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Dec 25, 2025

Macron Condemns U.S. Visa Bans on Former EU Commissioner Thierry Breton

Macron Condemns U.S. Visa Bans on Former EU Commissioner Thierry Breton
France woke up on Christmas Eve to an unusual diplomatic spat: Washington has slapped entry bans on five prominent European campaigners against online disinformation, including France’s own former EU Internal-Market Commissioner Thierry Breton.

In a post on X (formerly Twitter) at 11 a.m. Paris time, President Emmanuel Macron blasted the U.S. move as “intimidation and coercion aimed at undermining European digital sovereignty.” The Élysée confirmed that the five individuals and their families will be denied visas under section 212(a)(3)(C) of the U.S. Immigration and Nationality Act, normally reserved for serious security threats.

The timing is sensitive. France has spent most of 2025 pushing the EU’s Digital Services Act (DSA) and Digital Markets Act (DMA) from law into enforcement; Breton, now a special adviser to the French government, acts as Paris’ chief cheer-leader for the rules. U.S. officials argue that the DSA amounts to censorship of American-owned tech platforms and therefore justifies a visa sanction. French diplomats counter that the measure is an extraterritorial assault on an EU regulation passed by elected legislators.

Macron Condemns U.S. Visa Bans on Former EU Commissioner Thierry Breton


At a practical level, anyone caught in the crossfire—whether policy staff, investors or journalists—may need rapid guidance on switching visa categories or securing waivers. Online facilitators such as VisaHQ (https://www.visahq.com/france/) can streamline the process by walking applicants through required forms, assembling supporting documents, and booking consular appointments for both U.S. and Schengen visas on short notice.

Practically, the bans complicate transatlantic mobility for senior French officials and tech-policy experts who routinely travel to Washington and Silicon Valley to brief investors and meet regulators. Corporate mobility managers should anticipate last-minute itinerary changes and consider applying for A- or G-class visas well in advance for any staff involved in EU digital-policy work.

Looking ahead, Paris is exploring a reciprocal “digital-governance clause” that could withhold Schengen visas from foreign executives who fail to comply with EU platform rules. That could, in theory, hit senior U.S. tech officers attending next spring’s VivaTech conference in Paris. For now, EU foreign-affairs chief Josep Borrell has requested emergency consultations, while the European Commission says “all options—including counter-measures—are on the table.”
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