Five more states have joined an antitrust lawsuit that sought to block the Nexstar–Tegna broadcast giants merger, after a court order last week put the deal on hold while the litigation is ongoing.
California Attorney General Rob Bonta said on April 30 that attorneys general from Indiana, Kansas, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Vermont have joined the suit, bringing the total to 13 plaintiffs.
“This is not controversial stuff—this merger is illegal and will give Nexstar and Tegna the ability to control and raise prices, fire journalists, and dominate the media landscape,” Bonta said in a statement.
“We welcome our sister states into the fray and look forward to fighting alongside them,” he added, noting that the states’ participation turned the suit into a bipartisan effort.
Separately, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost said on April 30 that his office has reached an agreement with Nexstar that would safeguard the independence of local journalism and ensure residents will have a choice in local news and programming if the merger proceeds.
Under the agreement, Nexstar will uphold editorial, staffing, and production independence at two broadcast stations in Columbus and Cleveland, where it would own dual stations after the merger.
Nexstar also agreed to keep separate news teams at each station and preserve existing local programming levels, according to a statement issued by Yost’s office.
In a post on X, Nexstar defended the merger deal, saying that it would help to boost the amount of local news coverage across many markets.
“In today’s media landscape, multibillion-dollar technology companies compete directly with local broadcasters while facing none of the same ownership, reach, or size constraints, putting untenable pressure on the economic model that supports local news,” the company said.
“The alternative to this deal is not more independently owned outlets—it’s the demise of your local broadcast station.”
Under the preliminary injunction, Nexstar is required to allow Tegna to continue operating as a “separate and distinct, independently managed” business unit until the antitrust lawsuit is resolved.
Nexstar has said that it intends to appeal the ruling.







