The
The DOJ granted what’s known as early termination to the companies, said the people, who were granted anonymity to discuss a confidential matter. That means the department has wrapped up its review of the deal. The DOJ opened an in-depth probe of the merger last year. The decision comes less than a day after a group of state attorneys general sued to block the acquisition.
Under federal antitrust law once companies fully comply with their legal obligations under an in-depth merger review, the government has 30 days to bring a case unless it ends the process early. The
The DOJ, Nexstar and Tegna didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.
Late Wednesday night a group of democratic attorneys general from states including California, New York and Colorado sued to block the transaction, arguing it would give the combined company too much control over television in dozens of markets around the US. The combination would impact the delivery of local news, raise pay-TV prices, and lead to job cuts, the states said.
Satellite television company
If the deal goes through, the combined companies would own 265 full-power TV stations, reaching 80% of US households, according to the states’ lawsuit. Federal law presently bars a local station owner from serving more than 39% of the country. The companies are seeking a rule change or waiver.
Both Nexstar and Tegna operate stations affiliated with ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox. Nexstar also owns the CW network and the NewsNation cable network.
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Christopher Palmeri
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