House GOP split over Big Tech antitrust: Jordan versus Buck

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The Republican Party has split on antitrust legislation in its approach to limiting the influence of Big Tech, with Reps. Ken Buck (R-CO) and Jim Jordan (R-OH) pulling the House conference in different directions.

With companies such as Google, Microsoft, and Meta growing in power and sway, House Republicans have become increasingly skeptical of the platforms. They have accused them of censoring conservatives and become worried that the companies are working with the government to regulate speech.

Buck described himself as a recent convert to supporting the breakup of Big Tech. He said he changed his mind on the subject after attending a 2020 hearing on competitors in the digital marketplace. “I went into that hearing thinking that the free market would address the issues that we were facing in this area,” Buck told CPR News.

Jordan opposed two of the most important bipartisan bills put forward by Buck, including the American Innovation and Choice Online Act, which would have prevented Big Tech companies from"self-preferencing" their own products on their platforms by providing regulators additional powers, and the Open App Markets Act, which would have required Google and Apple to allow third-party app providers on their platforms.

The conflict between the two approaches played a role in Buck being snubbed for the chairmanship of the Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on the Administrative State, Regulatory Reform, and Antitrust. Some observers had expected Buck to take over on that subcommittee when the GOP took over the House, as he had been the top Republican on the panel in the previous term. Jordan instead appointed libertarian Rep. Thomas Massie to lead the committee.

The choice of Massie over Buck led some conservative Big Tech critics to criticize Jordan. Jordan"is giving at least two more years of antitrust amnesty to trillion-dollar Big Tech monopolists that crush the competition, shutter small businesses, and cancel conservatives," tweeted Internet Accountability Project President Mike Davis.

 

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“They have accused them of censoring…” It’s not an accusation if they have , in FACT, censored political opinion fascist democrats don’t like…HELLO

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