Alvaro Bedoya — the former FTC Commissioner whom Trump fired in an unprecedented break with a century of agency-independence norms — joins the Chuck Toddcast to explain why his firing matters far beyond his own career, and what it reveals about the collision between corporate power and consumer protection in the Trump era. Bedoya makes the legal case plainly: removal "for cause" is clearly written into the law, Congress needs to codify FTC independence, and while he's skeptical this Supreme Court will rule in favor of agency independence, the circumstances of his dismissal are damning — he believes he was fired specifically for suing companies that happened to be Trump donors. The Amazon case is his exhibit A: the FTC was actively pursuing Amazon until Trump intervened, and after Amazon funneled millions to Trump, the investigations simply evaporated — proof, Bedoya argues, that existing laws against bribery and corruption clearly aren't working. He walks through the sprawling, well-funded lobbying effort against meaningful privacy legislation, and offers vivid examples of how unchecked data collection harms ordinary people. His prescription is structural: America needs genuine restrictions on what data can be collected and how it can be used, paired with serious antitrust enforcement — but the agencies tasked with that work have been starved of the resources they need.
The conversation opens up into a fascinating, wide-ranging debate about monopoly power and consolidation across the American economy. Bedoya argues that streaming bills were already climbing even before the proposed Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery merger — a deal he believes there's a clear consumer case to block. He notes that Thomas Jefferson once argued for an anti-monopoly amendment in the Bill of Rights, that consolidation has hammered workers across countless industries, and that America is now suffering a genuine "drought of creativity" because of relentless media mergers — pointing out that there are only three serious buyers of documentary films left, and that half of America's TV news archive is about to be owned by a single family. Bedoya is honest about the nuances (Costco throws its weight around but has genuinely been good for consumers; vertically integrated health insurers are universally loathed), wrestles with whether unilateral Democratic executive action is even the answer, and warns that in this environment it's dangerously easy for regulators to simply get overwhelmed.
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Timeline:
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00:00 Alvaro Bedoya joins the Chuck ToddCast
02:00 Trump broke a long standing norm to fire Alvaro from the FTC
02:30 Congress needs to codify FTC independence
03:30 Firing “for cause” is very clearly written into the law
05:30 This Supreme Court unlikely to rule for agency independence
06:00 Was likely fired for suing companies that were Trump donors
06:45 You want consumers to be protected from political donors
08:30 FTC was pursuing case against Amazon until Trump intervened
10:00 Amazon funneled millions to Trump, investigations went away
10:30 Laws against bribery & corruption clearly aren’t working
12:30 How should government tackle consumer privacy protections?
13:15 There is a massive lobbying effort against privacy laws
14:30 Background actors were being scanned rather than being paid
15:30 Privacy can sometimes be an abstract concept to people
16:00 Labor unions are the group actually winning in this space
18:15 Need protections around privacy, data collection and antitrust
19:00 Need restrictions on collecting certain data and how it is used
20:30 Against law to use SEC database to solicit donations, not enforced
21:00 Agencies have been starved of resources needed for enforcement
23:15 Meta has grown massive and Zuckerberg retains total control
25:30 The debate about whether to break up the biggest companies
26:15 Breaking up AT&T benefitted consumers, ended long distance rates
27:00 T-Mobile merger should not have been allowed
28:00 Streaming bills going up even before Paramount WB merger
31:30 Jefferson argued for an amendment against monopolies in Bill of Rights
34:00 Consolidation has hurt workers in a variety of industries
34:45 Has there been a consolidation that’s been good for consumers?
37:15 Costco throws its weight around, but has been good for consumers
38:15 Health insurers are vertically integrated, and consumers loathe them
39:30 Iheart’s merger was allowed as an effort to preserve a “dying industry”
41:00 Paramount/WB only shot of catching Netflix/Disney is to merge?
42:15 Loading up the company with $80B in debt won’t produce a healthy firm
43:00 There are only 3 buyers of serious documentary films
44:15 Half of America’s TV news archive is about to be owned by one family
45:30 There are clear consumer cases for preventing the Paramount/WB merger
48:30 There’s been a cycle of innovation, then consolidation
50:00 We are suffering a drought of creativity due to mergers
52:15 There are antitrust exceptions for co-ops, can FTC encourage them?
54:15 Is unilateral Democratic executive branch action the answer here?
55:30 In this environment, it’s easy for regulators to get overwhelmed
56:15 The White House UFC fight was corrupt
59:00 Making the UFC event private at the WH was made it feel dirty
1:01:45 Favorite potential 2028 candidates?
1:03:45 Popular movements are effective pushing back against corporate power

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