4/3/2026 at 12:15:50 PM
Specifically, this is another Parliament vs Commission issue. The Commission loves to have little deals away from the public where everything is quietly smoothed over, while the Parliament is trying to build popular legitimacy.by pjc50
4/3/2026 at 1:11:56 PM
Also, I'm not sure there's much pressure involved. Mass surveillance is a thing "centrist" EU politicians very much want themselves.by vintermann
4/3/2026 at 1:30:23 PM
> Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg publicly voiced his dissatisfaction and sought support from Trump, while Apple’s Tim Cook reportedly asked the White House to directly intervene against EU fines imposed on his company.https://www.euractiv.com/news/widespread-alarm-over-commissi...
Apple even went so far as to demand the EU repeal these laws, and is likely still non-compliant in several ways; for which they should have been fined tens of billions of dollars by now!
https://www.reuters.com/business/apple-urges-eu-regulators-t...
Trump has delivered for them, made it a point of contention for trade deals and threatened sanctions on anyone enforcing them.
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/trump-administration-weighs...
by benoau
4/3/2026 at 4:19:40 PM
> they should have been fined tens of billions of dollars by now!Maybe cartoonishly large fines levied against powerful entities wasn’t such a great idea. Other incentives may have been better suited to getting the populace what they want in the long term.
by peyton
4/3/2026 at 5:36:18 PM
>Maybe cartoonishly large fines levied against powerful entitiesright, the tradition is that fines be cartoonishly small so that breaking the law can be factored into the cost of doing business, who the hell does the EU think they are to go against tradition!!?
by bryanrasmussen
4/3/2026 at 4:53:23 PM
I don't think there is an incentive lawmakers could offer that is worth more to Apple than monopolizing fees and subverting competition, there is practically no limits they will go to to preserve that status quo around the world.The only time they have eagerly complied with anything relating to this is when Judge YGR gave them this ultimatum, they approved Fortnite a full day early once someone had to be personally responsible for defying her order a second time:
https://x.com/TimSweeneyEpic/status/1924499498513862720/phot...
by benoau
4/3/2026 at 5:46:12 PM
That seems like a better model than stupefying fines against the corporate entity then. Forget about billion dollar fines, just give them a slap on the wrist while telling them explicitly what they have to stop doing, but then if they keep doing it the executives are personally held in contempt.It also solves the perverse incentive of "fine the foreign companies as a revenue generation method" because the result is getting them to comply instead of either repeatedly fining them for not doing it or trying to extract a fine so large it becomes an international political issue.
by AnthonyMouse
4/5/2026 at 9:28:49 PM
Nope. All that does is create a rash of execs/decisionmakers who become sacrificial fixtures who absolutely do not travel to the jurisdiction in question, thusly handily sidestepping the accountability. It has to be fines. At the end of the day, it's going to become a political sticking point one way or another if we're going to share and coexist on the same planet.by salawat
4/3/2026 at 1:18:51 PM
It’s the public/private dichotomy you see everywhere.Publicly pols say one thing or stand for one thing and privately they hold different views.
by mc32
4/3/2026 at 5:06:52 PM
The EU should abandon the stupid Commission structure and have a real Parliament that can actually draft legislation. The current one can just vote down legislation drafted by the Commission.by rayiner
4/3/2026 at 5:55:58 PM
What they ought to do is have a process for passing EU-wide laws where they get introduced by a popularly elected legislature but to be enacted they also have to be approved by the majority of the legislatures of the member states. That gives you a good check on centralized power grabs because the member states have to approve anything that could usurp their role, but you can still pass things that make sense at that level like a common set of antitrust rules.by AnthonyMouse
4/3/2026 at 8:28:33 PM
That’s similar to the original US model, except instead of the member state legislatures directly approving legislation, they appointed two proxies to the federal Senate. It’s a good system.But being able to originate legislation in the directly elected legislature is important. Even the original U.S. constitutional design, which was quite anti-populist, made the directly elected House the main originator of legislation. (Either the House or Senate could do it, but only the House could introduce appropriations bills giving it primacy in the legislative process.)
by rayiner
4/3/2026 at 5:59:35 PM
Isn't that how QMV works?by pjc50
4/3/2026 at 6:14:20 PM
The current system is new legislation has to be drafted by the Commission, which is the indirectly elected executive branch. That allows what would otherwise be popular proposals to never even be introduced. Whereas if you have legislation introduced by the directly elected body, popular proposals at least get a public debate and people get to see what they are and who is blocking them, but you still ultimately want the check on power grabs and populist nonsense before it actually gets enacted.by AnthonyMouse
4/4/2026 at 9:24:30 AM
NO! Laws should be drafted by lawyers and professionals in those fields. An election would select lawmakers by popularity contest. Can't expect good laws from tht kind of people.What's needed is accountability for drafted laws and removal of those who repeatedly draft laws rejected by parliament.
by M95D
4/4/2026 at 9:30:51 AM
> and removal of those who repeatedly draft laws rejected by parliament.While I believe I understand where you are coming from, this seems unduly broad and harsh.
What limit on time, number of attempts, etc. whould we apriori in advance place on laws like equality, climate monitoring, abortion rights, etc. before the gate is dropped on any more of that kind of thing?
by defrost
4/5/2026 at 6:26:20 PM
Limits should not be placed on laws, but on law authors. Each one with his own count of rejected laws. Like this: author signs some drafts, drafts go to parliament, N drafts rejected -> author dismissed from Eu commision. It could even be a ratio of adopted laws vs. rejected laws. Drop below threshold -> dismissed.by M95D
4/4/2026 at 12:35:09 PM
> An election would select lawmakers by popularity contestThat’s democracy.
by rayiner
4/6/2026 at 8:39:56 PM
And that's one of the main disadvantages of it. EU is trying to avoid those if possible, while still maintaining democracy's advantages. So far, this Commision / Parliament setup seems to be working just fine.by M95D
4/4/2026 at 12:45:00 AM
> The Commission loves to have little deals away from the public where everything is quietly smoothed over ...And there's money spent lobbying in Brussels (where the EU Commission is) than lobbying in the entire US.
And corrupt eurocrats are known to be very cheap whores.
by TacticalCoder