Trump Fires Two Democrats from US Federal Trade Commission

Move being seen as a direct challenge to a 90-year-old US Supreme Court ruling that protects independent agencies

Wed Mar 19 2025
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Key points

  • FTC is an independent agency founded 111 years ago
  • Its primary function is to stop unfair business practices
  • Agency designed to operate without direct control from White House

ISLAMABAD: President Donald Trump fired two Democratic commissioners at the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) on Tuesday.

The move is being seen as a direct challenge to a 90-year-old US Supreme Court ruling that protects independent agencies.

The agency was designed by Congress to operate without direct control from the White House, according to Democracy Docket.

“The FTC is an independent agency founded 111 years ago to fight fraudsters and monopolists,” Bedoya said in a social media post Tuesday, adding that he believed his dismissal was unlawful. “Now, the president wants the FTC to be a lapdog for his golfing buddies.”

The FTC’s primary function is to protect the US public against deceptive or unfair business practices.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, a White House official told AFP that FTC commissioners Alvaro Bedoya and Rebecca Kelly Slaughter were dismissed.

The FTC consists of five commissioners, typically representing both major political parties.

“See the president in court”

“The president just illegally fired me,” Bedoya wrote in a post on X, formerly Twitter. “This is corruption plain and simple.”

Bedoya vowed in an X post to “see the president in court” over the dismissal.

Layoffs of federal workers have been rampant since Trump took office in January and established a “Department of Government Efficiency” headed by billionaire Elon Musk, a senior advisor and key financial backer of the Republican’s campaign.

“The FTC is an independent agency founded 111 years ago to fight fraudsters and monopolists,” Bedoya said in a post. “Now, the president wants the FTC to be a lapdog for his golfing buddies.”

Under Trump and former president Joe Biden, the FTC has taken on Apple, Amazon, Google, and Facebook parent Meta over how they wield market power.

In an interview with Fox Business in February, newly appointed FTC Chair Andrew Ferguson confirmed that ongoing cases against Amazon and Meta would proceed, emphasizing his commitment to “holding Big Tech’s feet to the fire.”

Questions have lingered, however, on whether the Trump presidency will continue with the cases, given an apparent alignment between tech billionaires and the Republicans since he won last year’s election.

Major changes

Since that victory, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has made major changes at his company to bring it in line with Trump’s preferences. He has axed US fact-checking on Facebook, named Trump ally Dana White to Meta’s board and appointed a Republican advisor as head of global policy.

Amazon boss Jeff Bezos visited the president during the transition period and has sought to make his Washington Post newspaper less hostile to the president.

The billionaire has ordered the Post’s opinion section not to run columns opposed to “personal liberties and free markets,” and quashed its planned endorsement of Democrat Kamala Harris before the US election.

Musk, Bezos and other tech billionaires were given prominent places at Trump’s inauguration in January, with several making million-dollar donations to the committee organising the event.

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