Civil society and industry groups are pushing the European Commission to move ahead on a reported Google penalty because they see the case as a credibility test for Europe’s digital rulebook. The dispute centers on a long-running probe into Google’s alleged self-preferencing in Search, but the wider question is whether the EU will enforce the Digital Markets Act without letting outside political pressure slow the process [1][
7].
The case behind the pressure
Google has been under a Digital Markets Act probe for more than two years over alleged self-preferencing practices, according to MLex’s summary of the civil-society letter [1]. Reuters-linked coverage describes the issue as Google’s alleged favoring of its own services in online search results [
7].
The reports cited here describe the conduct as alleged, not as a final EU finding. That distinction matters: several groups are pressing the Commission to complete the process and impose a fine or sanctions if Google is found to have breached EU rules .
