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Trump nominates antitrust attorney Simons to lead FTC

By Allen Cone
President Donald Trump has nominated three men as commissioners of the Federal Trade Commission, which is housed in the Apex Building in Washington, D.C. Photo by Wikimedia Commons/Library of Congress
President Donald Trump has nominated three men as commissioners of the Federal Trade Commission, which is housed in the Apex Building in Washington, D.C. Photo by Wikimedia Commons/Library of Congress

Oct. 19 (UPI) -- President Donald Trump on Thursday nominated antitrust attorney Joseph Simons to be chairman of the Federal Trade Commission.

The White House also announced consumer protection advocate Rohit Chopra will fill the commission's open Democratic seat. Noah Phillips, chief counsel for Sen. John Cornyn, also was named to the FTC, White House spokeswoman Natalie Strom told Politico.

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The nominations, which last for seven-year terms and which the Senate must confirmed, will bring the FTC to its capacity of five.

Current members are Maureen Ohlhausen, who has run the agency on a temporary basis since Trump's inauguration in January, and Democratic Commissioner Terrell McSweeny.

Simons is a partner at the law firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison. He previously led the FTC's antitrust enforcement, which investigates anticompetitive mergers and business practices, from 2001 to 2003. The White House, in a release, said Simons helped re-invigorate the FTC's non-merger enforcement program, where he "initiated over 100 investigations and produced more non-merger enforcement actions in one year than in any other year in the prior two decades or since."

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Chopra is a senior fellow at the Consumer Federation of America, where he focuses on consumer protection issues involving young people and military families. He previously was an assistant director at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau from 2010 to 2015, when he directed work on problems facing student financial services. He has also served as the agency's student loan ombudsman.

Phillips worked at Steptoe & Johnson in Washington and at Cravath, Swaine & Moore in New York, where he focused on civil litigation, according to a biography on the website for the Federalist Society, a group of conservatives and libertarians in the legal profession.

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