Democratic secretaries of state oppose Kroger-Albertsons merger in letter to FTC

A group of seven Democratic secretaries of state signed a letter opposing the Kroger-Albertsons merger because of consumer choice concerns.Eric Glenn/Shutterstock.com
New Mexico’s Oliver, Colorado’s Griswold are among signees

A group of seven Democratic secretaries of state oppose the Kroger-Albertsons merger because of consumer choice concerns, they say in a letter sent Wednesday to the Federal Trade Commission.

The signees – New Mexico Secretary Maggie Toulouse Oliver, Colorado Secretary Jena Griswold, Arizona Secretary Adrian Fontes, Vermont Secretary Sarah Copeland-Hanzas, Minnesota Secretary Steve Simon, Rhode Island Secretary Gregg Amore and Maine Secretary Shenna Bellows – say the merger could affect up to 4,996 in their seven states.

New Mexico Secretary of State Maggie Toulouse Oliver speaks on Capitol Hill in 2018 in Washington. Susan Walsh/The Associated Press
Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold speaks during a news conference about the the state's efforts to protect the process of casting a vote in the general election in downtown Denver in 2020. David Zalubowski/The Associated Press

Kroger operates the chains King Soopers, City Market and Fry’s, while Albertsons operates Safeway.

The secretaries argue in the letter to FTC Chair Lina Khan that the merger will result in less consumer choice and “no competitive incentive” for the stores to reduce prices.

“The merger would result in Kroger-Albertsons controlling nearly a quarter of the entire U.S. food retail market – a significant consolidation of the already limited competition within the market,” the secretaries wrote.

Secretary Griswold in a statement called on the federal government to step in and “ensure that corporate greed does not result in executives and shareholders enriching themselves while hardworking Americans pay artificially high prices for basic necessities.”

Attorneys general are also keeping a close eye on the merger. In Colorado, Attorney General Weiser’s office is taking public input across the state on the proposed merger. In Arizona, Attorney General Kris Mayes’ office said in February it was investigating the merger for possible antitrust violations.