Tensions Rise as US Officials Push Back Against EU’s Sweeping Tech Regulations

Meta may soon find itself reaping the rewards of its alignment with U.S. President Donald Trump, as the Trump Administration appears ready to push back against what it sees as increasingly burdensome EU regulations unfairly targeting American tech giants.
The White House is preparing to mount stronger opposition to the European Union’s Digital Services Act (DSA) — legislation that imposes a sweeping set of rules, restrictions, and penalties on social media companies regarding how they collect and use user data.
According to Reuters:
“President Donald Trump’s administration has instructed U.S. diplomats in Europe to launch a lobbying campaign to build opposition to the European Union’s Digital Services Act (DSA), which Washington says stifles free speech and imposes costs on U.S. tech companies.”
In a letter from U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, the administration accuses EU regulators of placing “undue” limits on freedom of expression.
“The cable, whose headline described it as an ‘action request,’ tasked American diplomats across U.S. embassies in Europe with regularly engaging with EU governments and digital services authorities to convey U.S. concerns about the DSA and the financial costs for U.S. companies.”
For Meta and its CEO Mark Zuckerberg, this is welcome news. The company has long urged Washington to intervene against what it considers to be disproportionate penalties imposed in the EU.
Over the past three years, Meta has averaged over $1 billion annually in EU fines, with more enforcement actions looming in countries like Italy. This financial pressure is one of the key reasons Meta has aligned itself more closely with the Trump Administration — adopting features like Community Notes and removing third-party fact-checking, in line with White House preferences.
In January, Meta appointed Republican strategist Joel Kaplan as its head of global affairs, further strengthening its ties to Trump’s inner circle, with the expectation that the administration would help smooth the company’s path through regulatory obstacles.
And there are signs the strategy could pay off.
Trump has already shown a willingness to challenge such measures, recently threatening to suspend trade talks with Canada over its planned “Digital Services Tax,” which also targeted Meta. Canada ultimately backed down. The Trump Administration has similarly criticized the EU’s DSA and other rules related to AI, while Trump has floated tariffs on European imports as retaliation for tech regulations he deems harmful to U.S. businesses.
Now, with this latest directive to U.S. diplomats, Washington is signaling a more aggressive stance. While framed around defending free speech, the move could set the stage for a broader political confrontation — one that might pressure Brussels to water down some of its requirements.
Would that benefit everyday users?
That’s up for debate. Some EU measures have primarily hit the platforms’ bottom lines with minimal visible impact on users, while others have introduced protections that enhance user control and transparency.
Still, critics argue the EU has increasingly wielded regulation as a tool to siphon revenue from Meta’s dominant advertising business back into local economies.
Whichever side one takes, it’s clear the battle lines are being drawn for what could become a major transatlantic clash over the future of tech regulation.
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