Bidders for Warner Bros Discovery face barrage of political and regulatory risks

Bidders for Warner Bros Discovery face barrage of political and regulatory risks

Bidders for Warner Bros Discovery face barrage of political and regulatory risks

By Dawn Chmielewski and Chris Sanders

(Reuters) -Paramount Skydance, Comcast and Netflix are bidding to buy Warner Bros Discovery, Reuters reported on Thursday, but each company’s bid faces its own political and regulatory risks.

Factors to watch include market share imbalances each bidder could bring, investors and public comments by U.S. President Donald Trump or his administration about ​each company.

The White House could not immediately be reached for comment.

Political Risk

Paramount Skydance:

Paramount may have the inside track because of its White House connections and the significant cash the world’s second-richest person,‌ Larry Ellison, can provide Warner Bros Discovery to close the deal. His son, Paramount CEO David Ellison, enjoys Trump’s favor, which could help smooth regulatory hurdles.

Democratic Senators Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders and Richard Blumenthal worry approval of the deal could be ‌tainted by political favoritism, citing Paramount Global’s $16 million donation to Trump’s Presidential Library. The payment, made prior to a merger with Skydance that placed Ellison at the media company’s helm, settled a lawsuit Trump brought over edits to a “60 Minutes” interview.

Still, if the bid includes foreign investors, the size of their potential stake could trigger a review by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States. The merging of Paramount‘s and Warner Bros’ cable television networks could raise concerns about market concentration for the DOJ.

Outside the U.S., regulators would also weigh in under foreign direct investment regimes, while European authorities would examine media plurality rules given the ⁠combination of CNN and CBS.

Comcast:

The Philadelphia‑based cable giant faces a different political ‌climate. Trump has repeatedly denigrated the company over its unit NBC’s coverage of his second term in office, calling it “Concast,” and criticized its Chairman Brian Roberts.

That hostility could complicate the DOJ’s posture, though any opposition would need to be grounded in law and competition concerns rather than White House preference.

The DOJ sought to ‍block AT&T’s $85.4 billion acquisition of Time Warner, whose CNN attracted Trump’s ire during his first term in the White House. A federal judge ultimately cleared a path for the deal in 2018.

Netflix:

The streaming leader has its own potential political struggles. In October 2025, the Pentagon criticized “Boots,” a series about a gay Marine, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

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