Senate Commerce Holds First FTC Oversight Hearing in 6 Years

Published
Score
14

Why it matters

The Senate Commerce Committee held its first Federal Trade Commission oversight hearing in nearly six years on April 15, 2026, with Chairman Ted Cruz (R-TX) presiding. FTC Chairman Andrew Ferguson and Commissioner Mark Meador testified on agency priorities centered on hidden fees, deceptive pricing practices, and mandatory cost disclosure. The hearing covered enforcement strategies against junk fees in rental housing and online platforms, subscription traps, and dark patterns—framed as part of a broader cost-of-living initiative.

The hearing took place against a shifted political landscape. Following the 2025 dismissals of Democratic commissioners Rebecca Slaughter and Alvaro Bedoya, Ferguson and Meador represent the only sitting Republican commissioners, enabling a quorum under Republican control. Senators questioned the FTC on enforcement approaches across housing, groceries, healthcare, ticketing, auto privacy, agricultural right-to-repair, and digital market competition. The agency outlined its enforcement toolkit: monetary redress, injunctions, bans on deceptive practices, and targeted action on worker protections, robocalls, and nonconsensual imagery under the TAKE IT DOWN Act, effective May 19.

Attorneys should track the FTC's enforcement priorities under this reconstituted leadership, particularly its stated shift toward pragmatic fraud redress and restrained antitrust enforcement. The hearing signals how the agency intends to operate within recent court limitations on Section 13(b) relief authority. With heightened focus on subscription traps, dark patterns, and undisclosed fees across consumer sectors, expect increased enforcement activity in digital platforms, healthcare, and financial services in coming months.

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