By Sam Schechner 

Some European legislators, backed by members the German government, are preparing a draft resolution calling for the breakup of Google Inc.--a political salvo that could add to pressure on the European Union's newly appointed executive arm to crack down on the Internet giant.

According to a proposal headed for EU parliamentary debate next week, legislators from countries including Germany and Spain would call for the EU to consider ways to "unbundle" Internet search engines from "other commercial services" the websites may offer, according to a copy of the resolution viewed by The Wall Street Journal.

While the text of the resolution doesn't specifically mention Google, it takes direct aim at the U.S. technology company by calling on the European Commission--which for four years has been investigating allegations that Google abuses its dominance of the European search market--to "enforce EU competition rules decisively."

"Too-dominant market positions have never been good for the market," said Andreas Schwab, a German member of Europe's parliament who helped draft the proposal. "We're just pointing out that there are tools the commission can use." Mr. Schwab is also a member of German Chancellor Angela Merkel's CDU party.

A Google spokeswoman declined to comment.

Europe's parliament, whose members can draft Europe-wide measures but whose power is circumscribed by national legislatures, has no direct power to force such a breakup. It is also unclear what legislators envision as an unbundling of Google, which derives most of its revenue from advertising on its search engine, but also has its Android operating system, its YouTube video site, email and other distinct ventures.

Still, the call for a breakup of Google comes at an important moment because the European Commission, the EU's executive arm, has just begun a new term. The bloc's new competition chief, Margrethe Vestager, said last week that she would take her time to investigate the pending case against Google before deciding on the next steps, saying the issues were "multifaceted and complex."

Four German ministers, including Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel, have sent a letter to Brussels to back the idea behind the breakup resolution, a German government spokeswoman said.

The European parliamentary resolution and the ministers' letter ramp up political rhetoric surrounding Google, which is already under assault for its tax and privacy practices, and has had several proposed settlements of the antitrust probe into its search business fall apart over the last four years.

In recent months, politicians in Germany and France have called on the EU to take a harder line on Google, backed in large part by German publishers but including as well those fearful of Google's expansion into new areas like self-driving cars.

"There's been a lot of politicalization of this in Europe, but this is even more extreme than I could have imagined," said Dan O'Connor, vice president of public policy at the U.S.-based Computer & Communications Industry Association, which is funded by and lobbies on behalf of large tech companies including Google.

Backers of the proposal say their goal is to put pressure on Ms. Vestager, the new EU competition chief.

"Enterprises are losing jobs. We have no time to lose. It's our obligation to put pressure on the commission to act quickly," said Ramon Tremosa i Balcells, a Spanish member of the European parliament who helped draft the proposal.

A spokesman for Ms. Vestager declined to comment beyond her remarks last week.

It remains unclear what a breakup of Google would actually look like. Apart from its search services, Google also offers dozens of commercial services, including the Android operating system that powers the majority of the world's mobile devices and its YouTube video service. But many of its most popular services are closely intertwined with its search engine, including Google Maps.

Meantime, advertising revenue--primarily from its search engine--still generates the lion's share of the company's sales. Google reported advertising revenue on its own websites of $11.3 billion in the third quarter, 70% of the company's total.

Rolfe Winkler, Tom Fairless and Harriet Torry contributed to this article.

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