Standard General's latest legal maneuvers are “highly unlikely” to succeed in rescuing Standard General’s proposed acquisition of Tegna, which is close to being killed by a long regulatory review, according to former FCC chief of staff Blair Levin.
Nearly a year after Tegna agreed to be acquired, the Federal Communications Commission’s Media Bureau designated the deal to be sent to an administrative law judge for a hearing, a process unlikely to be completed before Standard General’s financing agreements expire on May 22.
Blair Levin |
He said there is no deadline by which an administrative law judge is required to make a ruling. If the judge does not make a timely ruling, the matter would go to the full FCC.
Levin predicted FCC chair Jessica Rosenworcel is unlikely to bring the matter to a commission vote. That would lead Standard General and Tegna to file an extraordinary writ in a U.S. District Court.
If there were an FCC vote as the companies have sought, Levin said, it would likely be a 2-2 tie, “leaving the matter in limbo, with the parties again filing an extraordinary writ with the District Court.”
What happens in federal court? Levin figures the court wouldn’t get the matter until April. That close to the deal’s expiration, the court could decide any decision would be irrelevant and, without a decision from the FCC, it could decide the case is not ripe for judicial review, Levin said.
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