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A Republican-led US House Judiciary Committee released a 160-page interim report in early February 2026 alleging a decade-long European Commission campaign to pressure social media platforms into censoring political speech worldwide.
The report, published Feb. 3, cites thousands of pages of internal communications from major tech firms and claims more than 100 closed-door meetings since 2020 guided platforms to suppress content on Covid-19, migration and transgender issues.
Committee chairman Jim Jordan held hearings in Washington on Feb. 4-5, where witnesses including Irish lawyer Lorcán Price and writer Graham Linehan testified, arguing the EU’s Digital Services Act (DSA) and related enforcement have extra-territorial effects on American speech.
The report points to a December 2025 €120 million fine against X as evidence of European coercion.
Brussels dismissed the allegations as “pure nonsense,” saying the DSA protects freedom of expression.
Irish regulators and national election interventions are singled out in the report, which frames EU engagement with platforms ahead of Ireland’s 2024 and 2025 elections as evidence of bias.
🔗 Based On
The Irish TimesUS House committee on free speech hears from Irish barrister and Fr Ted writer Graham Linehan
News | Latest Breaking News Stories & Headlines | RTÉLinehan among critics in US of EU Digital Services ActUS
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Social Summary
Publicly accessible DSA transparency records and the GOP report coexist: transparency undercuts claims of wholly secret censorship, but allegations of extensive closed-door influence remain contested and are likely to escalate US–EU tensions and scrutiny of platform practices.






















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