Sen. Josh Hawley unveils “trust-busting” plan

Axios

Corporate giants would be barred from acquisitions and century-old antitrust laws would get sharper teeth under a new proposal by Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) shared exclusively with Axios.

The big picture: Hawley is among the Senate’s most conservative members, but his attack on corporate power wouldn’t sound out of place on Elizabeth Warren’s or Bernie Sanders’ agenda.

  • That’s how deeply Republicans’ anger at what they see as out-of-control “censorship” by Big Tech and overreaching activism by “woke corporations” has alienated some of the party from its traditional big-business base.

Details: Hawley’s “Trust-Busting for the Twenty-First Century Act” would …

  • Ban mergers and acquisitions by firms with a market cap over $100 billion
  • Lower the threshold for prosecution under existing federal antitrust laws, replacing the prevalent “consumer harm” standard with one that emphasizes “the protection of competition”
  • Require companies that lose federal antitrust lawsuits to “forfeit all their profits resulting from monopolistic conduct”
  • Give the Federal Trade Commission new power to designate and regulate “dominant digital firms” in different online markets

What they’re saying: “This country and this government shouldn’t be run by a few mega-corporations,” Hawley told Axios. The Republican Party “has got to become the party of trust-busting once again. You know, that’s a part of our history.”

  • Hawley said “globalization” and “both parties getting comfortable with corporate consolidation” were responsible for a market failure that justifies strong intervention.
  • “We tried it the way that the big corporatists wanted,” he said, “and it hasn’t been a success for the American consumer, for the American producer, or for the American economy.”

Of note: Hawley’s plan is more than a salvo against Silicon Valley. Its rules on mergers, for instance, would cover dozens of U.S. giants in virtually every economic sector, from banking and health to retail and media.

Between the lines: Aren’t people going to be confused by this tough-on-business proposal from a member of the party of business? Hawley offers two responses:

  • “Trust-busting” was a Republican concept originally, under Progressive-Era GOP president Teddy Roosevelt.
  • Strong antitrust laws are ultimately about the sanctity of competition, and Republicans ought to embrace that.

What to watch:ย Hawley’s ideas might win some support from other populist Republicans, but the broader party would need a sea-change in thinking to embrace it. Democrats, meanwhile, are likely to prefer their own bills.

By Mike Allen,ย Scott Rosenberg

Read Original Article on Axios.com

The Thinking Conservative
The Thinking Conservativehttps://www.thethinkingconservative.com/
The goal of THE THINKING CONSERVATIVE is to help us educate ourselves on conservative topics of importance to our freedom and our pursuit of happiness. We do this by sharing conservative opinions on all kinds of subjects, from all types of people, and all kinds of media, in a way that will challenge our perceptions and help us to make educated choices.

Columns

Canada Should Become Our 51st State!

Canada is in the midst of a hostile takeover by globalists. They are implementing a destructive plan to collapse a free society from within.

A Semi-Automatic Rifle Ban or Not? In Colorado, It Depends Who You Ask

Coloradoโ€™s statute requires semiautomatic rifles and pistols to have fixed magazines that comply with the stateโ€™s ban on so-called large-capacity magazines.

Was 9/11 an Operation Northwoods Style False Flag?

Operation Northwoods was a 1961 false flag event proposal offered by the Joint Chiefs of Staff in conjunction with the CIA to kill some of its own American citizens.

Pope #267 Brings Good News and Bad News

If Pope Leo doesn't undo damage done by Pope Francis, more Catholics could leave the Church, seeing it as irrelevant in not following Christโ€™s teachings.

Epoch Survey Finds Broad Support for Medicaid Reformโ€“But Doubt Congress Can Deliver

Poll reveals support for reforms to Medicaid program, including work requirements and fraud reduction, with skepticism about Congressโ€™s ability to implement changes.

News

Another Air Traffic Control Equipment Outage Impacts Flights at New Jerseyโ€™s Newark Airport

Newark Liberty Int. Airport in NJ experienced another air traffic equipment outage, causing FAA to issue a temporary ground stop for all flights bound for the airport.

Judge Allows CIA to Fire Doctor Who Helped Enforce Military COVID Mandate

The CIA maintained that Adirim was not terminated over politics but because of โ€™multiple complaintsโ€™ from CIA staff about her conduct in the workplace.

Trump Unveils Accelerated Deportation Drive With 20,000 More Officers, UN Agreement

Trump announced the launch of Project Homecoming, a sweeping federal initiative aimed at accelerating removal of illegal immigrants from U.S.

FDA Approves 3 Natural Color Additives Amid Push to Remove Artificial Food Coloring

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved three color additives derived from natural sources for use in food products.

Supreme Court Poised to Grapple With Nationwide Injunctions on Trumpโ€™s Orders

One of the many lawsuits contesting President Donald Trumpโ€™s agenda will hit the Supreme Court for oral argument for the first time on May 15.

MTG: My Thoughts on the 2026 Senate Race

If Iโ€™m going to fight for a team, it will only be a team willing to lay it all on the line to save this country. ~ Marjorie Taylor Greene

Fed Interest Rate Cut Would be โ€˜Jet Fuelโ€™ for US Economy, Trump Says

President Donald Trump says the Federal Reserve cutting interest rates would be โ€œjet fuelโ€ for the U.S. economy.
spot_img

Related Articles