British Power Play: Why the UK Wants to Hold Back American Tech—and What Trump Must Do About It
The United Kingdom's Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act (DMCC), set to take full effect in 2025, represents a shocking overreach into the global digital economy, and the urgency of addressing this cannot be overstated. The future of American technological innovation is on the brink of being stifled by the hands of unelected British regulators—bureaucrats who neither understand nor care for American interests, their only goal being to undermine our progress for their own benefit. The implications of this new framework are not just profound but a direct assault on U.S. tech companies that will find their growth, dynamism, and global leadership curtailed by those who can't compete on a level playing field. The time for action is now, and President Trump must rise to the occasion to defend American sovereignty, innovation, and economic leadership.
The DMCC hands unprecedented powers to the United Kingdom’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), granting it control over global tech companies, with a laser focus on American giants like Apple, Google, and Meta. This is not a traditional regulatory measure; it is an ex-ante framework that allows the CMA to declare certain companies to hold “Strategic Market Status” (SMS) and impose restrictions even before any 'violations' occur. This preemptive approach departs radically from typical antitrust regulations that punish anti-competitive behavior only after it happens, positioning the CMA as an omnipotent overseer capable of dictating how U.S. firms operate, design, and innovate. The implications for our innovators are unacceptable; this isn't about protecting competition—it's about hobbling our brightest minds to prop up an economy that hasn't kept pace.
Mergers and acquisitions—vital lifelines for the growth and advancement of the tech sector—will be completely subject to the whims of the CMA, which can block mergers under the guise of preventing so-called “killer acquisitions.” These decisions are often based on arbitrary interpretations of what may stifle innovation, even when there is no impact on market share. We are already seeing major mergers being abandoned due to this egregious overreach, and now American companies must navigate both the anti-business motives of Nina Khan's FTC and this new affront from British regulators. For years, U.S. tech companies have been under Khan's thumb, facing relentless attempts to block M&A activity not out of incompetence, but as a deliberate effort to curb the influence of American business. With Trump's election and Khan's impending departure, there was hope for relief, but now that hope is dashed by the CMA stepping in to fill that void. This isn't just regulatory red tape; it's a deliberate attempt to restrain the natural evolution of our technology sector—and it is driven by regulators who are more interested in shielding British companies from competition than in fostering true innovation.
The regulatory overreach extends further, threatening product development and launch strategies as well. Imagine the future of the iPhone or any new tech innovation being held hostage to the whims of a bureaucratic committee in London before it can reach American consumers. This is the dystopian reality we are facing. Innovation is throttled because British officials want to dictate design rules, making American products adhere to the limitations that align with the UK's own interests rather than the needs and ambitions of the American market. These demands, such as bans on so-called “self-preferencing,” force U.S. firms to downgrade their offerings in order to avoid penalties. It’s American consumers who ultimately suffer as innovation stalls, and the marketplace of ideas and products becomes a bureaucratic quagmire.
The motivations here are crystal clear: the UK is desperately attempting to claw back some relevance in the global tech landscape. Unable to foster competitive companies of their own, they have opted to shackle the true leaders. This pattern isn't unique to Britain; it reflects a broader European trend of economic sovereignty campaigns that aim to displace American tech under the guise of leveling the playing field. But make no mistake, these moves are fundamentally protectionist and anti-competitive—designed to tear down competitors rather than build up genuine alternatives.
This dangerous shift away from free-market principles toward state-dominated management of the tech industry is part of a larger backlash against the successes of American neoliberal globalization. We see similar frameworks cropping up worldwide, as nations scramble to break the dominance of U.S. firms, regardless of the consequences for innovation, economic growth, or consumer choice. The UK's DMCC is not an isolated case; it’s part of a coordinated assault on American success, dressed up as regulatory prudence.
President Trump must act decisively. The United States cannot and must not allow foreign governments to dictate how American businesses innovate and operate—especially not within our borders. It is imperative that we respond in kind. If the United Kingdom continues down this path, the price must be substantial: a complete barrier to British products entering the American market until the UK understands the full repercussions of its economic aggression. This is about more than protecting American companies; it’s about preserving the innovative spirit that defines our nation, and ensuring that our enterprises answer to American interests, not the dictates of some overseas bureaucrat.
The DMCC is not just an inconvenient new regulation; it is an existential threat to American innovation and economic sovereignty. President Trump has both the opportunity and the obligation to safeguard U.S. interests, sending a clear message to the world that American technology companies will not be bullied into submission by foreign powers. The line must be drawn—and it must be drawn now. We must ensure that our companies answer to American laws, and our innovators remain unshackled, free to lead the world in creativity and technological advancement. The UK may wish to play the role of kingmaker in global tech, but it’s time they were reminded that America doesn’t bow to anyone—especially not to the whims of unelected bureaucrats in London.
If you don't already, please follow me on 𝕏 at https://x.com/amuse
Great reporting and analysis. In an ideal media environment reports like this would be on the six o’clock news on repeat. I wish we could expel those incestuous creeps- close the embassies and toss ‘em out and a full embargo on their goods and services, deny all Visa applications and eject those currently in the USA benefiting from our largess, stop any and all monies we send them and CLOSE OUR MILITARY BASES IN THE UK.