If the past five years of EU tech rules could take human form, they would embody Thierry Breton. The bombastic commissioner, with his swoop of white hair, became the public face of Brusselsâ irritation with American tech giants, touring Silicon Valley last summer to personally remind the industry of looming regulatory deadlines.
Combative and outspoken, Breton warned that Apple had spent too long âsqueezingâ other companies out of the market. In a case against TikTok, he emphasized, âour children are not guinea pigs for social media.â
His confrontational attitude to the CEOs themselves was visible in his posts on X. In the lead-up to Muskâs interview with Donald Trump, Breton posted a vague but threatening letter on his account reminding Musk there would be consequences if he used his platform to amplify âharmful content.â Last year, he published a photo with Mark Zuckerberg, declaring a new EU motto of âmove fast to fix thingsââa jibe at the notorious early Facebook slogan. And in a 2023 meeting with Google CEO Sundar Pichai, Breton reportedly got him to agree to an âAI pactâ on the spot, before tweeting the agreement, making it difficult for Pichai to back out.
Yet in this weekâs reshuffle of top EU jobs, Breton resignedâa decision he alleged was due to backroom dealing between EU Commission president Ursula von der Leyen and French president Emmanuel Macron.
âI’m sure [the tech giants are] happy Mr. Breton will go, because he understood you have to hit shareholdersâ pockets when it comes to fines,â says Umberto Gambini, a former adviser at the EU Parliament and now a partner at consultancy Forward Global.
Breton is to be effectively replaced by the Finnish politician Henna Virkkunen, from the center-right EPP Group, who has previously worked on the Digital Services Act.
âHer style will surely be less brutal and maybe less visible on X than Breton,â says Gambini. âIt could be an opportunity to restart and reboot the relations.â
Little is known about Virkkunenâs attitude to Big Techâs role in Europeâs economy. But her role has been reshaped to fit von der Leyenâs priorities for her next five-year term. While Breton was the commissioner for the internal market, Virkkunen will work with the same team but operate under the upgraded title of executive vice president for tech sovereignty, security and democracy, meaning she reports directly to von der Leyen.
The 27 commissioners, who form von der Leyenâs new team and are each tasked with a different area of focus, still have to be approved by the European Parliamentâa process that could take weeks.
â[Previously], it was very, very clear that the commission was ambitious when it came to thinking about and proposing new legislation to counter all these different threats that they had perceived, especially those posed by big technology platforms,â says Mathias Vermeulen, public policy director at Brussels-based consultancy AWO. âThat is not a political priority anymore, in the sense that legislation has been adopted and now has to be enforced.â