EU Parliament Votes Down Chat Control 1.0, Rejecting Mass Surveillance
Brussels, 27.03.2026 – In an interesting turn of events, amid a closely contested vote on 26.03.2026, the European Parliament has rejected the regulations proposed by the Chat Control 1.0 framework, marking a significant victory for digital rights advocates across Europe.
The outcome followed two critical votes that revealed both the political tensions and the Parliament’s ultimate stance on surveillance measures.
In the initial round of voting held on 11 March 2026, the European Parliament rejected indiscriminate monitoring practices as part of efforts to protect children online. However, in a subsequent procedural move initiated by conservative parties, a key amendment was removed. This amendment had restricted the scope of Chat Control 1.0 and introduced safeguards to limit intrusive monitoring. Its removal marked a concerning setback for privacy protections.
In a striking turn of events, the second and decisive vote on the amended parliamentary position led to the complete rejection of Chat Control 1.0. Without the necessary safeguards in place, a majority of Members of the European Parliament refused to endorse the proposal. The result was decided by a narrow margin of just one vote, underscoring the significance of every parliamentary voice and public intervention.
This outcome represents a clear rejection of indiscriminate and automated monitoring of private communications under unverified suspicion. It sends a strong signal that measures which risk undermining fundamental rights, including the privacy of communications and the integrity of end-to-end encryption, will not gain democratic approval without robust safeguards.
Patrick Breyer (Pirate Party) commented:
“This historic day brings tears of joy! The EU Parliament has buried Chat Control – a massive, hard-fought victory for the unprecedented resistance of civil society and citizens! The fact that a single vote tipped the scales against the extremely error-prone text and image search shows: Every single vote in Parliament and every call from concerned citizens counted!
We have stopped a broken and illegal system. Once our investigators are no longer drowning in a flood of false and long-known suspicion reports from the US, resources will finally be freed up to hunt down organized abuse rings in a targeted and covert manner. Trying to protect children with mass surveillance is like desperately trying to mop up the floor while leaving the faucet running. We must finally turn off the tap! This means genuine child protection through a paradigm shift: Providers must technically prevent cybergrooming from the outset through secure app design. Illegal material on the internet must be proactively tracked down and deleted directly at the source. That is what truly protects children.
But beware, we can only celebrate briefly today: They will try again. The negotiations for a permanent Chat Control regulation are continuing under high pressure, and soon the planned age verification for messengers threatens to end anonymous communication on the internet. The fight for digital freedom must go on!”
The decision reinforces the European Parliament’s role as a critical check in ensuring that efforts to combat online harms remain proportionate, targeted, and respectful of fundamental rights.
As discussions continue around future proposals, including the broader “Chat Control 2.0” framework, policymakers are urged to pursue solutions that effectively protect children while upholding the principles of privacy, security, and the rule of law.
The voting results mark a turning point: not the end of the debate, but a clear demand for better, rights-respecting legislation.
Press & Media Contact
Contact for inquiries:
Kalpana (Press Officer)
kalpana.vogeti@europeanpirates.eu