France’s Interministerial Digital Directorate (DINUM)—the central body that sets digital policy across the French civil service—announced on 8 April 2026 that it is migrating its own workstations from Windows to Linux and ordered every government ministry to produce a formal plan to eliminate non-European digital dependencies by autumn 2026. The directive covers operating systems, collaboration tools, cloud infrastructure, and artificial intelligence (AI) platforms and affects an estimated 2.5 million civil servants. This mandate is one of the most audacious government technology shifts in European history, but it prioritizes greater sovereignty—such as using open-source systems and reducing reliance on foreign vendors—over day-to-day productivity, and the lack of any published productivity case suggests that trade-off is intentional.
This latest policy directive follows France’s January 2026 mandate to replace Microsoft Teams and Zoom with its domestic Visio platform. The French government wants to muscle out Microsoft, Amazon Web Services, Google, and Salesforce, and channel the displaced procurement to Atos, OVHcloud, Outscale, Capgemini, and the open-source vendors that orbit them.
Governments should use open-source technology or switch vendors if there is a compelling business case, such as lower costs or better features. But this mandate does not attempt to justify itself with a standard cost-benefit analysis. There is no published productivity assessment, no total-cost model, and no reversion threshold if the initiative fails to meet certain performance targets.
Indeed, the French government may not even be interested in cost savings. From a digital sovereignty perspective, money paid to Atos and OVHcloud is better than the money paid to Microsoft and Google, even if the bill is larger and the productivity gain is smaller, because that goes to a domestic provider. France’s priority is not cost or productivity but shifting spending toward domestic firms—a form of digital mercantilism.
Successful implementation also appears to be an afterthought. The plan’s accelerated timeline compresses a multi-year change-management exercise into months, leaving no time for phased piloting, department-by-department feedback loops, or iterative training that would typically go into such a consequential project. Neither has the government published plans for supporting its workers. Without these, the mandate only addresses the technology and ignores the very people using these systems.
The rest of Europe will be closely watching France’s actions. Germany, Italy, and Spain have all explored government Linux initiatives, and France’s scale as the world’s seventh-largest economy means that its actions will serve as a signal for others.
France’s digital sovereignty strategy—which French Digital Affairs Minister Anne Le Hénanff has labelled “a strategic necessity” —is clearly not designed to enable government agencies to deliver better public services to French citizens. Instead, it would redirect public procurement toward European vendors, substituting the goal of enhancing productivity with one of increasing protectionism.
Image credit: Generated with DALL-E
