Again the jihadist understanding of the world leaves a lot to be desired - not to mention being downright hypocritical. The ECJ has previously ruled that Apple's tax arrangements in Ireland were illegal. The European Commission is now proposing a 3% levy on the revenue of big tech firms in Europe to limit regulatory arbitrage; but it wont fly unless it's accepted by member states. Something about respecting national sovereignty. Odd that when the EU's supposed to be an all powerful leviathan.
We've been here before: in 2015, the EU tried to introduce a common consolidated corporate tax base, or CCCTB that would have seen countries adopt a common set of rules on where company profits arose - removing many of the national differences that multinationals had exploited to lower their tax bill. The UK led efforts to kill the scheme.
Again the usual thickos are trying to have their cake and eat it. You either agree that something has to be done about tax avoidance and accept limits on national sovereignty. Or you believe that national sovereignty trumps international cooperation which means countries will continue to compete on tax as they've always done, leading to all manner of perverse behaviour and outcomes.