Trump FTC Urges Apple News to Boost Visibility for Conservative Media Outlets

The head of the US consumer watchdog has accused Apple of political bias, setting off a new fight over how tech platforms choose and present news.

Andrew Ferguson, chairman of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), sent a letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook claiming that Apple News may have violated US law by favoring liberal news outlets while suppressing conservative ones. Ferguson argued that such conduct could break the FTC Act if it conflicts with promises made to consumers or with reasonable user expectations.

The complaint relies on research from the Media Research Center, a conservative advocacy group. Its report claims that Apple News highlighted hundreds of articles from outlets it labels left-leaning while featuring none from conservative publishers such as Fox News, New York Post, Daily Mail, Breitbart, and The Gateway Pundit.

Ferguson said these claims raise “serious questions” about whether Apple News aligns with its own terms of service.

He stressed that the FTC is not trying to control speech or force companies to promote any political viewpoint. Instead, he argued, regulators must act if a company misleads users about how its product works.

Critics say the letter itself crosses a line.

Trump FTC Urges Apple News to Boost Visibility for Conservative Media Outlets

Craig Aaron, president of the advocacy group Free Press, called the accusation dangerous and unsupported by evidence. He warned that government pressure over editorial choices could amount to censorship.

Aaron argued that private platforms have the right to curate content and that government officials should not dictate news rankings or coverage decisions.

Ferguson’s argument hinges on consumer protection law rather than free speech law. He suggested that bias could violate the FTC Act if ideological favoritism is hidden from users and causes harm they cannot reasonably avoid. Yet his letter does not point to any specific clause in Apple’s terms that promises political neutrality.

Credits: Fortune

Apple’s published terms appear broad. They state that content comes “as-is” and that the company does not guarantee specific results or types of material. The agreement also says users unhappy with content can simply stop using the service. Apple places responsibility for third-party articles on the publishers themselves, not on the platform.

Supporters of Ferguson’s move include Brendan Carr of the Federal Communications Commission, who said Apple has no right to suppress viewpoints if doing so violates consumer law. Carr has often echoed media criticism voiced by former president Donald Trump and his allies.

The Regulatory Battle Over News Aggregator Neutrality

The Media Research Center’s analysis focused on Apple News morning briefings and criticized the prominence of outlets such as The Washington Post, Associated Press, NBC News, The Guardian, The New York Times, NPR, Politico, USA Today, and Bloomberg News. The group classified The Wall Street Journal as politically centrist and compared coverage levels with sources like Reuters.

The dispute comes as the FTC also investigates NewsGuard, which evaluates the credibility of news outlets. NewsGuard has sued the agency, claiming the probe stems from political disagreement rather than consumer protection concerns.

The lawsuit notes pressure linked to complaints from Newsmax and challenges merger conditions involving advertising giants Omnicom and Interpublic Group.

At its core, the conflict reflects a wider debate over platform power. News aggregators shape what millions of people see each day, yet they also operate as private services with editorial freedom. Regulators now face a difficult question: when does content curation become consumer deception?

For now, Ferguson has asked Apple to review its policies and ensure its practices match its public representations. Whether the FTC can turn that warning into a legal case may depend on one key issue, proving that Apple promised neutrality in the first place.

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