A clash between Poland’s right-wing president and its centrist ruling coalition
over the European Union’s flagship social media law is putting the country
further at risk of multimillion euro fines from Brussels.
President Karol Nawrocki is holding up a bill that would implement the EU’s
Digital Services Act, a tech law that allows regulators to police how social
media firms moderate content. Nawrocki, an ally of U.S. President Donald Trump,
said in a statement that the law would “give control of content on the internet
to officials subordinate to the government, not to independent courts.”
The government coalition led by Prime Minister Donald Tusk, Nawrocki’s rival,
warned this further exposed them to the risk of EU fines as high as €9.5
million.
Deputy Digital Minister Dariusz Standerski said in a TV interview that, “since
the president decided to veto this law, I’m assuming he is also willing to have
these costs [of a potential fine] charged to the budget of the President’s
Office.”
Nawrocki’s refusal to sign the bill brings back bad memories of Warsaw’s
years-long clash with Brussels over the rule of law, a conflict that began when
Nawrocki’s Law and Justice party rose to power in 2015 and started reforming the
country’s courts and regulators. The EU imposed €320 million in penalties on
Poland from 2021-2023.
Warsaw was already in a fight with the Commission over its slow implementation
of the tech rulebook since 2024, when the EU executive put Poland on notice for
delaying the law’s implementation and for not designating a responsible
authority. In May last year Brussels took Warsaw to court over the issue.
If the EU imposes new fines over the rollout of digital rules, it would
“reignite debates reminiscent of the rule-of-law mechanism and frozen funds
disputes,” said Jakub Szymik, founder of Warsaw-based non-profit watchdog group
CEE Digital Democracy Watch.
Failure to implement the tech law could in the long run even lead to fines and
penalties accruing over time, as happened when Warsaw refused to reform its
courts during the earlier rule of law crisis.
The European Commission said in a statement that it “will not comment on
national legislative procedures.” It added that “implementing the [Digital
Services Act] into national law is essential to allow users in Poland to benefit
from the same DSA rights.”
“This is why we have an ongoing infringement procedure against Poland” for its
“failure to designate and empower” a responsible authority, the statement said.
Under the tech platforms law, countries were supposed to designate a national
authority to oversee the rules by February 2024. Poland is the only EU country
that hasn’t moved to at least formally agree on which regulator that should be.
The European Commission is the chief regulator for a group of very large online
platforms, including Elon Musk’s X, Meta’s Facebook and Instagram, Google’s
YouTube, Chinese-owned TikTok and Shein and others.
But national governments have the power to enforce the law on smaller platforms
and certify third parties for dispute resolution, among other things. National
laws allow users to exercise their rights to appeal to online platforms and
challenge decisions.
When blocking the bill last Friday, Nawrocki said a new version could be ready
within two months.
But that was “very unlikely … given that work on the current version has been
ongoing for nearly two years and no concrete alternative has been presented” by
the president, said Szymik, the NGO official.
The Digital Services Act has become a flashpoint in the political fight between
Brussels and Washington over how to police online platforms. The EU imposed its
first-ever fine under the law on X in December, prompting the U.S.
administration to sanction former EU Commissioner Thierry Breton and four other
Europeans.
Nawrocki last week likened the law to “the construction of the Ministry of Truth
from George Orwell’s novel 1984,” a criticism that echoed claims by Trump and
his top MAGA officials that the law censored conservatives and right-wingers.
Bartosz Brzeziński contributed reporting.
Tag - Content moderation
Meta named former Trump adviser Dina Powell McCormick to serve as president and
vice chair Monday, further cementing the company’s growing ties to Republicans
and President Donald Trump’s White House.
In addition to a long career on Wall Street, Powell McCormick served as Trump’s
deputy national security adviser during his first term. She was also a member of
the George W. Bush administration.
She first joined Meta’s board last April, part of a broader play by the social
media and artificial intelligence giant to hire Republicans following Trump’s
election.
In a statement, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg praised Powell McCormick’s “experience
at the highest levels of global finance, combined with her deep relationships
around the world, [which] makes her uniquely suited to help Meta manage this
next phase of growth.”
Rightward trend: Powell McCormick’s time in global finance — she spent 16 years
as a partner at Goldman Sachs and was most recently a top executive at banking
company BDT & MSD Partners — could be a major asset to Meta as it raises
hundreds of billions of dollars to build out data centers and other AI-related
infrastructure.
But her GOP pedigree and proximity to Trump likely played a significant role in
her hiring as well.
Since Trump’s election, Meta has worked to curry favor with Republicans in the
White House and on Capitol Hill. The company elevated former GOP official Joel
Kaplan to serve as global affairs lead last January, simultaneously tapping
Kevin Martin, a former Republican chair of the Federal Communications
Commission, as his No. 2.
Under pressure from Republicans, last year Meta also rolled back many of its
former rules related to content moderation. In 2024, the company apologized to
congressional Republicans — specifically Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), chair of the
House Judiciary Committee — for removing content that contained disinformation
about the Covid-19 pandemic.
A Meta spokesperson declined to comment when asked whether Powell McCormick’s
ties to Trump and Republicans played a role in her hiring.
Trump thumbs up: In a Truth Social post Monday, Trump congratulated Powell
McCormick and said Zuckerberg made a “great choice.” The president called her “a
fantastic, and very talented, person, who served the Trump Administration with
strength and distinction!”
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen blasted Elon Musk’s platform
X over the spread of sexually explicit deepfakes created using its AI chatbot
Grok.
“I am appalled that a tech platform is enabling users to digitally undress women
and children online. This is unthinkable behavior. And the harm caused by these
deepfakes is very real,” von der Leyen said in an interview with multiple
European media outlets, including Reuters and Corriere della Sera.
“We will not be outsourcing child protection and consent to Silicon Valley. If
they don’t act, we will,” she warned.
Since the beginning of January, thousands of women and teenagers, including
public figures, have reported that their photos published on social media have
been “undressed” and put in bikinis by Grok at the request of users.
The deepfake tool has prompted investigations from regulators across Europe,
including in Brussels, Dublin, Paris and London.
The European Commission ordered X on Thursday to retain “all internal documents
and data relating to Grok” — an escalation of the ongoing investigation into X’s
content moderation policies — after calling the nonconsensual, sexually explicit
deepfakes “illegal,” “appalling” and “disgusting.”
In response, X made its controversial AI image generation feature only available
to users with paid subscriptions. European Commission spokesperson Thomas
Regnier said that limiting the tool’s use to paying subscribers did not mean an
end to the EU’s investigation.
The scandal has emerged as a fresh test of the EU’s resolve to rein in Musk and
U.S. Big Tech firms. Only a month earlier, Brussels fined X €120 million for
breaching the bloc’s landmark platform law, the Digital Services Act (DSA).
The fine sparked a swift and forceful reaction from Washington, with the U.S.
administration imposing a travel ban on the EU’s former digital commissioner and
chief architect of the DSA, Thierry Breton.
X did not immediately respond to POLITICO’s request for comment about von der
Leyen’s criticism.
WARSAW — Poland’s nationalist President Karol Nawrocki on Friday sided with his
ally U.S. President Donald Trump to veto legislation on enforcing the EU’s
social media law, which is hated by the American administration.
Trump and his top MAGA officials condemn the EU’s Digital Services Act — which
seeks to force big platforms like Elon Musk’s X, Facebook, Instagram to moderate
content — as a form of “Orwellian” censorship against conservative and
right-wingers.
The presidential veto stops national regulators in Warsaw from implementing the
DSA and sets Nawrocki up for a a clash with centrist pro-EU Prime Minister
Donald Tusk. Tusk’s parliamentary majority passed the legislation introducing
the DSA in Poland.
Nawrocki argued that while the bill’s stated aim of protecting citizens —
particularly minors — was legitimate, the Polish bill would grant excessive
power to government officials over online content, resulting in “administrative
censorship.”
“I want this to be stated clearly: a situation in which what is allowed on the
internet is decided by an official subordinate to the government resembles the
construction of the Ministry of Truth from George Orwell’s novel 1984,” Nawrocki
said in a statement — echoing the U.S.’s stance on the law.
Nawrocki also warned that allowing authorities to decide what constitutes truth
or disinformation would erode freedom of expression “step by step.” He called
for a revised draft that would protect children while ensuring that disputes
over online speech are settled by independent courts.
Deputy Prime Minister and Digital Affairs Minister Krzysztof Gawkowski dismissed
Nawrocki’s position, accusing the president of undermining online safety and
siding with digital platforms.
“The president has vetoed online safety,” Gawkowski told a press briefing Friday
afternoon, arguing the law would have protected children from predators,
families from disinformation and users from opaque algorithms.
The minister also rejected Nawrocki’s Orwellian comparisons, saying the bill
explicitly relied on ordinary courts rather than officials to rule on online
content.
Gawkowski said Poland is now among the few EU countries without national
legislation enabling effective enforcement of the DSA and pledged that the
government would continue to pursue new rules.
The clash comes as enforcement of the social media law has become a flashpoint
in EU-U.S. relations.
Brussels has already fined Elon Musk’s X €120 million for breaching the law,
prompting a furious response from Washington, including travel bans imposed by
the Trump administration on former EU Commissioner Thierry Breton, an architect
of the tech law, and four disinformation experts.
The DSA allows fines of up to 6 percent of a company’s global revenue and, as a
measure of last resort, temporary bans on platforms.
Earlier this week, the European Commission expanded its investigation into X’s
AI service Grok after it started posting a wave of non-consensual sexualized
pictures of people in response to X users’ requests.
The European Commission’s digital spokesperson Thomas Regnier said the EU
executive would not comment on national legislative procedures. “Implementing
the DSA into national law is essential to allow users in Poland to benefit from
the same DSA rights, such as challenging platforms if their content is deleted
or their account suspended,” he said.
“This is why we have an ongoing infringement procedure against Poland. We have
referred Poland to the Court of Justice of the EU for failure to designate and
empower the Digital Services Coordinator,” in May 2025, Regnier added.
Gawkowski said that the government would make a quick decision on what to do
next with the vetoed bill but declined to offer specifics on what a new bill
would look like were it to be submitted to parliament again.
Tusk four-party coalition does not have enough votes in parliament to override
Nawrocki’s vetoes. That has created a political deadlock over key legislation
efforts by the government, which stands for reelection next year. Nawrocki,
meanwhile, is aiming to help the Law and Justice (PiS) political party he’s
aligned with to retake power after losing to Tusk in 2023.
Mathieu Pollet contributed reporting.
Elon Musk’s AI chatbot Grok restricted access to a much-criticized deepfake
generator on social media platform X following a surge of users creating
nonconsensual nude images.
Grok now says that “image generation is currently limited to paying subscribers”
as “this helps ensure responsible use while we continue refining things,” citing
“recent issues and improvements to safeguards.”
The chatbot has drawn scrutiny from regulators and politicians across Europe
after it enabled users to manipulate pictures posted online into a series of
deepfakes, including depictions of undressed minors and public figures.
Swedish Deputy Prime Minister Ebba Busch was one of the latest high-profile
victims. That post is no longer visible. “This post from grok has been withheld
in [the] European Union based on local law(s),” it is now labeled.
The European Commission ordered X on Thursday to retain “all internal documents
and data relating to Grok” — an escalation of the ongoing investigation into X’s
content moderation policies — after calling the nonconsensual, sexually explicit
deepfakes “illegal,” “appalling” and “disgusting.”
X did not respond to a request for comment in time for publication.
PARIS — Former European commissioner Thierry Breton urged the European Union to
respond with “the utmost severity” to the Trump administration’s decision to
sanction him and four other European nationals for their work on online content
moderation.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio last week announced Breton would be
“generally barred from entering the United States,” along with British citizens
Imran Ahmed and Clare Melford and Germany’s Anna-Lena von Hodenberg and
Josephine Ballon, all of whom were members of organizations seeking to fight
hate speech online.
The U.S. State Department targeted Breton as the “mastermind of the Digital
Services Act,” the EU’s rulebook for online platforms which was used to impose a
€120 million fine on Elon Musk’s X and has led to a high-level dispute between
Brussels and Washington.
“If we accept that, as a European Commissioner, you can be ostracized, blamed,
and punished for carrying out the mandate entrusted to you, then we are heading
down an extraordinarily dangerous path,” Breton said Tuesday on RTL. “If we
allow this situation to continue, it would mean that those who succeed me and
have to exercise their European mandate would be intimidated and prevented from
doing so.”
“The European Commission cannot show any sign of weakness… European institutions
must respond with the utmost severity,” he added.
Breton said he had spoken at length with French President Emmanuel Macron after
being sanctioned. The former tech industry executive, who resigned from his role
as commissioner for internal market last year over claims Commission chief
Ursula von der Leyen was trying to push him out, has received widespread support
in Europe since the U.S. decision against him.
In a statement, the Commission said it had “requested clarifications from the
U.S. authorities” and would “if needed … respond swiftly and decisively.”
BRUSSELS — The fight between Brussels and Washington over tech rules is
officially high politics — and shows no sign of stopping in 2026.
Last week the United States sanctioned a former top European Commission
official, alleging he was a “mastermind” of the bloc’s content moderation law.
The travel ban was a sign the Trump administration is ramping up its attacks on
what it calls Europe’s censorship regime.
The pressure puts Brussels between a rock and a hard place.
EU leaders like France’s Emmanuel Macron and European Parliament lawmakers
dismissed the U.S. move as intimidation and even suggested considering
counteraction, ramping up calls for Brussels to hold its ground and reduce the
EU’s reliance on U.S. technology.
It suggests that U.S. pressure on the EU’s tech rules is now a full-blown
transatlantic dispute of its own, rather than just a sideshow to trade talks,
and requires an appropriate response.
“The real response must be political,” said Italian Social Democrat lawmaker
Brando Benifei, the European Parliament’s lead on relations with the U.S., in
response to the American sanctions.
“Our sleepwalking leaders must wake up, because there’s no time left.”
While the Commission condemned the U.S. move, its President Ursula von der Leyen
offered a muted response, highlighting only the importance of freedom of speech
in a post on X.
ONLY THE START
The U.S. move to impose a travel ban on Frenchman Thierry Breton, who served as
the EU’s internal market chief from 2019 to 2024 and led the drafting of the
Digital Services Act, marked an acceleration in the U.S. campaign against the
EU’s tech rules.
Breton has borne the brunt of criticism over the EU’s tech rules, particularly
following his public spat with U.S. President Donald Trump’s one-time ally, X
owner Elon Musk. The tech billionaire appears to be back in the president’s good
books after a bitter falling-out over the summer.
A letter Breton sent in August 2024 to warn Musk ahead of an upcoming livestream
featuring then-presidential candidate Trump was repeatedly shared by Trump
loyalists after Breton was sanctioned.
Another four individuals were sanctioned, including two from German NGO HateAid,
which Berlin’s regulators have said is a “trusted” organization to flag illegal
content like hate speech.
The U.S. had previously mainly threatened the EU over its tech rules, or invoked
them when the EU demanded concessions from Washington such as lower steel and
aluminum tariffs in early December.
But after the Commission crossed the Rubicon in early December and imposed its
first-ever Digital Services Act fine on Musk’s X, Washington responded with the
travel bans.
The EU executive has repeatedly said its enforcement of the DSA is not
political, yet Washington insists it is nothing but.
Threats of travel restrictions from the U.S. have been trickling in since the
summer, but the Commission has declined to say how it plans to protect its
officials.
Both sides still have room — and face internal calls to escalate — in what is
now a full-blown transatlantic dispute over the limits of free speech.
Just earlier this month, when the U.S. announced its intention to require social
media disclosures from people hoping to enter the country on temporary visas,
Commission chief spokesperson Paula Pinho insisted these were only plans and
declined to comment on how it would protect its staff working on the DSA.
Pressured by journalists about the impact on staff working on digital rules, she
said tech spokesperson Thomas Regnier had no plans to visit the U.S.
Still, the sanctions announced by the State Department may be only a warning
shot.
The measures announced last week targeted a former Commission official, not
someone currently in office. The U.S. still has many other tools in its arsenal,
which U.S. politicians say it should use.
Missouri Republican Senator Eric Schmitt called for the use of Magnitsky
sanctions, which are financial measures that can cause significant operational
headaches including asset freezes and barring U.S. entities from trading with
sanctioned entities.
While they are normally reserved for serious human rights violations like war
crimes or the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, the Trump
administration has already used them to go after another person deemed to be a
modern agent of censorship.
In July, the Treasury and State departments announced Magnitsky sanctions
against Brazilian Judge Alexandre de Moraes, including for suppressing “speech
that is protected under the U.S. Constitution.”
De Moraes has drawn the same criticism as EU officials from the Trump
administration and its allies, including Musk.
COUNTERACTION
The Commission also faces heat from the other side, with EU country leaders and
European Parliament lawmakers demanding a more political response to the
situation.
The EU’s tech rules have been a regular topic of debate at the Parliament’s
plenary sessions, and several lawmakers have indicated the U.S. travel
restrictions could be on the agenda for the January session.
German Greens lawmaker Sergey Lagodinsky said the EU should not rule out
considering some sort of counteraction.
“Europe must respond. It must raise pressure in the trade talks and consider
measures against senior tech executives who actively support the U.S.
administration agenda,” he said in a statement shared with POLITICO.
Breton himself accused the EU institutions of being “very weak” in an interview
with TF1.
Just before the break, in a rare joint address, MEPs from four political groups
called for stronger action against U.S. Big Tech companies.
“The small fine against X is a good beginning, but it comes definitely too late,
and it’s absolutely not enough,” said German Greens MEP Alexandra Geese.
The socialists have tried to kick off a special inquiry committee to figure out
if the Commission is strong enough in enforcing the DSA, although support from
other groups is lacking.
The Commission has yet to announce its decisions on the meatier part of its DSA
probe into X and other platforms.
Others see the U.S. sanctions as another warning to reduce reliance on U.S.
technology and build up the EU’s own technological capacity.
“Lovely, but not enough,” Aurore Lalucq, a French MEP and chair of the economic
affairs committee, quipped in response to the Commission’s condemnation of the
U.S. sanctions.
“We need to build our independence now. It starts with our payment systems, a
sovereign cloud, and an industrial policy for digital infrastructure and social
networks.”
Europe’s far-right firebrands are rushing to hitch their fortunes to
Washington’s new crusade against Brussels.
Senior U.S. government officials, including Vice President JD Vance and
Secretary of State Marco Rubio, have launched a raft of criticism against what
they call EU “censorship” and an “attack” of U.S. tech companies following a
€120 million fine from the European Commission on social media platform X. The
fine is for breaching EU transparency obligations under the Digital Services
Act, the bloc’s content moderation rule book.
“The Commission’s attack on X says it all,” Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor
Orbán said on X on Saturday. “When the Brusselian overlords cannot win the
debate, they reach for the fines. Europe needs free speech, not unelected
bureaucrats deciding what we can read or say,” he said.
“Hats off to Elon Musk for holding the line,” Orbán added.
Tech mogul Musk said his response to the penalty would target the EU officials
who imposed it.
“The European Commission appreciates censorship & chat control of its citizens.
They want to silence critical voices by restricting freedom of speech,” echoed
far-right Alternative for Germany leader Alice Weidel.
Three right-wing to far-right parties in the EU are pushing to stop and
backtrack the integration process of European countries — the European
Conservatives and Reformists, the Patriots for Europe, and the Europe of
Sovereign Nations. Together they hold 191 out of 720 seats in the European
Parliament.
The parties’ lawmakers are calling for a range of proposals — from shifting
competences from the European to the national level, to dismantling the EU
altogether. They defend the primacy of national interests over common European
cooperation.
Since Donald Trump’s reelection, they have portrayed themselves as the key
transatlantic link, mirroring the U.S. president’s political campaigning in
Europe, such as pushing for a “Make Europe Great Again” movement.
The fresh U.S. criticism of EU institutions has come in handy to amplify their
political agendas. “Patriots for Europe will fight to dismantle this censorship
regime,” the party said on X.
The ECR group — political home to Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni — issued
a statement questioning the enforcement of the DSA following the U.S. criticism.
“A digital law that lacks legal certainty risks becoming an instrument of
political discretion,” ECR co-chairman Nicola Procaccini said on Saturday after
the U.S. backlash.
The group supported the DSA when it passed through the Parliament, having said
in the past the law would “protect freedom of expression, increase trust in
online services and contribute to an open digital economy in Europe.”
LISBON — Ursula von der Leyen’s European Commission should continue to enforce
its digital rules with an iron fist despite the outcry from U.S. officials and
big tech moguls, co-chair of the Greens in the European Parliament Bas Eickhout
told POLITICO.
As Green politicians from across Europe gather in the Portuguese capital for
their annual congress, U.S. top officials are blasting the EU for imposing a
penalty on social media platform X for breaching its transparency obligations
under the EU’s Digital Services Act, the bloc’s content moderation rule book.
“They should just implement the law, which means they need to be tougher,”
Eickhout told POLITICO on the sidelines of the event. He argued that the fine of
€120 million is “nothing” for billionaire Elon Musk and that the EU executive
should go further.
The Commission needs to “make clear that we should be proud of our policies … we
are the only ones fighting American Big Tech,” he said, adding that tech
companies are “killing freedom of speech in Europe.”
The Greens have in the past denounced Meta and X over their content moderation
policies, arguing these platforms amplify “disinformation” and “extremism” and
interfere in European electoral processes.
Meta and X did not reply to a request for comment by the time of publication.
Meta has “introduced changes to our content reporting options, appeals process
and data access tools since the DSA came into force and are confident that these
solutions match what is required under the law in the EU,” a Meta spokesperson
said at the end of October.
Tech mogul Musk said his response to the penalty would target the EU officials
who imposed it. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the fine is “an attack
on all American tech platforms and the American people by foreign governments,”
and accused the move of “censorship.”
“It’s not good when our former allies in Washington are now working hand in
glove with Big Tech,” blasted European Green Party chair Ciarán Cuffe at the
opening of the congress in Lisbon.
Eickhout, whose party GreenLeft-Labor alliance is in negotiations to enter
government in the Netherlands, said “we should pick on this battle and stand
strong.”
The Commission’s decision to fine X under the EU’s Digital Services Act is over
transparency concerns. The Commission said the design of X’s blue checkmark is
“deceptive,” after it was changed from user verification into a paid feature.
The EU’s executive also said X’s advertising library lacks transparency and that
it fails to provide access to public data for researchers as required by the
law.
Eickhout lamented that European governments are slow in condemning the U.S.
moves against the EU, and argued that with its recent national security
strategy, the Americans have made clear their objective is to divide Europe from
within by fueling far-right parties.
“Some of the leaders like [French President Emmanuel] Macron are still
desperately trying to say that that the United States are our ally,” Eickhout
said. “I want to see urgency on how Europe is going to take its own path and not
rely on the U.S. anymore, because it’s clear we cannot.”
The European Commission has lost access to its control panel for buying and
tracking ads on Elon Musk’s X — after fining the social media platform €120
million for violating EU transparency rules.
“Your ad account has been terminated,” X’s head of product, Nikita Bier, wrote
on the platform early Sunday.
Bier accused the EU executive of trying to amplify its own social media post
about the fine on X by trying “to take advantage of an exploit in our Ad
Composer — to post a link that deceives users into thinking it’s a video and to
artificially increase its reach.”
The Commission fined X on Thursday for breaching the EU’s rules under the
Digital Services Act (DSA), which aims to limit the spread of illegal content.
The breaches included a lack of transparency around X’s advertising library and
the company’s decision to change its trademark blue checkmark from a means of
verification to a “deceptive” paid feature.
“The irony of your announcement,” Bier said. “X believes everyone should have an
equal voice on our platform. However, it seems you believe that the rules should
not apply to your account.”
Trump administration has criticized the DSA and the Digital Markets Act, which
prevent large online platforms, such as Google, Amazon and Meta, from
overextending their online empires.
The White House has accused the rules of discriminating against U.S. companies,
and the fine will likely amplify transatlantic trade tensions. U.S. Secretary of
Commerce Howard Lutnick has already threatened to keep 50 percent tariffs on
European exports of steel and aluminum unless the EU loosens its digital rules.
U.S. Vice President JD Vance blasted Brussels’ action, describing the fine as a
response for “not engaging in censorship” — a notion the Commission has
dismissed.
“The DSA is having not to do with censorship,” said the EU’s tech czar, Henna
Virkkunen, told reporters on Thursday. “This decision is about the transparency
of X.”