TIME

Europe’s antitrust enforcer Margrethe Vestager mulls her legacy after taking on Silicon Valley

AS I ARRIVE TO MEET MARGRETHE VESTAGER, she is bounding down the long corridor outside her Brussels office toward a group of German teenagers just leaving her office. “I forgot to offer you these!” Europe’s Competition Commissioner says, handing them a box of chocolate-covered licorice from her hometown of Copenhagen. “You have to try this.” As she races back to her office, one student gazes after her. “Wow,” she says, through a mouthful of licorice. “She’s amazing.”

There are few European Union officials whom jaded teenagers would ever want to meet, let alone gush over. But Vestager, Denmark’s former Deputy Prime Minister, has grown used to getting strong reactions from people, not all as positive.

Four years after being appointed to one of the E.U.’s more controversial positions,

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from TIME

TIME1 min read
The D.C. Brief
Former President Donald Trump bullied the Republican National Committee into passing a 2022 resolution declaring zero cooperation with the nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates. Trump was convinced the group that has run the events since 198
TIME13 min read
El Loco
President Javier Milei hates his new office. The Casa Rosada, with its historic blue chair and ornate paneled walls, feels tainted by his predecessors, who he believes drove Argentina into ruin. But there is one detail Milei loves. Engraved into a fi
TIME6 min read
The Parents Who Regret Having Children
No one regrets having a child, or so it’s said. I’ve heard this often, usually after I’m asked if I have children, then, when I say I don’t, if I plan to. I tend to evade the question, as I find that the truth—I have no plans to be a parent—is likely

Related Books & Audiobooks