T-Mobile Simply Lies When Pressed About 9,000 Lost Jobs In Wake Of Sprint Merger

from the zero-accountability dept

Former T-Mobile CEO John Legere repeatedly promised in print that the Sprint merger would result in a massive surge in new jobs. In a rambling missive that took aim at critics of the deal who predicted job losses, the former potty-mouth CEO proclaimed that critics were lying, and that the deal would be “job positive from day one” and every day thereafter.

Yeah, about that.

Geekwire did a proper retrospective on the deal’s impact last week (something the press usually can’t be bothered to do), and found that T-Mobile now employs 9,000 fewer employees than it did before the deal. And while that’s not quite as bad as the 15,000-30,000 jobs union leaders predicted (although layoffs will likely continue), it’s still… not great.

Especially given the lengths T-Mobile went to to insist layoffs would never happen, and the hostility the company expressed against deal critics who predicted otherwise.

When Geekwire’s Todd Bishop pressed the company on its failed promise to create jobs… T-Mobile officials simply lied, falsely claiming they’d accomplished their goal:

“We’ve upheld our jobs commitment. Before we merged with Sprint we said we’d have more employees as a combined company than the two standalone companies would have had on their own without the merger — and we have done just that.”

This is patently false and disproven by the company’s own publicly-available earnings data and employee numbers, which indicate it’s clearly about 9k employees lighter.

As Geekwire notes, they gave the company another shot to answer the question, and T-Mobile simply doubled down, again falsely claiming they’d fulfilled their promises of job creation. T-Mobile can lie here because it knows federal U.S. telecom regulators are gridlocked by telecom industry lobbying, and generally too feckless to do anything about it even when they aren’t.

This is, of course, par for the course for U.S. megamergers, especially in the highly consolidated telecom space. Companies make all manner of empty promises to regulators pre-merger, knowing full well they have zero intention of following through. Thanks to federal regulatory capture and corruption, the penalty for these kinds of empty promises is usually nonexistent.

Recall, the Trump FCC approved the T-Mobile Sprint merger without even reading data on the deal’s impact. Trump DOJ “antitrust enforcer” Makan Delrahim used his personal email and phone to work closely with T-Mobile to ensure regulatory approval, resulting in a plan to try and make a new competitor out of Dish Network that’s looking increasingly doomed.

This is all extremely typical for a country that talks a lot about “job creation” and “antitrust reform,” yet routinely rubber stamps mergers and consolidation without the slightest fuck given about the employee and consumer-facing repercussions. None of the think tankers, hired economists, Senators or regulators responsible for the impact of consolidation in telecom are ever held even remotely accountable, and the band plays on to obvious effect.

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Companies: sprint, t-mobile

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Comments on “T-Mobile Simply Lies When Pressed About 9,000 Lost Jobs In Wake Of Sprint Merger”

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7 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

“We’ve upheld our jobs commitment. Before we merged with Sprint we said we’d have more employees as a combined company than the two standalone companies would have had on their own without the merger — and we have done just that.”

Hmm I think what ever PR person that was… T-mobile could probably lay them off and be none the worse. Considering that baldfaced lies are typically not a positive PR (I mean, unless the industry your in is the “generate easily disproven baldfaced lies that have zero utility”, however I personally don’t think there’s a market for such an industry)

This comment has been deemed funny by the community.
Pixelation says:

Like Magic

They are telling the truth. Both companies had fewer employees individually than they ended up with combined. If T-Mobile had 50,000 and Sprint had 50,000, when you combine them to 100,000 and remove 9000, you end up with 91,000, which is more than either 50,000. Each company added 41,000! This is how you create 82,000 additional jobs!

ECA (profile) says:

What ever happened

To processing, condemning,excommunication, prosecuting, Those that would harm the group?

Our gov. keeps throwing numbers up and NEW jobs, but the corps Keep Cutting those jobs.

What happens when you Cut to many jobs? Lets ask Elon in the next few months, As those he Fired that Knew their jobs, WONT come back unless he pays them MORE.

When are we going to start using the scarlet letter? As a democratic nation, It would be NICE if those on top would Listen to what the customers want.
Insted we get a bunch of people with excuses and pointing fingers and Blatant Lies.

LostInLoDOS (profile) says:

Moving on

T-Mobile purchased an inferior ‘other’ company. One notorious for bad services across the board.
T-Mobile is the top rated carrier in the country. Best services, best prices, best customer response.

Despite calls about losses, it was inevitable that they would dump the worst of the worst company. The number is more a statement of how many poor quality staffers sprint had than anything to do with a merger. Given the relative small number of such a large company, T-Mobile is undeniably gone out of its way To hold on to whatever staff they could actually teach and instruct.

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