U.S. senators oppose trade group's lawyer as consumer watchdog
Source: Reuters
BUSINESS NEWS MAY 14, 2018 / 4:11 PM / UPDATED 35 MINUTES AGO
U.S. senators oppose trade group's lawyer as consumer watchdog
Reuters Staff
2 MIN READ
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Trade Commission should delay a vote to name its top consumer advocate, three Democratic U.S. senators said on Monday, citing the appointees work for Equifax, Facebook, Uber [UBER.UL] and other companies the FTC has probed.
The FTC is considering making Andrew Smith, a partner at Covington and Burling, LLP, head of its consumer protection bureau. Smith has worked for the Consumer Data Industry Association, whose members include credit reporting companies like Equifax, which is under FTC scrutiny following a massive data breach last year.
Democratic Senators Elizabeth Warren, Richard Blumenthal and Brian Schatz said in a letter that Smiths prior work, and the likelihood that he would be recused from big FTC investigations, meant he was unfit and unable to function as the FTCs top consumer advocate.
Mr. Smith has every right to represent corporations that have harmed consumers, and those companies have every right to be represented by Mr. Smith, the lawmakers wrote in the letter to FTC Chairman Joseph Simons. It is impossible to believe that the best candidate (to head consumer protection) is someone with a long record of representing companies that have been accused of hurting consumers.
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https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-ftc-equifax-smith/u-s-senators-oppose-trade-groups-lawyer-as-consumer-watchdog-idUSKCN1IF2T7