The decision came two days after T-Mobile said it was ceasing all DEI practices at the company.
The Department of Justice (DOJ) no longer opposes the merger of T-Mobile and UScellular and has closed its investigation into the matter, the department said in a July 10 statement.
In May last year, the companies had announced an agreement in which T-Mobile would acquire โsubstantially all of UScellularโs wireless operationsโ in a $4.4 billion deal, T-Mobile said in a May 28, 2024, statement. The transaction was set to be completed by mid-2025, provided regulatory conditions and other requirements were met.
The DOJ investigated the matter, looking at how it would affect customers and the potential impact of consolidation in the wireless spectrum.
โAfter a thorough investigation, the Antitrust Division determined prudentially not to seek an injunction to prevent T-Mobile from closing on its proposed acquisition of UScellular,โ Assistant Attorney General Gail Slater from the DOJโs antitrust division said.
UScellular focuses on rural customers, offering plans and other services that the โBig 3โ telecommunications companiesโVerizon, AT&T, and T-Mobileโdid not offer and which its customers valued, Slater said.
However, the limited regional footprint and unique structural limitations within which UScellular functions led to the company being unable to โkeep up with the escalating cost of capital investments in technology required to compete vigorously in the relevant market,โ he added.
If this situation continues, it would lead to a โslow degradationโ in network quality for UScellular subscribers, according to Slater.
T-Mobileโs commitment to integrate the two networks to ensure faster data speeds benefits UScellular users, he said.
โAccordingly, the department concluded the loss of the local offerings that UScellular customers value was outweighed by the immediate improvements in network quality promised by this proposed transaction,โ Slater said.
The DOJโs decision came two days after T-Mobile sent a letter to Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr on July 8, notifying that the company has officially scrapped its diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs.