The Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR) confirmed Friday 24 July as the final determination date for its Section 301 investigation into European Union digital rules 1. The European Commission's binding decision on Google's Digital Markets Act (DMA) Article 6(11) search-data obligation, filed as DMA.100209 , follows on Monday 27 July. The EU AI Office gains full enforcement powers over general-purpose AI (GPAI) model providers on Sunday 2 August , with a fine ceiling of 3 percent of global turnover. Three deadlines, nine days, one diplomatic window.
The procedural sequence matters more than the calendar. Section 301 lands first. Washington's retaliation posture, including any threatened tariffs on European digital exports, will be public before the Commission issues its first major DMA cloud-AI ruling three days later. Any tariff threat in the determination puts political pressure on Brussels to moderate the Google ruling, or to appear to be doing so. Six days after that, AI Act GPAI enforcement activates against the same cohort of United States frontier-model providers; the DMA consultation behind the 27 July decision closed on 1 May, with submissions still under seal pending Alphabet's right of reply.
Neither the Commission nor USTR has publicly acknowledged the convergent calendar. The Center for European Policy Analysis brief from which the timeline is drawn calls Section 301 a tariff trigger that USTR is using to bare its claws on European tech rules 2; Brussels's own posture in the EU-Japan Digital Partnership Council signed two days ago was "acceleration of cooperation", not retaliation. The three deadlines sit inside the same diplomatic window the Tech Sovereignty Package is supposed to clear. If the package's 27 May adoption holds, the Commission will be writing the EU's first statutory definition of "sovereign" infrastructure while three of its existing instruments are tested simultaneously by Washington.
