Federal Trade Commission Chairman Andrew Ferguson previews the start of the agency’s antitrust case against Meta and details the deregulatory agenda of the Trump administration.
Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Chairman Andrew Ferguson weighed in on the agency’s antitrust case against social media giant Meta Platforms in a Monday appearance on “Mornings with Maria.”
The FTC and Meta headed to court Monday morning as the trial arising out of the agency alleging the tech company “has engaged in anticompetitive acquisitions to protect its dominant position” in personal social networking officially got underway.
The agency’s lawsuit takes particular issue with Meta’s purchases of Instagram and Whatsapp and calls for the tech company to divest or reconfigure its businesses to “restore the competition.” Those massive deals occurred in 2012 and 2014, respectively.
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“Mornings with Maria” host Maria Bartiromo reported a Meta spokesperson said over the weekend that “more than 10 years after the FTC reviewed and cleared our acquisitions, the Commission’s action in this case sends the message that no deal is ever truly final.”

Commissioner Andrew Ferguson was tapped to chair the FTC last month. (Screenshot/Federal Trade Commission / Fox News)
Asked about the Meta trial, Ferguson told Bartiromo that President Donald Trump “began this suit in 2020 and we’re seeing it through today.”
“On the finality of transactions, you know, the FTC doesn’t clear transactions, it tries to make a prediction about whether a transaction is going to be anti-competitive,” he said.
“But here, we have actual evidence that the transactions turned out to be anti-competitive and have given Facebook and Meta a tremendous amount of power, power we all saw on full display in 2020,” Ferguson claimed during his “Mornings with Maria” appearance. “And so that’s what this case is about, is about addressing the power of Meta and making sure that the situation we had in 2020 can never arise again.”
Ferguson said the FTC “certainly” believes Meta is a “monopoly.”

On Monday, April 7, Meta is set to end all third-party fact-checking on its U.S. platforms. (Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto via / Getty Images)
“We think that the evidence that we’re going to put on at trial is going to show that it’s a monopoly,” he said. “And look, we all saw full on in 2020 how much power these social media platforms have over every aspect of our daily life, of our politics, our elections, our social lives, our economic lives, and that’s what this case is about, is about addressing that sort of power and making sure that 2020 can never happen again.”
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Meta, which is helmed by CEO Mark Zuckerberg, has fervently pushed back against the FTC’s claims about a monopoly and called the agency’s case “weak.”
In a press release put out over the…
Read More: FTC chair Andrew Ferguson weighs in on Meta antitrust trial