Trump's CNN attacks may hobble legal case
to block AT&T-Time Warner deal
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[November 10, 2017]
By David Shepardson and Jan Wolfe
WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - President
Donald Trump's broadsides against cable network CNN may complicate the
U.S. government's legal case if it decides to block AT&T's deal to buy
media company Time Warner, according to legal experts.
Trump's repeated claims that CNN produces "fake news" and other
criticisms of the network could hurt legitimate legal arguments the
Department of Justice may use to show the deal gives the company too
much power over media rivals and is bad for consumers.
"His comments have soiled the process," said John Kwoka, an economics
professor at Northeastern University. "If I were AT&T’s lawyers I would
certainly introduce them into the evidentiary record as meddling with
what is really a law enforcement process."
The fate of AT&T Inc's <T.N> $85.4 billion deal to buy Time Warner Inc
<TWX.N>, hatched in October 2016, looks set to end up in court as the
two sides have so far failed to agree on what conditions AT&T needs to
meet in order to gain antitrust approval.
Justice Department staff have recommended that AT&T sell either its
DirecTV unit or Time Warner Inc's <TWX.N> Turner Broadcasting unit,
which includes news company CNN, a government official told Reuters on
Thursday, on the grounds that a combined company would raise costs for
rival entertainment distributors and stifle innovation.
AT&T chief executive Randall Stephenson said on Thursday he would not
sell CNN to win antitrust approval and would fight the government in
court if the two sides could not reach an agreement.
"If we feel like litigation is a better outcome then we will litigate,"
Stephenson told the New York Times DealBook conference on Thursday. He
said the company had been ready to go to court the day the deal was
announced in October 2016.
TRAVEL BAN COULD BE PRECEDENT
The deal took on broader political significance soon after it was
announced when Trump attacked it on the campaign trail last year, vowing
that as president his Justice Department would block it. He has not
commented on the transaction since taking office in January.
Trump's aggressive campaign comments have harmed legal arguments of his
administration before.
Earlier this year, an appeals court refused to reinstate a ban on
travelers from a group of Muslim-majority nations on the grounds that it
illegally targeted people of one religion.
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The AT&T logo is seen on a store in Golden, Colorado United States
July 25, 2017. REUTERS/Rick Wilking
Explaining the decision, the chief judge cited a statement on
Trump's campaign website calling for a "total and complete shutdown
of Muslims entering the United States.” The U.S. Supreme Court later
partially reinstated the travel ban.
OVER BY APRIL
Stephenson has rejected the Justice Department's arguments against
the deal, saying it was a classic "vertical" merger that removed no
competitors from any market and denied the company would be too
powerful.
He said a combined AT&T and Time Warner would create a data and
advertising company competing against the newest and most disruptive
entrants into the media sector: Amazon.com Inc <AMZN.O>, Facebook
Inc <FB.O>, Netflix Inc <NFLX.O> and Alphabet Inc's <GOOGL.O>
Google, not other wireless phone companies.
Stephenson told the conference he has no reason to think Trump would
be a factor in the deal's approval and said he hoped the matter
would be settled well before the April 22, 2018 deadline when
parties can walk away from a deal.
The head of the Justice Department's antitrust division, Makan
Delrahim, said in a statement late on Thursday that he has "never
been instructed by the White House" on the AT&T deal.
AT&T told the Justice Department on Monday that it believed it had
complied with all legal requirements for the deal to be cleared, a
person briefed on the matter said. That sets a deadline for the
government to sue if it wants to block the merger. Officials said
that detail could be as early Nov. 27.
Shares of Time Warner closed down 1.6 percent at $87.05. AT&T shares
rose 1.6 percent to $34.00.
(Reporting by David Shepardson and Jan Wolfe; Additional reporting
by Anjali Athavaley, Subrat Patnaik and Aishwarya Venugopal; Writing
by Anna Driver; Editing by Bill Rigby and Chris Sanders)
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