On August 13, 2025, President Trump issued an executive order revoking former President Biden’s July 9, 2021 Executive Order 14036 “Promoting Competition in the American Economy” (the “Biden Order”).
Comprised of 14 pages of exposition, mission-setting, and agency directives, the Biden Order affirmed that administration’s aim to “enforce the antitrust laws to combat excessive concentration of industry, the abuses of market power, and the harmful effects of monopoly and monopsony—especially as these issues arise in labor markets, agricultural markets, Internet platform industries, healthcare markets (including insurance, hospital, and prescription drug markets), repair markets, and United States markets directly affected by foreign cartel activity[.]” The Biden Order set out a “Whole-of-Government competition Policy” that directed federal agencies, such as the Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”), to adopt pro-competitive regulations and rescind regulations that “create unnecessary barriers to entry that stifle competition,” including narrowing or eliminating the scope of enforceable restrictive covenants.
Blog Editors
Recent Updates
- Spilling Secrets Podcast: Non-Competes in 2026 - FTC Signals Major Policy Shift
- Washington State Bans Almost All Noncompetes
- More Changes Ahead? Virginia May Expand Noncompete Restrictions in July 2026
- Preparing for Non-Compete Litigation: 2026 Update
- Moving Forward on Noncompetes: Key Takeaways from the Federal Trade Commission’s Noncompete Workshop