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10MAY

Twelve states sue to block Paramount-WBD

2 min read
16:44UTC

Twelve Democratic attorneys general asked a San Francisco federal court on 13 July to freeze Paramount Skydance's $110bn Warner Bros. Discovery takeover, on grounds neither Washington nor Brussels examined.

IndustryDeveloping
Key takeaway

A dozen state AGs became the live block on Paramount-WBD after federal and EU regulators cleared or went silent.

Twelve Democratic state attorneys general filed suit in federal court in San Francisco on Monday 13 July, seeking a temporary restraining order (TRO) and a preliminary injunction to stop Paramount Skydance's $110bn acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) from closing. California attorney general Rob Bonta, who leads the coalition, said the merger would mean 'higher prices, lower quality, and less content'. 1 The other eleven states are Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon and Washington.

Paramount Skydance is the Larry Ellison and David Ellison controlled group formed from the Skydance takeover of the old Paramount; WBD holds HBO, Max, CNN and the Warner Bros. studio. The two make up the largest entertainment tie-up in flight this year. Every federal and European lever that could have blocked it had already cleared or gone quiet: the Department of Justice signed off in June , leaving the states as the one live obstacle.

The theories the coalition is pressing, on theatrical film distribution and basic-cable channel licensing, are grounds neither the DOJ nor the European Commission examined. Paramount rejects them, calling the suit 'a fundamentally flawed application of the antitrust laws'. 2 State antitrust suits survive federal clearance because states enforce their own competition statutes, so the DOJ's sign-off gives Paramount no shield here.

The states asked for a restraining order because the merger can close the moment Brussels rules on 22 July. A TRO granted in the Northern District of California would hold the deal shut past that date, the day the remaining EU competition track resolves. The suit does not need to win outright to bite; it needs only to slow the close while the other clocks run down.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Twelve US states, led by California, have gone to federal court to try to stop the $110bn merger between Paramount Skydance and Warner Bros. Discovery, the deal that would combine CBS, CNN, HBO Max and the Warner Bros. film studio under one owner. This matters because the federal government's own antitrust regulator, the Department of Justice, already cleared this same merger back in June. States are allowed to bring their own separate case even after that, because they can sue over harms to their own residents, like higher cable bills or fewer film releases in their state, that the federal case did not specifically weigh. If the states win their request for an emergency block, the merger could not close while the case proceeds, even though Washington has already said yes.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

US merger enforcement splits authority between the DOJ, the FTC, and fifty separate state attorneys general under the Clayton Act and state parens patriae statutes. DOJ clearance binds only DOJ; it does not extinguish a state's own right to sue, which is why California's coalition could file five weeks after the federal review closed rather than during it.

The specific theory, harm to wide-release theatrical distribution and basic-cable channel licensing, sits in product-market definitions the DOJ's June clearance did not adjudicate on the states' terms, giving Bonta's coalition a non-preclusion argument rather than a straight rerun of the federal case.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    A win for the twelve-state coalition would strengthen the case that state AGs can act as a second antitrust check on media mergers even after DOJ clearance.

  • Risk

    A TRO granted before the EU's 22 July competition-review deadline would stack a US injunction on top of an unresolved European clock, compounding the deal's closing timeline risk.

First Reported In

Update #9 · State AGs sue as EU clears Paramount-WBD

Washington Post· 15 Jul 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Twelve states sue to block Paramount-WBD
State antitrust suits enforce state competition law in their own right, so June's federal clearance does not dispose of them, and a granted restraining order could stall the deal past 22 July.
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