As the second Trump administration reaches its 60-day mark, it is a good time to take stock of the US antitrust agencies’ actions. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Department of Justice Antitrust Division (DOJ) have been busy despite the broader government shakeup. Enforcement patterns are emerging. For example, FTC Chairman Andrew Ferguson has been transparent about his priorities—health care, technology platform dominance, and labor. As the timeline below shows, he has wasted no time in implementing initiatives and enforcement in these areas. As for the DOJ, Assistant Attorney General Abigail Slater was sworn in last week, and her enforcement priorities will likely take more shape in the coming 60 days. The DOJ, however, has remained active, especially in the Sherman Act enforcement space.Continue Reading Antitrust in Trump 2.0—the First 60 Days

As COVID-19 antibodies begin flooding the immune systems of most Americans, it is important to remember the important role that hygiene has played over the past fifteen months. For many, the risks and dangers of the pandemic were kept at bay by hand washing, masking, and sanitizing after every new touch. That same kind of attention to hygiene is something federal contractors should retain as they are permitted to reenter a world filled with supply chain enforcement risk.
Continue Reading Prevention v. Cure: Supply Chain Hygiene Is the Key to Defending Enforcement