Antitrust
The Chamber advocates for antitrust laws that benefit all consumers and businesses and do not target specific companies or industries.

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With the trial phase of the United States v. Google case complete, the court must now focus on determining a remedy that addresses specific unfair practices without stifling competition.
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Antitrust laws ensure competition in free and open markets, which is the foundation of any vibrant, diverse, and dynamic economy. Healthy market competition benefits consumers through lower prices, higher quality products and services, more choices, and greater innovation.
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Latest Content
Considering the broad scope of substantive issues raised in the RFI, the IFA and its members urge the FTC to extend the comment period under the RFI for an additional 60 days.
The Biden Administration seems determined to sideline consumers, and competition itself, from its competition policy.
The Chamber welcome the opportunity to provide the Canadian Government with comments in response to the consultation on the future of Canadian competition policy.
This Hill letter was sent to Members of the Senate Judiciary Committee ahead of the hearing entitled “Reining in Dominant Digital Platforms: Restoring Competition to Our Digital Markets.”
'A sweeping prohibition of noncompete agreements by the FTC was an unlawful extension of power that would have put American workers, businesses, and our economy at a competitive disadvantage,' President and CEO Suzanne P. Clark said as the Chamber scored a major legal victory.
This Hill letter was sent to Senators Warren and Whitehouse on the Chamber's stance on the FTC’s ban of noncompete clauses.
This Coalition letter was sent to the Members of the United States Congress, opposing the Federal Trade Commission's proposed rule on noncompete agreements.
Is the Federal Trade Commission working foreign authorities to deny due process?
FTC response to Chamber FOIA request for all records between the FTC and the European Commission or other foreign jurisdictions related to the Illumina-Grail transaction.
Congress must refrain from granting the Commission any further rulemaking or enforcement authority until it conducts a thorough investigation and oversight and puts forward reasonable guardrails around agency activity.