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Despite Shaky Turnout, DOJ May Still Hold Tech Meeting Tuesday

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra (D) is planning on DOJ holding its Tuesday meeting in Washington, D.C., to discuss tech industry issues (see 1809140033 and 1809110041), an official said Friday, despite a report Justice was considering delaying the event. DOJ…

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didn’t comment. A spokesperson for Iowa AG Tom Miller (D), who declined to attend, said her understanding was that the National Association of Attorneys General proposed Justice reschedule the meeting to coincide with an NAAG event Nov. 27-29 in Charleston, South Carolina, but DOJ rejected the idea. An NAAG spokesperson directed questions to individual AG offices. Iowa cited a scheduling conflict and “the lack of an agenda” in declining DOJ’s invite. “We’d be interested in a substantive, bipartisan discussion in which all states were invited,” the spokesperson said. Seven offices for various states AGs told us they are either interested in or will attend Tuesday's meeting. Seven other offices told us they aren’t attending. Justice sent invites to at least 24 AGs. We’ve contacted all 50 state law enforcements chiefs multiple times. Law enforcement chiefs in Texas (R), Louisiana (R) and California (D) said they plan to attend, though they didn't confirm if they are sending the AG or representatives. A spokesperson for Arizona' Mark Brnovich (R) said he's unable to attend, but the office will send staff. Offices in Nebraska (R), Washington (D) and Wisconsin (R) said they were invited. Law enforcement chiefs in Ohio (R), North Dakota (R), Arkansas (R) and North Carolina (D) said they won’t attend due to scheduling conflicts. Democrats in New York and Massachusetts said they aren’t interested. Ten offices told us there weren't invited: Colorado (R), Connecticut (D), Delaware (D), Hawaii (D), Iowa (D), New Hampshire (R), Ohio (R), Oklahoma (R), Oregon (D) and Rhode Island (D). The office for Tennessee's Herbert Slatery (R) directed questions to DOJ. Justice’s inquiry into tech company bias is “misguided,” several groups wrote the department Friday. TechFreedom, Engine Advocacy and Information Technology and Innovation Foundation were among those expressing skepticism the DOJ inquiry will produce any legal action, since the First Amendment bars government from attempting to correct political bias, including through antitrust.