EU to Vote Again on Extending ‘Chat Control’ Rules

08-Jul-2026 Crypto Breaking News
Eu To Vote Again On Extending ‘chat Control’ Rules

European lawmakers are set to vote again on a controversial “chat control” framework that would require certain online services to scan messages for child sexual abuse material. The European Parliament voted on Tuesday using an urgent procedure, setting up a further vote on Thursday to decide whether to extend a legal arrangement that expired in early April.

Privacy and cryptography advocates argue that the measure undermines end-to-end encryption by pushing providers to detect prohibited content at the message level—even when messages are otherwise protected. Until the expiry in April, platforms such as WhatsApp were able to rely on voluntary steps rather than a binding EU framework.

Key takeaways

  • The European Parliament triggered an urgent procedure Tuesday, allowing a fast-track vote on Thursday after the previous framework expired in early April.
  • Tuesday’s vote narrowly passed, with 331 votes in favor, 304 against, and 11 abstentions, but any attempt to reject or amend the proposal would require an absolute majority of 361 votes.
  • Critics say the approach revives “Chat Control 1.0” requirements that would compel message scanning, including for end-to-end encrypted communications.
  • Earlier, Parliament had rejected a Commission-backed temporary extension in March, and opposition to the latest proposal centers on changes to how broadly message scanning would apply.

Urgent vote sets up a renewed extension battle

The Tuesday vote used a rarely employed urgent procedure, bringing lawmakers back to the negotiating table with a decision window measured in days. Pirate Party MEP Markéta Gregorová described the process as a procedural violation, saying Parliament used urgency to revisit an extension vote after the initial rules lapsed.

Gregorová said Thursday’s vote would be about extending the derogation that allowed online platforms to scan private communications. In her view, the Parliament’s choice to use urgent procedure bypasses the normal decision rhythm and effectively reopens a dispute that had already been settled through a prior vote.

The substance of the proposal remains what critics have long targeted: a legal requirement for service providers to detect child sexual abuse material in messages, including—according to opponents—where end-to-end encryption is used.

What the numbers mean for Thursday’s outcome

According to Gregorová, rejecting or amending the proposal would require an absolute majority of 361 votes in Parliament. That means opponents of the measure face a steep hurdle if the Thursday vote is structured as a continuation of the same legislative effort.

Tuesday’s urgent-procedure vote passed narrowly: 331 lawmakers voted in favor, 304 against, and 11 abstained. That result suggests the measure is still deeply polarizing, with neither side able to dominate the chamber.

The requirement for an absolute majority also helps explain why Tuesday’s narrowly positive result matters. Even if the vote does not reflect full support across Parliament, the procedural threshold for blocking the extension may make it difficult to stop without significant coalition-building.

March rejection and the question of scope

The renewed vote comes after a previous attempt to extend a similar system failed in March. In that earlier parliamentary vote, Parliament rejected a temporary extension of the scheme proposed by the European Commission while a new version of the law was under discussion. The rejection passed by 311 votes against, 228 for, and 92 abstentions, according to the European Parliament’s press room.

Euronews reported that Tuesday’s revival was backed by the European People’s Party (EPP), which had largely voted against the measure in March. The outlet pointed to amendments in the March version that had narrowed the scope of message scanning, a change that had helped the measure fail.

Euronews also reported that EPP leader Manfred Weber has been seeking ways to push the extension through without amendments. That framing aligns with Gregorová’s criticism that the EPP is using Parliament’s procedural mechanics to bring forward a proposal previously rejected—despite concerns about both privacy and the breadth of scanning.

Gregorová argued that the EPP was “abusing its position as the largest political group” by bringing back a rejected measure through a procedural loophole, calling it unprecedented.

Where EU member states stand and what could change

Beyond the European Parliament vote, the broader legislative landscape is already shifting. EU member states agreed last month to reinstate an interim “chat control” measure. The arrangement, as reported in the same reporting thread, would allow service providers to detect, report, and remove abusive material until 2028.

For investors, builders, and users of messaging and communications tools, the key uncertainty is how Thursday’s parliamentary vote will translate into the final rules that providers would have to follow—particularly regarding what kinds of systems are covered, what technical methods are considered compliant, and how end-to-end encryption is handled in practice.

The distinction between voluntary efforts and binding scanning obligations also matters operationally. Voluntary measures can vary significantly across platforms, while a reinstated framework would create a uniform baseline that could force changes to product design, compliance workflows, and the handling of encrypted content.

As the EU moves from expired rules to a renewed vote, the next signal to watch is whether Parliament can secure the absolute majority required to reject or amend the proposal on Thursday—or whether the current majority will be enough to extend the framework again.

This article was originally published as EU to Vote Again on Extending ‘Chat Control’ Rules on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.

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