Government talks have focused on restraint, with officials emphasizing the need to stay calm and avoid emotional reactions. At a press conference Monday, a government spokesperson said Merz was “a rational person who does not put a stamp on international relations.” Merz, who leads the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), has argued for a measured response.
Yet Vice Chancellor Lars Klingbeil, a Social Democrat, has left the door open to tougher options. “We should now examine the use of these measures,” he said, referring to the EU’s trade defense toolbox, including the Anti-Coercion Instrument — the bloc’s untested trade bazooka — that could be used to target services such as tech.
While Merz remains reserved, senior lawmakers from within his Christian Democrat camp are openly advocating retaliation aimed at U.S. tech firms.
Sepp Müller, the deputy parliamentary leader of the CSU and its Bavarian sister party, called on Monday for a digital tax and even import bans on U.S. products.
“The issue will certainly come onto the table,” Ralph Brinkhaus, the conservative group’s digital policy spokesperson, told POLITICO — while stressing that any move should be “reflected and thought through.”
Klingbeil’s Social Democrats appear willing to revisit earlier commitments. SPD digital policy lawmaker Johannes Schätzl told POLITICO that previous agreements — in which the EU committed not to introduce a digital infrastructure levy — now need to be reassessed.