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The European Parliament will make French search engine Qwant the default on its Microsoft Edge and Mozilla Firefox browsers from June 4, 2026, the institution said on Wednesday.
The change, which will be applied automatically for some 720 lawmakers plus thousands of staff and assistants, is part of a wider push to reduce reliance on non-EU digital tools and promote European, privacy-focused alternatives.
Users will still be able to select other search engines.
The move coincides with planned European Commission announcements on measures to bolster domestic capabilities in chips, cloud computing and artificial intelligence under a āBuy and Use Europeanā digital sovereignty agenda.
Qwant, founded in 2011 and hosted in Europe, markets itself as tracker-free and not dependent on third-party cookies or behavioural targeting.
The decision, first reported by Euractiv and widely covered in media outlets, follows similar regional efforts to shift public administrations toward locally governed technology stacks and tighter procurement rules for critical digital services.
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The Parliament switch boosts nascent European search indexes by directing institutional traffic to Qwant and Ecosia, supporting tech sovereignty goals. Practical limits remain: platform engine constraints, international data-law exposure and patent/interop ties mean this is a meaningful but partial step.








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