Overview
- The State Department on Dec. 23 imposed visa restrictions on Thierry Breton, Josephine Ballon, Anna-Lena von Hodenberg, Imran Ahmed, and Clare Melford for allegedly pressuring U.S. platforms to suppress speech.
- Secretary of State Marco Rubio called the targets “leading figures of the global censorship-industrial complex” and said the U.S. would oppose foreign “extraterritorial” limits on American speech.
- The European Union condemned the travel bans, warned it could respond to defend its regulatory autonomy, and sought clarification from Washington.
- Those named include leaders linked to the Center for Countering Digital Hate, the Global Disinformation Index, and HateAid, while Breton is a key architect of the EU’s Digital Services Act.
- The move intensified a broader dispute over internet governance as groups such as GDI labeled the action authoritarian and U.S. commentators pressed for wider sanctions on European officials.