President Trump fired both Federal Trade Commission Democrats and set up a legal battle that would have a major impact on major bipartisan regulators considered independent of the administrative division.
The White House informed Alvaro Bedoya and Rebecca Kelly on Tuesday that they massacred the fire, Democrats confirmed in another X post. Both Bedoya and Slaughter called their shootings “illegal” and vowed to challenge Trump in court.
“The president illegally fired me. This is corrupt, plain and simple,” Bedya said.
The massacre said Trump's decision violated “a plain language and clear Supreme Court precedent of law.”
“The law protects the independence of the committee, as it serves Americans rather than corporate power,” Slaughter said in a statement.
The shootings made FTC chairman Andrew Ferguson and fellow Republican Melissa Holiork the sole member of the five-member panel. Mark Medor, who was appointed third Republican FTC commissioner from Trump, has yet to be confirmed in the full Senate vote.
It was not immediately clear whether Trump would plan to nominate a Bedoya and the genocide alternative.
White House aide Taylor Rogers said Trump “has the legal authority to control personnel within the administrative department.”
“President Trump will continue to remove the federal government from bad actors who are not sorted into his common sense agenda, which the Americans have voted decisively,” Rogers added in a statement.
Ferguson, who has referred to the agency as the “Trump Vance FTC,” since taking over as chairman, supported the right to fire the president's committee members.
“There is no doubt about his constitutional authority to eliminate the commissioners needed to ensure democratic accountability for our government,” Ferguson said in a statement posted to X.
“The Federal Trade Commission will continue its tireless efforts to protect anti-competitive behavior of consumers, low prices and police,” Ferguson added.
White House officials notified Bedoya and the Massacre that the president has “unlimited power” to remove officers of the Senate-confirmed executives, according to the email. Retrieved by Wall Street Journal.
“The ongoing service at the FTC is inconsistent with my administration's priorities,” the email said. “Therefore, I am expelling you from the office in accordance with my authority under Article II of the Constitution.”
Earlier this week, Ferguson confirmed that the FTC is fully prepared to challenge the meta at the April trial, which calls for the breakup of the tech giant. The agency also has pending cases against Amazon and oversees the data privacy settlements associated with Meta and X.
Trump attempted to promote greater control over independent institutions, and issued an executive order in February, making him more tolerant of the White House.
The dismissal tests the 1935 decision by the Supreme Court in Humphrey's Enforcer v. United States case.
At the time, the court held that the president had no authority to fire the FTC commissioner without justification. This sets precedents that traditionally protected independent institutions such as the FTC and the Federal Reserve from direct enforcement intervention.
The White House argues that the FTC has significant enforcement power and that the exemptions provided by Humphrey's enforcers should not apply to commissioners.
The FTC's shooting “will have a major impact on the Fed's independence,” a former FTC official told the post.
Trump has been extremely critical of feeding Chairman Jerome Powell in the past due to differences in opinion regarding his handling of interest rates. Powell will specifically announce the Fed's next policy move this afternoon.
“I think it was timing as a threat,” an FTC official said.
Fire shots along partisan boundaries could backfire Republicans in the future under the democratic White House administration, officials added.
“Are we all going to be happy with Queen Lina Khan at the FTC?” the official said.
Kahn, who led the agency under former President Joe Biden, and his hard-working approach to enforcement, irritating business leaders, and even torn off fire.
“The @FTC must enforce the law without fear or favor,” Khan said. “The administration's massacre of commissioners and the administration's illegal attempt to fire Bedya are a disturbing indication that this FTC is not. It's a gift to American consumers, workers and law-blockers of businesses that squeeze honest businesses.”

