European Parliament to make Qwant its default search engine instead of Google
The Facts
- The European Parliament is replacing Google with Qwant as the default search engine on its internal computers.
- The change is set to take effect on June 4, 2026.
- Qwant will be the default search engine in the Parliament's Microsoft Edge and Mozilla Firefox browsers.
- Users in the European Parliament will still be able to use other search engines or change the default setting after the switch.
- Parliament officials said the switch is tied to commitments on digital sovereignty and protecting users' personal data.
- The search-engine change is happening alongside a broader EU effort to reduce dependence on foreign technology providers and promote European alternatives.
- The European Commission was due to present measures on chips, cloud computing services and AI the same day as part of that broader technology policy push.
How left and right are reading this
- Both agree
- A symbolic but concrete institutional shift is using default settings to advance European tech self-reliance, while still leaving Parliament users free to choose other search engines if they want.
- They split on
- Less a disagreement than a question of emphasis: the significance of a public institution using its own tech choices to advance digital sovereignty and data protection, versus the importance of preserving user choice even as that default changes.
Context
What exactly is changing for Parliament users?
From June 4, searches typed into the address bar in Microsoft Edge and Mozilla Firefox on European Parliament computers will go through Qwant by default instead of Google, though users can still switch to another search engine if they want Yahoo! Finance,POLITICO,Clubic.com.
Why did the European Parliament say it is making this switch?
Officials said the move is meant to support the Parliament's commitments on digital sovereignty and the protection of users' personal data, and forms part of a broader effort to rely less on non-EU digital tools Yahoo! Finance,Anadolu Ajansı,Clubic.com.
Why does this matter beyond one institution's browser settings?
The switch aligns with a wider EU policy push to back European technology providers and reduce dependence on foreign suppliers, as the European Commission is also advancing measures covering chips, cloud services and AI Yahoo! Finance,POLITICO,centrepresseaveyron….
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