Musk Fires Back as EU Slaps X With $140 Million Fine

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Elon Musk is once again at the center of an international clash — this time after the European Union handed down a $140 million fine targeting his platform, X, and accusing it of violating the bloc’s transparency laws.

According to FOX Business, Musk didn’t wait for lawyers or spokespeople to respond. Instead, he took to his own site and unleashed a barrage of criticisms at the EU, its institutions, and the officials behind the penalty.

“The EU should be abolished and sovereignty returned to individual countries, so that governments can better represent their people,” he wrote in one post, later adding the hashtag, “AbolishTheEU.”

The European Commission announced the hefty fine on Friday, saying X violated multiple sections of the Digital Services Act (DSA), the sweeping online-regulation law the bloc adopted in 2022. Regulators accused X of “deceptive” blue-check design, failing to provide public researchers access to data, and lacking transparency around political advertising.

The move quickly sparked outrage in the United States, including from senior officials in the Trump administration, as well as from Musk personally, who said the action also targeted him directly.

“The ‘EU’ imposed this crazy fine not just on X, but also on me personally, which is even more insane!” Musk wrote in reply to Sen. Ted Cruz, who called the punishment an “abomination” and urged President Donald Trump to impose sanctions “until this travesty is reversed.”

Musk said the fine warranted a forceful response. “It would seem appropriate to apply our response not just to the EU, but also to the individuals who took this action against me,” he wrote. In another post, he bluntly called the fine “bulls—,” adding, “I love Europe, but not the bureaucratic monster that is the EU.”

Trump administration leaders echoed his frustration. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the fine “isn’t just an attack on X, it’s an attack on all American tech platforms and the American people by foreign governments.” Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick claimed the DSA “is designed to stifle free speech and American tech companies.”

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Vice President JD Vance weighed in even before the fine was public, arguing that “the EU should be supporting free speech not attacking American companies over garbage.”

Other Republicans joined the chorus. Sen. Eric Schmitt said “foreign bureaucrats have zero right to tell Americans what they can and can’t say.” FCC Chair Brendan Carr argued Europe was “fining a successful U.S. tech company for being a successful U.S. tech company,” while Sen. Rick Scott warned that “America is done looking the other way while foreign governments seek to censor our people and bully our companies.”

EU officials dismissed the free-speech complaints entirely. At a Friday briefing, spokesperson Thomas Reigner insisted the action was unrelated to moderation policies.

“Today’s decision has nothing to do with content moderation,” he said. “It’s about transparency provisions for citizens here in the European Union.”

In a detailed press release, the commission accused X of misleading users through its blue-check system and failing to provide a searchable ad repository for researchers.

“Anyone can pay to obtain the ‘verified’ status without the company meaningfully verifying who is behind the account,” the statement said. The commission argued the system exposes users to impersonation scams and manipulation campaigns.

It also said X’s advertising database does not meet DSA standards, calling transparency “critical” to identifying online threats.

For Musk, the fight now appears to be about more than a fine — it’s a political showdown, and he’s making clear he intends to treat it that way.