keep her job if former President Donald Trump wins the election. It’s also unclear if Khan would keep her job if Vice President Kamala Harris wins. Some of Harris’ biggest donors are people who want Khan out of the FTC. 

“My focus is not listening to what CEOs are saying on TV,” Khan said. “It’s important in these jobs to really stay focused and block out a lot of the noise.”



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What to know about Susie Wiles, Donald Trump’s White House chief of staff

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Last week, President-elect Donald Trump announced his campaign co-chair Susie Wiles will serve as his White House chief of staff, the first woman — Republican or Democrat — ever to hold that position. Calling her “tough, smart, innovative…, universally admired and respected,” Trump credited her with helping him win both the 2024 and 2016 elections.

Behind the scenes

Wiles is known as a formidable political operative who prefers to work behind the scenes, rather than on any stage — or in front of cameras. In keeping with that, when Trump declared victory in the early hours of last Wednesday morning, he invited her to come to the microphones, but she politely declined. 

She’s managed to not just curry favor, but more critically, to remain in good standing with Trump, winning his trust while working in a high-profile campaign role, managing the ambitions, personalities and egos in Trump’s orbit. 

Relationship with campaign staff

Wiles is beloved by the Trump campaign staff, many of whom call her a mentor. 

“Susie Wiles is a tremendous advocate for President Trump and a great boss to those that work for her,” said Trump senior adviser Danielle Alvarez. “She knows how to bring people together.”

“For myself and countless others, having Susie Wiles as a mentor and a friend is a gift,” said Brian Hughes, another senior adviser. “The nation will see that with President Trump in the White House with Susie as the COS the next four years will be America’s best.”

Those who have worked for Wiles “will take a bullet for Susie,” said Carlos Trujillo, a campaign adviser who served as U.S. ambassador to the Organization of American States. Trujillo said most people don’t see Wiles’ motherly and grandmotherly side. “She always made sure her people were taken care of,” he said. “She’s very soft spoken, but she holds everyone accountable, and it’s always done through love and kindness but never a place of hate.”

Management style

Staffers say Wiles runs a tight and focused ship. Trump’s 2024 campaign did not go through the big, dramatic shakeups or infighting that characterized his previous campaigns. Wiles’ appointment signals that as president-elect, he wants to run his administration in a similar way. 

Wiles’ legacy, Trujillo said, is her ability to cultivate talent. “Susie in politics is the greatest coach of all time…she’s going to be able to recruit the best talent.” 

And while Wiles shies away from the spotlight, she made a rare comment on X when businessman Mark Cuban, in an interview on ABC’s “The View,” accused Trump of not associating with “strong, intelligent women.” In response, Wiles posted for the first time this year: “I’m told [Mark Cuban] needs help identifying the strong and intelligent women surrounding Pres. Trump. Well, here we are!”

Background

After Trump won the 2016 election, Wiles, who was the chief strategist in Florida for his campaign, was dispatched in late September of 2018 to help Ron DeSantis with his 2018 bid to be Florida governor. At the time, he was trailing Democrat Andrew Gillum in several polls.

After helping DeSantis win, however, Wiles was shut out of his inner circle, according to The Atlantic‘s Tim Alberta. Wiles told Alberta that working for DeSantis was the “biggest mistake” of her career. She returned to the Trump campaign and ran his Florida campaign in 2020, and then after his loss, she went on to run Trump’s Save America PAC.

As Trump’s 2024 co-campaign manager, Wiles, along with Chris LaCivita, hatched a plan to recruit, register and turn out Trump’s low-propensity voters, Alberta reported. During the primary campaign, they pursued people in the reddest areas of the country who liked Trump but weren’t habitual voters and in many cases, weren’t even registered to vote. During the general campaign, Wiles and LaCivita raised a volunteer army to take on the legions of canvassers paid by Kamala Harris’ cash-rich coffers.

Wiles is a native of New Jersey, the daughter of renowned the late NFL kicker and sportscaster Pat Summerall. Soon after she graduated from college at the University of Maryland, she worked for Ronald Reagan’s presidential campaign, and later went on to work in Florida politics. In 2010, she helped Sen. Rick Scott win his election against Democrat Bill McCollum, and she has also been a political consultant in Florida.





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Orientation for new members of Congress begins as government shutdown looms

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Orientation for new members of Congress begins as government shutdown looms – CBS News


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Orientation is underway in Congress for new members as important matters loom, including funding the government to avoid a shutdown. CBS News’ Scott MacFarlane reports.

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Some monkeys are still on the loose after escaping South Carolina lab

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Some monkeys are still on the loose after escaping South Carolina lab – CBS News


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More than a dozen monkeys that escaped a research facility in South Carolina are still on the loose. CBS News’ Dave Malkoff has the latest details on the quest to capture the remaining primates.

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