HOUSE OVERSIGHT 032808 • President Trump attacked Google for liberal bias, and claimed Google, Facebook, and Amazon represent "a very antitrust situation". • Attorney General Jeff Sessions convened a meeting of Republican state attorneys general to discuss whether tech giants "may be hurting competition and intentionally stifling the free exchange of ideas on their platforms." • Facebook, Twitter, and Google were called to testify in front of the House and Senate about election interference, political bias, etc. Google declined to attend. • The FTC has begun a series of hearings on Digital Age antitrust, the first such hearings since the 1990s. • The FTC revealed the hiring of Lina Kahn—heralded for authoring a groundbreaking antitrust argument against Amazon—as an advisor. (See section 5 for more.) • Republican Senator Orrin Hatch asked the FTC to reopen a 2013 antitrust case against Google. • Democratic Senator Mark Warner released a six-point policy proposal on regulating the tech industry. • Democratic Senator Bernie Sanders proposed the "BEZOS Act", which would tax corporations one dollar for every dollar low-wage workers receive in government health- care benefits or food stamps. • The E.U. Parliament voted 438 to 226 to back a draft proposal of copyright reformsthat will impose unprecedented liability on information platforms. • France is pushing to have "Right to be Forgotten" laws applied globally, which Google is now fighting in court. • Reports emerged that the E.U. is considering investigating Google's location- tracking practices on data privacy grounds. We will continue to watch each development in the U.S. and E.U. closely to understand if and when debate turns to action. For now, we agree with the analysis of NYU Stern professor Scott Galloway, who told CNBC last week after the congressional hearings: I don't see anything meaningful coming out of this panel, much less Washington...D.C. lacks the domain expertise or the will