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Five more U.S. states are joining an antitrust lawsuit challenging Nexstar's (NXST.O) acquisition of rival broadcaster ​Tegna after a judge temporarily blocked the deal ‌from proceeding, California's attorney general said on Thursday.

Attorney General Rob Bonta, a Democrat whose office joined seven other states in suing over the $6.2 ​billion deal in March, said Massachusetts, Vermont, and ​his Republican counterparts in Indiana, Kansas, and Pennsylvania ⁠were joining the case.

The states’ attorneys general did not ​immediately respond to requests for comment.

U.S. District Judge Troy Nunley ​in Sacramento said in an April 17 ruling that the plaintiffs were likely to succeed on their claims that the deal will substantially ​lessen competition in dozens of local television markets.

The court’s ​order bars Nexstar from consolidating its operations with Tegna pending further ‌litigation, ⁠but does not unwind the transaction.

The deal quickly closed after the Justice Department and the Federal Communications Commission approved it on March 19, which Nexstar noted in a statement announcing ​its appeal ​of Nunley's ⁠decision.

The deal would create the largest broadcast station group in the U.S., reaching 80% of ​U.S. households. The states have argued that ​the ⁠deal would result in lost jobs, increased cable bills and "significantly impact the delivery of news and other media content to ⁠Americans ​nationwide."

Nexstar has said its deal with ​Tegna will strengthen local stations and support investment in local journalism.


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