State AGs Are Right: DOJ Must Fix Its Ticketmaster Settlement

State AGs Are Right: DOJ Must Fix Its Ticketmaster Settlement 

Beware the Ides of March: What Julius Caesar and George Washington Teach Amid Today’s Toppling of Dictators

Obama’s Race-Hustling Eulogy at a Race Hustler’s Funeral

Democrat Dynasty Inspires Conservative Fashion Trends

‘Largest Deportation in History’? Why the GOP Is Divided Over This Immigration Question

What to Know About Judge Who Blocked Trump Immigration Court Reform

Poll Reveals Popularity of Trump’s Iran Performance

  PoliticsSecurityNews

Weaponized Immigration Methods Aimed at America

Why Chinese Communist Media Is Touting the US Constitution

China Receiving ‘Mixed Signals’ on US Operation in Iran

Not Just the Ayatollah—How Operation Epic Fury Is Remaking Geopolitics

 EducationPoliticsNews

EXCLUSIVE: Bill to Dismantle Taxpayer-Funded Democrat ‘Talent Pipeline’ Expected to Pass House Committee

Dire Straits for Midterms? Gas Price Surge Troubles Senators

Democrats Block DHS Reopening as TSA Lines Grow Longer

 PoliticsSecurityNews

Florida Passes Voter ID Bill as National SAVE Act Stalls

What’s on Voters’ Minds? Polls Suggest These 3 Issues

Senate Passes Bipartisan Housing Package as SAVE Act Pressure Builds

Why the Real Fight Over Virginia’s Partisan Map to Reshape Congress May Come After Referendum

DOJ Review of Voter Rolls Uncovers Alarming Names—and It’s Only the Beginning

Hegseth: Iran’s Leader ‘Wounded and Likely Disfigured’

Does Iran Still Have a War Strategy?

Iran Indicates Khamenei’s Hardline Son Will Be Next Supreme Leader

Lawmakers Look to Ensure Military Is Prepared for Long-Term Threats

Beyond the Oyster Fork: An Etiquette Expert’s Tips for ‘Relationships, Work, and Life’

Is the Iran Operation ‘America First’?

 International Commentary

Russia Operating ‘Systematic Child Abduction Operation,’ EU Ambassador Says

Meet the People Fueling Chaos in Minneapolis, New York, and Beyond 

While Some Allies Hesitate, Israel Is Already in the Fight Against Iran

Victor Davis Hanson: Why Kristi Noem Failed at DHS

Victor Davis Hanson: Newsom’s Rocky Month Shows the Risks of Running on Style Over Substance

Victor Davis Hanson: Trump Laid Out America’s Comeback While Democrats Sat Silent

State AGs Are Right: DOJ Must Fix Its Ticketmaster Settlement 

President Donald Trump in Washington, D.C., on March 12, 2026. (Jim WATSON / AFP via Getty Images)

Thomas Stratmann is a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center and professor of economics and law at George Mason University.

Voters reward politicians who make their lives better, even in small ways. 

Keeping your shoes on in the TSA line, a few hundred extra dollars in your federal tax refund, unnatural dyes removed from your kids’ cereal—Americans will remember these little improvements when they head to the polls in November.

With the war in Iran dominating news coverage, President Donald Trump needs his entire administration laser focused on delivering as many of these micro wins as possible.

Unfortunately, in its first major antitrust action after the departure of Gail Slater—the tough-on-monopoly head of the Antitrust Division—Justice Department lawyers appear to have retreated to the same weak settlement approach that frustrated conservatives for years.

The DOJ’s bipartisan lawsuit against Live Nation (also Ticketmaster’s owner), which 39 states and the District of Columbia signed onto, was a golden opportunity. Everybody hates inflated ticket prices and the ridiculous junk fees that accompany them, but we’re stuck paying them because Live Nation is pretty much the only game in town. 

The company controls 64% of the country’s highest-grossing amphitheaters and 78% of the most lucrative arenas. Its biggest competitors operate 5% and 9%, respectively.

It also provides the lion’s share of promotion and ticketing services for shows at these top venues, domineering an eye-popping 80% of the primary ticketing marketplace.

Big isn’t automatically bad, but Live Nation abuses this vertically integrated monopoly to harm artists, competitors, and customers.

Artists get locked out of Live Nation venues if they opt for rival promoters or ticketers (an illegal practice known as “tying”).

Those competitors—who might have offered better deals—get forced out of the market.

Concertgoers, with no other options in sight, bite the bullet and pay whatever Live Nation demands.

If DOJ’s lawyers had stayed the course, they could have lowered prices and introduced real competition into the live entertainment industry by forcing Live Nation to sell off Ticketmaster.

Instead, they offered the company a slap-on-the-wrist settlement this week, just one week after the trial began.

Yes, the settlement requires Live Nation to pay a stated $280 million, but according to some estimates, that’s just four days’ worth of revenue for the company—a drop in the bucket. It mandates that Live Nation get rid of the exclusive booking arrangements it has at 13 venues, but it doesn’t force the company to divest a single one of the venues it owns. 

This agreement looks like the bare minimum DOJ lawyers could demand while still claiming victory. It won’t deliver anything close to the relief consumers could have expected if DOJ had argued and won its case.

That’s why so many Republican attorneys generals have expressed their distaste, announcing that they will continue the litigation on their end. They are even pushing for a mistrial. North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson went so far as to call it “a terrible deal that USDOJ hid from the states until the last minute.”

Settling would have made sense if the government’s lawyers had thought they’d lose at trial, but they had no reason to think that would happen. The judge overseeing the case had already shot down Live Nation’s motions for dismissal and summary judgment and seemed highly skeptical of the company’s arguments.

This is not the kind of antitrust enforcement conservatives expected after President Trump promised a tougher stance on monopolies that hurt working Americans. DOJ antitrust czar Gail Slater promised to usher in a new, more aggressive approach for the age of working-class conservatism. Instead, she was forced out last month, and DOJ immediately returned to its usual practice of deferring to Big Business. 

Multiple states are still pursuing lawsuits against Live Nation, as is Trump’s Federal Trade Commission under Chairman Andrew Ferguson. But by squandering its opportunity to remove a source of annoyance that plagues millions of Americans every year, Trump’s DOJ has made this fight tougher.

The president should intercede and ensure that his Justice Department doesn’t close the book on this case so soon. Trump promised to stand up to monopolies that hurt working Americans. His DOJ must make sure that promise includes Live Nation.

We publish a variety of perspectives. Nothing written here is to be construed as representing the views of The Daily Signal.

Trump Should Seize This Opportunity to Correct His Unforced Error

Jack Smith Forced to Explain ‘Enemies List’ of Congressional Phone Records

‘PUT ON ICE’: Jeffries Cheers Noem Ousting, Vows to Fight for Removal of Bondi and Miller

Read the first chapter of The Woketopus right now for FREE

Today, even with President Trump’s victory, leftist elites have their tentacles in every aspect of our government.

The Daily Signal’s own Tyler O’Neil exposes this leftist cabal in his new book, The Woketopus: The Dark Money Cabal Manipulating the Federal Government.

In this book, O’Neil reveals how the Left’s NGO apparatus pursues its woke agenda, maneuvering like an octopus by circumventing Congress and entrenching its interests in the federal government.

You can read the first chapter of this new book for FREE in this eBook, The Woketopus: Chapter One using the secure link below.

The Tony Kinnett Cast

The Daily Signal Podcast

© 2025 The Daily Signal Media Group, Inc. All rights reserved.

We use cookies on our website. By using our website, you consent to cookies.  Learn More .  


© The Daily Signal