New from @Robillard and me: A look at how, over a few years, the new antitrust crusaders gained traction in both parties, and won the support of Joe Biden from "the corporate state of Delaware."
Some news: @barrywlynn of @openmarkets says getting influence was "like pushing a boulder up the hill" until Elizabeth Warren reached out for a meeting. Lynn brought Teddy Downey, Lina Khan and Jonathan Kanter.
Warren gave a speech afterward that put the movement on the map.
“People were waking up every day with bruises all over their bodies. We helped them see the fist,” @barrywlynn of @openmarkets.
This is the ultimate story in "inside" activism. Rather than marches and stump speeches, the antitrust advocates wrote op-eds, legal notes and books, and held influential meetings -- all with the goal of exposing the damage wrought by "the misguided philosophy of Robert Bork."
Historical events pushed things along:
-- 2016 election took the shine off Big Tech for Dems
-- Google booting Open Markets from New America made a laughingstock of "don't be evil" motto
Re the latter: “It showed that Big Tech is no different than Big Tobacco," @matthewstoller
Trump talked a good game on antitrust, speaking out against the AT&T and Time Warner merger as a candidate. But his DOJ failed in their case against him.
And -- something I didn't know previously -- Rob Porter, the aide who resigned after a year amid domestic abuse charges, had been the point person on coordinating antitrust policy across agencies.
Still, the antitrust reformers' openness to, and communication with Republicans and conservatives has been a key to their success.
“They’re pretty savvy,” a GOP Senate aide said.
It hasn't hurt that now the political right also feels persecuted by Big Tech.
Behold Amazon's shuttering of Parler.
“This kind of stuff does breed a real enmity culminating in a desire for antitrust action ― taking a hammer to Amazon and smashing it to pieces," @emeriticus
More news: After Biden's win, @barrywlynn sent an essay he wrote about how Biden can change the country through antitrust to a couple dozen people in Biden's circle.
“In the Obama administration, how many people could we send it to? There was nobody,” Lynn said.
Cutting room floor: Lynn said that of the major Democratic presidential candidates, only Harris's team was unresponsive to requests for a meeting.
Buttigieg's team met with them, but he didn't end up embracing the ideas.
But plenty of Biden aides seen as being in the corporate-friendly New Democrat mode, such as Bruce Reed and Brian Deese, are now viewed as allies of the antitrust movement.
Cutting-room floor: The absence of Larry Summers, who hasn't embraced the new antitrust movement, has been key.
“One important part of this is that they don’t listen to Larry Summers,” @matthewstoller said. “He’s always been on the side of concentrated wealth and power.”
Even liberals credit Josh Hawley for forcing Merrick Garland to deny that Susan Davies, who has represented Facebook, was his pick to lead the antitrust division.
Biden has helped translate the academic speak into something people understand.
“An economist would call that monopoly power expressed through contractual practices,” a White House official said. “But I think President Biden would just call it ‘screwing the middle class.’”
Family farm advocates are even cautiously optimistic about Ag Secretary Tom Vilsack, who appointed CAP fellow Andy Green to a top post.
Still, the six Big Tech bills that Reps. Cicilline (D) and Buck (R) have advanced out of committee have an uncertain fate on the House floor. There is bipartisan resistance.
And Robert Bork Jr. is mounting the intellectual counter-offensive.
“Success is a world in which we don’t talk about [Amazon founder] Jeff Bezos every day,” @barrywlynn of @openmarkets said. “He’s less powerful. He’s less important. We don’t care about him.”
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I just heard @bobpetersonfarm speak to a group of supporters in Chilicothe.
He’s an 8th-generation corn and soybean farmer and state senator running to succeed Steve Stivers, who left just a few months ago. Special election is Tuesday.
This is a race w/ 11 candidates. One backed by Stivers (Jeff LaRe), one backed by Trump (Mike Carey), and backed by Rand Paul (Ron Hood).
Peterson is likely most traditional conservative — furthest right record per @ACUConservative and endorsed by @ohiolife.
Will it be enough?
Peterson says he’s running for Congress to preserve Liberty for his grandkids (he now has one).
He tells me that he admires Jim Jordan but also Pat Tiberi, Troy Balderson and Brad Wenstrup.
Rep. Jake Auchincloss (D-Mass.) will join Frequency Therapeutics CEO David Lucchino, who donated $3,900 to Auchincloss's 2020 campaign, for a chat on biopharma next Tuesday sponsored by the Harvard Business School Association. hbsab.org/s/1738/cc/21/p…
Lucchino's giving history is pretty standard Democratic stuff, though he has given to the Mass. Biotech Council PAC and the Advanced Medical Technology Association PAC. (When his name appears in the screenshot as someone from Pa., it's someone else, so ignore.)
FWIW, the event description touts Cambridge's Kendall Square, where many MIT buildings are located, for having the "largest concentration of life science researchers."
Kendall Square is in @AyannaPressley's district, not Auchincloss's.
New: People have been puzzled by why freshman Mass. Rep. Jake Auchincloss stuck his neck out for Pharma.
There's no single factor, but it turns out he gets a lot of donations from Pharma CEOs and other insiders, including his mother: huffpost.com/entry/jake-auc…
Dr. Laurie Glimcher, Auchincloss's mother and a GlaxoSmithKline board member, gave $105k to a super PAC that supported his bid for an open seat vacated by JKIII in 2020.
Another backer is Patrick Ronan, a GOP donor who consults Pharma companies and employs Auchincloss's sister.
And while Auchincloss refuses corporate PAC money, the money he gets from Big Pharma employees are almost entirely from CEOs and other top executives at firms like Alnylam, Amgen, Dicerna , Frequency Therapeutics, Lytica, Proterris, Cartesian Therapeutics, Vertex and Novartis.
Dianne Morales is asked about allegations of sexism and racism on her staff.
"I have been a successful manager and leader of organizations for decades … As soon as I became aware of the situation, I intervened," said Morales, who noted she fired the alleged offenders.
Stringer asked whether his accuser is a "liar," doesn't answer directly.
"I believe that women should be heard … and then facts kick in ... There have been inconsistencies and I deny the allegations."
Scoop from @ryangrim, @JohnBolgerNYC: Patricia Pastor, the attorney representing Scott Stringer's accuser Jean Kim, was the long-time, in-house counsel for a non-union construction firm that Stringer battled as comptroller: interc.pt/3pb6Dkk
Stringer won the endorsement of the Building and Construction Trades Council of Greater New York thanks to his advocacy for union labor at Hudson Yards: local3ibew.org/news/nyc-build…