US announces travel bans on former EU commissioner Thierry Breton and four others over DSA enforcement

On December 24, 2025, the Trump administration barred five Europeans, including ex-EU Commissioner Thierry Breton, from the US, citing their roles in the EU's Digital Services Act (DSA) as threats to American free speech on social media platforms. This is the first in a series covering the bans and reactions. (Updated coverage available.)

The US government imposed travel bans on five European figures central to digital regulation and hate speech monitoring under the EU's Digital Services Act (DSA). Leading the list is Thierry Breton, former European Commissioner for Internal Markets, dubbed the 'mastermind' behind the DSA by US Under Secretary of State Sarah Rogers. Breton had warned Elon Musk about X's noncompliance with rules on illegal content and disinformation.

Others banned: Imran Ahmed (Center for Countering Digital Hate, UK), which pushed deplatforming US anti-vaxxers like incoming HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.; Clare Melford (Global Disinformation Index, UK), which rates online content risks; and Anna-Lena von Hodenberg and Josephine Ballon (HateAid, Germany), DSA 'trusted flaggers' reporting hate speech.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated: 'For far too long, ideologues in Europe have led organized efforts to coerce American platforms to punish American viewpoints they oppose. The Trump Administration will no longer tolerate these egregious acts of extraterritorial censorship.'

The bans align US tech interests against EU pressures, per reports. Europeans reacted strongly: Global Disinformation Index called it 'an authoritarian attack on free speech'; HateAid's von Hodenberg and Ballon deemed it 'a new escalation questioning European sovereignty.'

This marks escalating US-EU divides on content moderation. Further developments, including detailed reactions from leaders like Macron and organizations, covered in subsequent series articles.

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French President Macron denounces US visa bans on EU DSA enforcers at tense press conference, symbolizing clash over digital sovereignty.
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European backlash grows to US visa restrictions on DSA enforcers

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French President Emmanuel Macron and EU figures denounced the US visa restrictions imposed on December 23, 2025, against former Commissioner Thierry Breton and four NGO leaders over Digital Services Act (DSA) enforcement, calling them an assault on European digital sovereignty. New details emerge on preceding X fine and US celebrations, part of ongoing series coverage.

Building on yesterday's State Department announcement, visa restrictions target five Europeans accused of coercing U.S. tech platforms into censoring American speech. New details highlight their organizations' roles in digital regulation, while Europe decries the move as an attack on sovereignty.

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The Trump administration has announced visa sanctions against five European figures involved in strict tech regulation, including former French commissioner Thierry Breton, accused of censorship harmful to US interests. Paris has strongly denounced the measure, defending European digital sovereignty. This decision fits into a broader offensive against EU rules on online platforms.

The EU Commission has presented a revised cybersecurity law to better fend off attacks and reduce dependencies on high-risk third countries. In particular focus: Chinese companies like Huawei and ZTE, which are to be effectively excluded from 5G rollout. This follows a recent hacker attack on the Eurail platform.

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New reactions to the January 3, 2026, US capture of Nicolás Maduro highlight contradictions among European nationalists, as French divisions persist amid fears of Trump alienating support for Ukraine.

The EU is considering retaliatory tariffs worth 93 billion euros against the US in response to Donald Trump's tariff threats against eight European countries. The threats concern the countries' military support for Greenland, and the EU is calling an extraordinary summit in Brussels on Thursday. Sources provide conflicting reports on the scope of countermeasures.

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The U.S. State Department has voiced significant concerns over a recent revision to South Korea's Information and Communications Network Act, warning that it could negatively impact U.S. online platforms and undermine technology cooperation. The amendment, aimed at curbing false and fabricated online information like deepfakes, was passed by South Korea's National Assembly last week and approved by the cabinet on Tuesday. This has raised worries about potential diplomatic and trade tensions between the allies.

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