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EU Parliament to switch to French search engine from Google in tech sovereignty push

By Thomson Reuters Jun 3, 2026 | 6:38 AM

By Foo Yun Chee

BRUSSELS, June 3 (Reuters) – The European Parliament will switch to French search ​engine Qwant from Google, ‌it said on Wednesday, underscoring Europe’s push to reduce its reliance on U.S. technology in favour of local ‌alternatives.

The ​European Commission will ⁠later on Wednesday ⁠announce measures on chips, cloud computing services and AI as part of its “Buy and Use ​European” drive.

“From 4 June 2026, Qwant will become the default ⁠search engine on ⁠the European Parliament’s Microsoft ​Edge and Mozilla Firefox browsers,” a ​Parliament spokesperson said in an ‌email.

The change will be applied automatically, though users will still be able to select alternative ⁠search engines.

“It is part of a larger framework of actions aimed at reducing ⁠EP ‌reliance on non-EU digital ⁠tools and promoting European-based, ​privacy-focused ‌services,” the spokesperson said.

The ​Parliament has ⁠720 lawmakers, along with thousands of assistants and administrative staff. Euractiv first reported the switch.

(Reporting by Foo Yun Chee. Editing by ​Mark Potter)