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Tim Cook called Nancy Pelosi to warn her against disrupting the iPhone with impending antitrust bills

Big Tech lobbyists are fighting “tooth and nail” against regulation

Big Tech lobbyists are fighting “tooth and nail” against regulation

Tim Cook
Tim Cook
Sean Hollister
is a senior editor and founding member of The Verge who covers gadgets, games, and toys. He spent 15 years editing the likes of CNET, Gizmodo, and Engadget.

Tech giants have repeatedly said they would welcome government regulation — if it’s the right regulation, of course. But faced with five antitrust bills that could unwind what the House Judiciary Committee described as Apple, Amazon, Google and Facebook’s “monopoly power,” Big Tech is bringing out the big lobbying guns.

Apple CEO Tim Cook himself called Speaker Nancy Pelosi to “deliver a warning” that the “rushed” antitrust bills could disrupt the iPhone, according to The New York Times, and that’s not all:

“Executives, lobbyists, and more than a dozen think tanks and advocacy groups paid by tech companies have swarmed Capitol offices, called and emailed lawmakers and their staff members, and written letters arguing there will be dire consequences for the industry and the country if the ideas become law,” the NYT wrote.

There’s a growing sense that the current administration has a genuine interest in combating tech monopolies — a point perhaps made most clearly when Biden chose prominent antitrust scholar and Amazon critic Lina Khan to lead the Federal Trade Commission. She was sworn in last week.

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It’s not unusual for tech companies to dive deeper into lobbying these days, as you’d expect now that they’re the most valuable companies in the world, and we’ve seen their outsize influence overwhelm voters and legislators at the local level before. Uber and Lyft won big after backing the most expensive measure in California history, using their own apps as an unfair advantage, and Arizona’s controversial app store bill mysteriously disappeared after tech companies stepped in. An Apple lobbyist managed to scare California legislators away from a right-to-repair bill in 2019, too.

Pelosi apparently wasn’t having it, though, at least not on the call. She pushed back against Cook, according to the Times’ sources.

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