In the corridors of power where corporate law meets political pressure, leadership changes can signal broader shifts in direction. This week, the top antitrust official at the U.S. Department of Justice quietly exited her post, leaving behind a roster of unfinished corporate cases and a swirl of debate over the future of competition enforcement in Washington.
Gail Slater — confirmed by the U.S. Senate in March 2025 to serve as Assistant Attorney General for the Antitrust Division — announced her resignation on social media Thursday, saying it was “with great sadness and abiding hope” that she was stepping down. Her departure comes less than a year into the role, at a time when her office was engaged in high-profile matters involving proposed mergers and antitrust scrutiny of technology and entertainment giants.
Slater’s tenure became increasingly fraught with internal tension between her and senior figures in the Trump administration, including Attorney General Pam Bondi and other top officials. People familiar with the matter told news outlets that she had lost the confidence of Justice Department leadership and was effectively pushed out, despite her public characterization of the move as a voluntary resignation.
The conflict reportedly stemmed from disagreements over how aggressively to enforce the nation’s competition laws. Slater had pushed back against more lenient approaches favored by some senior Trump administration officials and allies of major corporations, particularly in cases like the settlement of Hewlett Packard Enterprise’s $14 billion acquisition of Juniper Networks — a deal the Justice Department initially challenged but later negotiated to allow. Critics of the settlement raised concerns that political influence and corporate lobbying had shaped the outcome.
Her departure arrives amid a series of leadership shake-ups within the antitrust division, including the earlier dismissal of two senior deputies and tension over high-stakes cases such as the proposed antitrust review of the proposed Netflix-Warner Bros. merger and a looming trial against Live Nation on allegations of monopolistic practices. The shake-ups have sparked criticism from lawmakers and antitrust advocates who fear that political interference may weaken the division’s independence and effectiveness.
For now, Omeed A. Assefi — a political appointee with ties to the Justice Department’s leadership — will serve as acting head of the antitrust division. Observers are watching how the agency’s enforcement priorities and corporate oversight will evolve under new leadership, at a moment when big tech, media and other industries face increasing scrutiny over market power and competition.
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Sources Reuters Associated Press The Guardian CBS News The Washington Post (reporting via latest updates)

