Who is on your side?

While the Trump family and cronies are cutting lucrative deals, illegally getting richer trading on insider information, and letting off wrongdoers with slaps on the wrist or presidential pardons, Democrats are working to break up monopolies that bilk consumers. (Not enough of them, to be sure. But take the wins where you can.)
A federal jury in New York on Wednesday found that concert and ticketing giant Live Nation is an illegal monopoly in violation of federal and state antitrust laws.
After the blockbuster trial that went from the U.S. Department of Justice to 34 states, a jury has decided that Live Nation Entertainment and its subsidiary Ticketmaster illegally held monopoly power in the ticketing market.
The jurors came to their decision after around five weeks of the antitrust trial, according to NBC News. Deliberations in the case began on Friday. The ruling is essentially a rebuke to the Department of Justice’s settlement with Live Nation last month — reportedly ordered directly by President Donald Trump — in which the company agreed to a series of structural changes to its business, including changes to ticketing deals with venues, capping certain service fees, and paying a $280 million fine.
In a statement shared with Variety, a representative for Live Nation said that the jury’s verdict is “not the last word on this matter” and that “pending motions will determine whether the liability and damages rulings stand.”
Live Nation will appeal. Pay attention to who wants to protect consumers from Live Nation/Ticketmaster:
The government initially filed suit against Live Nation two years ago during the Biden administration, with approximately 40 states also suing the company. The suit claimed that Live Nation has illegal dominance in the concert business, to a degree that harms artists, fans and venues. A victory in the lawsuit meant that Live Nation would part ways with Ticketmaster, with which it merged in 2010 during the Obama administration.
In February, Judge Aran Subramanian had narrowed portions of the suit but allowed others — claims related to the market for large amphitheaters, related to Ticketmaster’s role in the ticketing market, and state-level claims — to proceed to trial. Subramanian had dismissed claims related to concert promotion services and those related to the ticketing market’s impact on fans.
The DOJ settlement in March led to a series of structural changes to Live Nation’s business, including the company changing its ticketing deals with venues and allowing those businesses to use multiple vendors to sell tickets to fans, instead of working with Ticketmaster exclusively, although venues will still have that option. The settlement also required Live Nation to discontinue its exclusive booking arrangements with 13 amphitheaters across the U.S., and will allow touring artists to use other promoters when performing in its owned amphitheaters.
Six states accepted the Trumpy DOJ settlement in March: Arkansas, Iowa, Mississippi, Nebraska, Oklahoma and South Dakota. Notice anything about them?
The New York Times adds:
Whatever remedy the judge orders, it will likely shift the competitive landscape in the multibillion-dollar concert business, where Live Nation has been a colossus with no equal. Last year, the company put on 55,000 events and sold 646 million tickets around the world. According to testimony, Ticketmaster sells about 10 times as many tickets as its closest rival, AEG.
The Trump DOJ deal “fails to address the monopoly at the center of this case,” said New York Attorney General Letitia James in a statement issued in March:
“My attorney general colleagues and I have a strong case against Live Nation, and we will continue our lawsuit,” James said.
A release containing her statements said other states rejecting the settlement included Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Kansas, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin, Wyoming and the District of Columbia.
Notice anything about them? The overwhelming majority are blue states, swing states, or states with split partisan control.
James issued another statement Wednesday after the jury verdict:
“For far too long, Live Nation and Ticketmaster have taken advantage of fans and artists by raising prices for tickets and stifling any competition that threatened their power,” the statement reads. “A jury found what we have long known to be true: Live Nation and Ticketmaster are breaking the law and costing consumers millions of dollars in the process.”
North Carolina’s Attorney General, Democrat Jeff Jackson, addressed the verdict (as he is wont to do) on social media. “Our goal is simple: restore real competition, end the abuse of consumers and artists, and bring fair pricing back to live entertainment.”
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About that fair pricing. Navigator Research this morning finds that:
- Americans are overwhelmingly pessimistic about the economy, as majorities feel costs are rising and their personal financial situation is uneasy.
- Americans report taking actions to help save money or increase income, including staying home rather than going out, selling personal items online or even selling blood plasma.
- A majority continue to disapprove of President Trump’s handling of the economy, while Democrats have a slight trust advantage on addressing cost of living issues – though one-in-four trust neither party.
“Now do Media monopolies and the harm done to the public,” says a commenter.
Jackson is working on it. The Trump administration is working against it. Surprised?








