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PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: President Donald J. Trump has threatened the European Union (EU) with retaliatory tariffs over huge fines directed at American tech giants like Google and Apple.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: President Donald J. Trump, U.S. tech firms, and the EU.

📍WHEN & WHERE: President Trump announced the possible retaliation on September 5 on Truth Social.

💬KEY QUOTE: “Europe today ‘hit’ another great American company, Google, with a $3.5 billion fine, effectively taking money that would otherwise go to American Investments and Jobs.” – President Trump.

🎯IMPACT: The threat could see the EU back off on fines, or be forced to pay the equivalent in tariffs back to the United States.

IN FULL

President Donald J. Trump is taking a hard line against the European Union (EU) after its regulators imposed a massive $3.5 billion fine on Google. The President is accusing Brussels of unfairly targeting American tech companies and threatening to launch a formal trade response.

“Europe today ‘hit’ another great American company, Google, with a $3.5 billion fine, effectively taking money that would otherwise go to American Investments and Jobs,” Trump said in a statement released Friday. He also pointed to Apple’s previous $17 billion fine in the EU, saying, “They should get their money back!”

Trump warned that his administration would not tolerate “discriminatory actions” against U.S. firms and threatened to initiate a Section 301 trade investigation, which would pave the way for tariffs or other retaliatory measures. “We cannot let this happen to brilliant and unprecedented American Ingenuity,” he stated.

The America First leader’s remarks come amid a broader dispute between the United States and the European Union over trade, taxation, and regulation. Earlier this year, Trump threatened 200 percent tariffs on EU wine, champagne, and other luxury goods, describing the EU as “one of the most hostile and abusive taxing and tariffing authorities in the world.”

Beyond economics, the Trump administration is increasingly voicing concerns about free speech restrictions in the EU, particularly in Germany. Recent U.S. criticisms have focused on arrests tied to social media posts and sweeping EU digital content laws.

The German government has dismissed U.S. objections, insisting its laws—which recently saw a German woman receive a harsher sentence for insulting a migrant gang rapist than the migrant received for the gang rape—are necessary to fight so-called hate speech.

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