BRUSSELS -
The EU Commission has decided to appeal to the European Court of Justice against the July 2020 ruling of the court that overturned the Brussels decision on "illegal" state aid granted by Ireland to Apple.
This was announced by the vice president of the EU Commission, Margrethe Vestager.
"The court ruling raises important legal issues" and "the Commission respectfully considers that the court made a number of legal errors in its ruling," Vestager stresses.
The European antitrust champion, Margrethe Vestager, does not stop in her battle on the tax side against Apple and Ireland, despite the painful defeat suffered in July at the EU Court. The vice president decided to appeal that decision which, by canceling Brussels' request to Apple to return 13 billion euros to Ireland, belied years of European investigations that proved that those tax rebates were illegal aid. "The Tribunal's ruling raises important legal issues" and "the Commission respectfully believes that the Tribunal made a number of legal errors in its ruling," Vestager said announcing the move, which she had studied for over a month but was convinced of immediately. The fight against multinational corporations that legally evade the tax authorities, aided by governments happy to attract investments, especially if they are billionaires, has been his main battle throughout his previous mandate. In the new Commission, which has become even more powerful because it has risen to the rank of executive vice president, it does not intend to back down. "Ensuring that all companies, large and small, pay their fair share of taxes remains a top priority for the Commission", continues Vestager, stressing that "the Tribunal has repeatedly upheld the principle that, although Member States have the to determine their tax legislation, they must do so in compliance with EU law, including state aid rules ".