Since the inauguration, U.S. organizations have conducted roughly 2,500 meetings with European Parliament members. This activity is heavily skewed toward the technology sector, with Google, Apple, Amazon, Meta, and Microsoft collectively holding more meetings than the U.S. Mission to the EU and the American Chamber of Commerce combined. While traditional diplomatic outreach has seen a decline, corporate lobbying has risen by approximately 12 percent, largely driven by an aggressive push to reshape or dismantle EU digital regulations like the Digital Markets Act.
Surprisingly, this lobbying effort ignores the far-right factions ideologically aligned with the current U.S. administration. Instead, American firms focus their attention on the political center, particularly the European People’s Party, which maintains the committee power necessary to influence digital policy. Even when these companies engage with fringe groups, the strategy appears calculated; researchers note instances where giants like Meta have targeted right-wing parties specifically to leverage their potential voting blocs against existing regulations.

Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first!