Europe’s top court backs crackdown on Apple and Google
Al Jazeera
European Commission directed Apple to pay billions in back taxes, an order upheld by the EU’s top court.
European Union antitrust chief Margrethe Vestager has scored two major wins as Europe’s top court has backed her crackdown against Apple’s Irish tax deal and Google’s anticompetitive practices in two landmark cases.
Vestager, who ends her term in November, has made a name for herself going after Big Tech’s tax arrangements with some EU countries and attempts to stifle smaller rivals. The court victories, which were announced on Tuesday, could embolden her successor to take a similar tack.
The antitrust chief cheered the judgements. “Today is a huge win for European citizens and tax justice,” she said on X of the Apple ruling while also praising the Google judgement as a big win for digital fairness.
The European Commission in 2016 ordered Apple to pay 13 billion euros ($14.4bn) in back taxes to Ireland, saying the iPhone maker benefitted from two Irish tax rulings for more than two decades that artificially reduced its tax burden to as low as 0.005 percent in 2014.
The Luxembourg-based Court of Justice of the EU sided with Vestager.