The Irish Data Protection Commissioner enforces Europe’s mighty General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) on many of the world’s largest technology companies, including Meta, X, Google, TikTok and others that have their European headquarters in Ireland.

For years, the Irish authority has faced criticism for being too soft on tech giants, with critics pointing to Ireland’s heavy reliance on Big Tech for its domestic economy. After the GDPR took effect in 2018, it took years before the DPC started imposing sizable fines on tech giants.

Commissioners at the Irish DPC are appointed by the Irish government on the advice of the Public Appointments Service, the authority that provides recruitment services for public jobs. The authority is known as publicjobs.

In a confidential letter dated May 14 and seen by POLITICO, publicjobs said it had assembled a selection panel of five people to pick the newest privacy chief. According to the letter, that panel included consultant Shirley Kavanagh as chair, Department of Justice Deputy Secretary Doncha O’Sullivan, the head of Ireland’s ComReg communications watchdog Garrett Blaney, publicjobs recruitment specialist Louise McEntee, and Leo Moore, a partner at law firm William Fry.

Moore heads the firm’s technology group. He has advised domestic and multinational companies, including “several ‘Big Tech’ and social media companies,” the law firm’s own website states.

The law firm advised Microsoft in a landmark court case where U.S. authorities wanted to access data on Irish servers, it said in a 2016 press release. Irish media also reported that the firm had advised the Irish government in a case in which the government pushed back on collecting almost €14 billion in back taxes from Apple.