Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), a tough critic of the big tech companies, urged the Federal Trade Commission on Nov. 12 to interview some former employees of Facebook Inc. as part of its probe of the social media giant.
Both the FTC and groups of state attorneys general are widely believed to be planning litigation against Facebook for breaking antitrust law.
In her letter to FTC Chairman Joe Simons, Blackburn referred to an FTC deposition of Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg, adding: “While that is promising, I encourage you to also speak to other Facebook executives and engineers who can reveal the company’s real agenda. Many of them fear letting Facebook’s dominance go unchecked can hold dark consequences for competitors and consumers alike.”
Blackburn specifically urged the FTC to interview such Facebook critics as company co-founder Chris Hughes, former chief security officer Alex Stamos, and Yael Eisenstat, the former head of Facebook’s elections integrity effort.
Blackburn said that internet regulation, which is something Congress would take up, wasn’t sufficient.
“Americans depend on the commission to stand up to Facebook and to fully prosecute entities that violate the Sherman Antitrust Act,” she wrote.
Pursuing the tech giants—the Justice Department sued Alphabet’s Google last month while Amazon and Apple remain under investigation—is one thing that Democrats and Republicans have agreed on, despite a polarized political atmosphere.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), a progressive Democrat, has urged that Facebook be required to sell Instagram, which it bought in 2012, and WhatsApp, which it bought in 2014.