House lawmakers say Facebook, Google, Apple, and Amazon are monopolies that need to be more heavily regulated — and potentially broken up
- House Democrats said Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google have monopoly power that gives them unfair market advantages and proposed sweeping changes in a sprawling 449-page report published Tuesday.
- The report came on the heels of a yearslong antitrust investigation that culminated with testimony from the CEOs of the four companies before Congress in July. It criticized the CEOs, saying they were "evasive and non-responsive" during the testimony.
- The report singled out Facebook's collection of popular social-media apps, Google's dominance in search, Amazon's control of its marketplace, and Apple's authority over its iOS App Store as potentially monopolistic functions that should be more heavily regulated or perhaps separated from the companies.
- Republicans issued a response that endorsed some aspects of the report but disagreed with the recommendation to separate parts of the companies or block acquisitions.
Facebook, Apple, Google, and Amazon are monopolies that need to be more heavily regulated — and potentially broken up — House Democrats said in a sweeping report published Tuesday.
The report said each of the four companies "serves as a gatekeeper over a key channel of distribution" and "can pick winners or losers" throughout the US economy.
The report singled out Facebook's collection of popular social-media apps, Google's dominance in search, Amazon's control of its marketplace, and Apple's authority over its iOS App Store as potentially monopolistic functions that should be more heavily regulated or perhaps separated from the companies. It also said regulators should turn more scrutiny toward future acquisitions by the tech companies.
"Companies that once were scrappy, underdog startups that challenged the status quo have become the kinds of monopolies we last saw in the era of oil barons and railroad tycoons," lawmakers wrote in the report.
The 449-page report is the result of a yearslong investigation into the four companies led by the House antitrust subcommittee that culminated with Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai, and Apple CEO Tim Cook testifying before Congress in July.
In the report, Democrats criticized the CEOs, saying they dodged questions during the hearing. They also said the companies were slow and uncooperative in providing relevant documents requested outside the hearings.
"Their answers were often evasive and non-responsive, raising fresh questions about whether they believe they are beyond the reach of democratic oversight," lawmakers wrote.
The report stopped short of making specific recommendations as to how the companies should be separated but said new laws should be introduced to prevent the companies from operating in adjacent markets. Rep. David Cicilline, the subcommittee's chairman, has previously called for a "Glass-Steagall" law for the internet, referencing the 1933 law that separated commercial and investment banking.
Democrats said new laws should be passed to ban companies from giving their own products an advantage on platforms that they control, citing listings on Google's search engine and Amazon's marketplace as examples of anticompetitive behavior.
House Democrats added that regulatory bodies like the Federal Trade Commission have been severely underfunded and unable to adequately monitor the tech giants, calling for their budgets to be increased.
"These firms have too much power, and that power must be reined in and subject to appropriate oversight and enforcement. Our economy and democracy are at stake," they said in the report.
Republicans on the subcommittee didn't agree with all of the majority's conclusions. Rep. Ken Buck, a Colorado Republican, published a response to the report that objected to Democrats' calls for separating the companies. But Buck stressed that he supported the drive of the investigation and viewed the tech companies' behavior as anticompetitive.
"It is fundamentally anticompetitive to simultaneously serve as the only substantial marketplace operator, including setting terms, policies, and fees; host third-party sellers; and use marketplace data to launch and sell competitive products," Buck wrote.