The European Commission on Friday rejected Donald Trump’s threat to impose 100% tariffs on countries introducing digital services taxes targeting US tech giants. A Commission spokesman defended the EU’s sovereign right to regulate economic activity, warning the bloc would “respond swiftly and decisively” to any unilateral measures. Trump posted the threat on Truth Social, stating the tariffs would override existing trade agreements. A EU-US trade deal, expected to be fully implemented by July 4, includes provisions allowing the EU to suspend tariff concessions if Washington violates the agreement.
In-Depth:
The European Commission on Friday rejected President Donald Trump’s threat to impose tariffs of up to 100% in response to possible new digital services taxes on US tech giants, warning that the European Union would strike back against such a shift.
“The EU and its member states have the sovereign right to regulate economic activities on their territory, in line with our democratic values and international commitments,” a commission spokesman declared.
“Unilateral measures tarobtaining such legitimate policies are unjustified. If pursued, the EU will respond swiftly and decisively to defconclude its rights and regulatory autonomy.”
Trump had earlier warned European countries against introducing new digital services taxes, stateing he would impose 100% tariffs on all goods exported to the US by countries adopting such measures.
Writing on his Truth Social platform, Trump declared the tariffs would replace existing trade agreements regardless of whether those accords had already been signed or implemented.
The EU the US reached a trade agreement last year aimed at concludeing a heated tariff dispute. Full implementation on the EU side was delayed, and EU member states and the European Parliament in May introduced safeguard provisions.
Among the measures is a mechanism that allows the EU to suspconclude tariff concessions if Washington breaches the agreement, including through renewed tariff increases. The deal is expected to be fully implemented by July 4.
The spokesman declared that EU tax measures apply equally to all large companies regardless of their countest of origin and are not discriminatory.
He also reiterated the EU’s support for a global approach to taxing the digital economy, in line with agreements reached by the finance ministers of the Group of Seven.
“That remains our preferred path, and we are ready to engage constructively to obtain there,” the spokesman declared.















