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Irish comedian and television writer Graham Linehan testified this week before a House Judiciary Committee hearing: “But I warn you – the Atlantic is not as wide as you think.” That is the thesis of a staff report from that same committee, also released this week, entitled, Europe’s Decade-Long Campaign to Censor the Global Internet and How It Harms American Speech in the United States. This committee staff report, the second in a series, is informed by evidence from subpoenaed communications between ten U.S. tech companies and the European Union. It draws on thousands of documents and communications to present an eye-popping portrayal of Europe’s ambition to control speech across the Atlantic. That report declares: “The European Commission, in a comprehensive decade-long effort, has successfully pressured social media platforms to change their global content moderation rules, thereby directly infringing on Americans’ online speech in the United States.” The EU’s enabling authority in this effort springs from the Digital Services Act (DSA), which went into effect in 2023. In December 2025, the European Commission finally cracked its knuckles and hit X with the first DSA fine, a whopping €120 million ($140 million). Of the several justifications for this punishment, the most telling was that X was charged with not being as forthcoming as possible in providing American data to “vetted researchers” around the world. The first committee staff report in 2025 traced “these so-called researchers” back to academia and NGOs, finding them to be “uniformly left-wing and pro-censorship.” The DSA also lists many content infractions, revealing a determination to restrict free speech in the United States and to curtail our First Amendment. The report details an EU handbook that helpfully lists “offending” categories, which include: • “Populist rhetoric” • “Anti-government/anti-EU” content • “Anti-elite” content • “Political satire” • “Meme subculture” To help enforce this censorship, a European disinformation “task force” is focused on specific disinformation topics, including “fact-checking, elections, and demonetization of conservative news outlets.” The committee recounts how TikTok was forced to buckle to pressure from such groups. It was compelled to report to the European Commission how it censored over 45,000 pieces of alleged “misinformation,” including political speech on topics such as migration, climate change, security, and defense, ahead of the 2024 EU elections. Most alarming of all is Europe’s desire to control American speech about American elections. The absurd lengths of Europe’s ambition were on full display when then-EU Commissioner Thierry Breton “threatened X with regulatory action under the DSA for hosting a live interview with Donald Trump in the United States during the 2024 elections, warning that ‘spillovers’ of U.S. speech into the EU could spur the Commission to adopt retaliatory ‘measures’ against X under the DSA.” Such “spillover” is the EU’s excuse for trying to deny users of X around the world the ability to watch an interview with a former president who was a major-party nominee seeking to return to the White House. Whatever your view of Donald Trump, Breton’s actions revealed the breathtaking determination of Europe to try to manage our domestic political dialogue. The report concludes that the EU’s Digital Services Act “represents a grave danger to American freedom of speech online: the European Commission has intentionally pressured technology companies to change their global content moderation policies, and deliberately targeted American speech and elections.” In short: “The European Commission’s extraterritorial actions directly infringe on American sovereignty.” That conclusion should alarm anyone who values the First Amendment. Europe is not merely regulating its own digital marketplace – it is attempting to export its censorship regime to the United States by pressuring American companies to silence American speakers. If American leaders allow foreign regulators to dictate what Americans may say, hear, or share online, the First Amendment will not be repealed. It will be quietly nullified, one “spillover” at a time. Comments are closed.
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