Media Issues for America sued the Federal Commerce Fee (FTC) on Monday to dam the company’s investigation into the progressive media watchdog group, arguing the probe quantities to illegal retaliation. 

The group obtained a request from the FTC final month for paperwork and communications associated to a number of promoting and watchdog teams, in addition to its authorized battle with Elon Musk’s social platform X. 

“Media Matters faces an ongoing campaign of retribution for exercising its First Amendment rights,” the lawsuit reads. “For the third time, Media Matters must ask this Court to halt this ‘government campaign of retaliation.’” 

X sued the watchdog group in 2023 over a report that outlined how the social media website had positioned advertisements for mainstream manufacturers subsequent to hateful content material. The report, mixed with controversial feedback from Musk on the time, prompted advertisers to halt their spending on the platform. 

Texas and Missouri adopted go well with, opening investigations into Media Issues and requesting paperwork from the group that have been later blocked in courtroom.  

“Now the Federal Trade Commission seeks to punish Media Matters for its journalism and speech in exposing matters of substantial public concern,” the group wrote in its criticism. “The campaign of retribution against Media Matters must stop.” 

Media Issues argues the FTC’s request is “overbroad and designed to be maximally burdensome” and “constitutes a fishing expedition into the most sensitive areas” of its work, in search of details about the group’s funds, editorial course of and newsgathering actions.

The FTC didn’t instantly reply to The Hill’s request for remark. 

Notably, the company now not has any Democratic commissioners, after President Trump fired Commissioners Rebecca Kelly Slaughter and Alvaro Bedoya in March. The previous commissioners, who argue their firings are unlawful, have sued the president.