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HEALTH

France’s Senate votes to make abortion a constitutional ‘freedom’

France's Senate on Wednesday overwhelmingly backed a government move to enshrine the freedom to have an abortion in the French constitution.

France's Senate votes to make abortion a constitutional 'freedom'
French Senators voted in favour of enshrining the freedom to have an abortion in the French Constitution. Photo by STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN / AFP

President Emmanuel Macron last year pledged to put the right to terminate a pregnancy – which has been legal in France since 1974 – into the constitution after the US Supreme Court in 2022 overturned the half-century-old right to the procedure, allowing states to ban or curtail abortion.

France’s Assemblée nationale had already overwhelmingly voted in favour (337 for and 32 against) of enshrining the right to abortion in the constitution in January, but it was thought that the male-dominated and traditionally more socially conservative Senate might block the plan.

In the event, however, it passed easily – the upper chamber voted by 267 votes to 50 to back the constitutional change.

Macron said he would call a special Congress session of the two chambers at Versailles palace on Monday, March 4th for a final vote.

The move will not change anything on a day-to-day level in France, where abortion has been legal since 1974, but it would make it much harder for any future government to curtail the rights of women to terminate pregnancies.

READ ALSO How can France’s constitution be changed?

Macron on Wednesday evening welcomed what he called a “decisive step” by the Senate.

Justice Minister Eric Dupond-Moretti said France was on the verge of a “historic day” when it becomes “the first country in the world to protect in its constitution the freedom of women” to decide what happens to their bodies.

The lower house in 2022 had approved enshrining the “right” to an abortion, while the Senate last year was in favour of adding the “freedom” to resort to the procedure – in the end a compromise wording was agreed to add the “guaranteed freedom” to abortion into the constitution.

However before the full vote, a Senate committee on Wednesday rejected motions from the right to amend the text of the proposed revision.

In private several right-wing senators said they felt under social pressure to approve the change.

“If I vote against it, my daughters will no longer come for Christmas,” said one woman senator who asked to remain anonymous, while other senators told French media that they would vote in favour of the motion because they are “fed up with being yelled at by my wife and daughter”.

The move has huge public support – a survey by French polling company IFOP in November 2022 found 86 percent of French people supported making abortion a constitutional right.

Member comments

  1. I’m a little surprised at the tone of this article that seems to think that senators following the overwhelming majority of voters in agreeing to the change is some how bad. You prioritise the extreme views above the fact that the change (and indeed, the stronger version that the Assemblée favoured) is overwhelmingly popular here. Democracy is not a game, or an entertainment show.

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POLITICS

French territory New Caledonia counts the cost of overnight riots

People in New Caledonia's main city Noumea assessed the damage on Tuesday after a night of rioting in the French Pacific territory that saw vehicles and shops torched, and shots fired at security forces.

French territory New Caledonia counts the cost of overnight riots

Riots erupted on Monday over a constitutional reform that is being debated in the national assembly in Paris, and which aims to expand the electorate in the territory’s provincial elections.

Groups of demonstrators took over several roundabouts and confronted police, who responded with non-lethal rounds, while the territory’s high commissioner said shots had been fired at security forces during the riots.

On Tuesday, the streets of Noumea bore the scars of clashes between the police and rioters with traffic blocked by burnt-out cars and smoking piles of tyres.

“The police station nearby was on fire and a car was too, in front of my house, there was non-stop shouting and explosions, I felt like I was in a war,” said Sylvie, whose family has lived in New Caledonia for several generations.

“We are alone. Who is going to protect us?” she told AFP, asking to be identified only by her first name.

A total of 36 people were arrested and 30 police officers injured, according to authorities, who also announced a night-time curfew on Tuesday and a ban on public gatherings.

No deaths have been reported.

“I can’t talk,” said Joelle Vincent, who owns a supermarket business. “I am disappointed and disgusted.”

The fire brigade recorded nearly 1,500 calls and counted around 200 fires in the overnight unrest.

At least two car dealerships and a bottling factory in the capital Noumea were set on fire in arson attacks, an AFP journalist saw.

‘Side by side’

While the situation appeared more calm in parts of Noumea on Tuesday, there were still clashes in the suburbs, where a supermarket was looted after being rammed during the night.

Many other businesses also bore the marks of attempted break-ins and few shops were open. Long queues were forming in front of the few that are still open.

Hundreds of cars were set on fire, as were more than 30 businesses, shops and factories, according to a group of employers’ representatives.

The group issued an appeal for calm and said nearly 1,000 jobs on the island had been put at risk by the unrest.

The island’s public transport network has also been cut off, with the territory’s flag carrier Aircalin announcing that it was cancelling all its flights for Tuesday.

“I feel sad,” Jean-Franck Jallet, who owns a butcher shop that firefighters managed to rescue from the flames. “I thought it was possible for us (islanders) to live side by side, but it hasn’t worked. There are too many lies.”

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