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Norms Impact

Trump FTC wants Apple News to promote more Fox News and Breitbart stories

A federal consumer-protection agency is invoking the FTC Act to pressure a private news product’s editorial curation toward favored outlets, blurring the line between oversight and viewpoint-driven state leverage.

Executive

Feb 12, 2026

Sources

Summary

FTC Chairman Andrew Ferguson sent Apple CEO Tim Cook a letter asserting Apple News may be violating the FTC Act by suppressing conservative-leaning outlets and promoting liberal ones. The FTC is signaling a willingness to treat editorial curation in a news product as a consumer-protection compliance issue tied to “reasonable expectations,” even where the product’s terms disclaim any promise of specific results. The practical consequence is heightened pressure on private platforms to change content presentation under threat of federal investigation despite no cited, breached term-of-service commitment.

Reality Check

This kind of federal pressure weaponizes regulatory authority to steer what Americans see, and once that precedent hardens, any administration can threaten investigations to coerce editorial outcomes that shrink our rights in practice. Based on the record described here, the conduct is not clearly criminal; it is presented as a warning letter without cited false statements, coercive demands, or a specific breached promise in Apple’s terms. The more immediate legal danger is constitutional: using the FTC Act (15 U.S.C. § 45) as a pretext to police viewpoint curation invites First Amendment violations by converting “consumer expectations” into a government tool for content control. Even without a chargeable offense, it violates core governance norms by turning independent regulation into partisan leverage over speech.

Media

Detail

<p>Federal Trade Commission Chairman Andrew Ferguson sent a letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook alleging that Apple News “systematically promoted” articles from “left-wing news outlets” while suppressing “more conservative publications,” citing studies by the Media Research Center that examined Apple News “morning edition” top-20 story lists during January.</p><p>Ferguson wrote that the FTC “is not the speech police” and lacks authority to require ideological curation, but argued the agency can act if Apple’s practices are inconsistent with its terms of service, representations to consumers, or “reasonable consumer expectations,” framing such conduct as a potential “material misrepresentation” or “material omission” under the FTC Act. The letter encouraged Apple to conduct a “comprehensive review” of its terms and to take “corrective action swiftly” if needed.</p><p>The Apple News terms cited in the reporting state the service is provided “as-is” and that users should not expect “specific results,” with the sole remedy for dissatisfaction being to stop using the service.</p><p>FCC Chairman Brendan Carr publicly endorsed Ferguson’s position.</p>