The Guardian (USA)

France makes abortion a constituti­onal right in historic Versailles vote

- Kim Willsher in Paris

The French parliament has enshrineda­bortion as a constituti­onal right ata historic joint session at the Palace of Versailles.

Out of 925 MPs and senators eligible to vote, 780 supported the amendment, which will give women the “guaranteed freedom” to choose an abortion.

There was thunderous applause in the chamber as the result was announced on Monday; in central Paris, the Eiffel Tower was illuminate­d to mark the occasion.

The measure hadalready been passed by the upper and lower houses, the Sénat and the Assemblée Nationale, but final approval by parliament­arians at the joint session at Versailles was needed to effect constituti­onal change.

The prime minister, Gabriel Attal, told those gathered in the opulent Congress Hall in the palace’s Midi wing: “We are haunted by the suffering and memory of so many women who were not free. We owe a moral debt [to all the women who] suffered in their flesh.

“Today, the present must respond to history. To enshrine this right in our constituti­on is to close the door on the tragedy of the past and its trail of suffering and pain. It will further prevent reactionar­ies from attacking women.

“Let’s not forget that the train of oppression can happen again. Let’s act to ensure that it doesn’t, that it never comes this day.”

He added: “I say to all women within our borders and beyond, that today, the era of a world of hope begins.”

Mathilde Panot, an MP from the hard-left France Unbowed, who proposed inscribing the abortion rights in the constituti­on, told the meeting it was “a promise … for all women fighting [for them] everywhere in the world”.

She added: “Your fight is ours. This victory is yours.”

The president, Emmanuel Macron, said he had promised to make women’s freedom to choose an abortion “irreversib­le”. Writing the right to abortion into the constituti­on, which involved amending the 17th paragraph of article 34that defines the law and its limits, wasseen as a way of protecting the law that decriminal­ised abortion in France in 1975.

During the national assemblyde­bate on the law in January, the justice minister, Éric Dupond-Moretti, told MPs that abortion rights were not simply a liberty like any other, “because they allow women to decide their future”.

Aurore Bergé, the minister in charge of equality and the fight against discrimina­tion, added: “This vote will be one of the most important and remarkable of this parliament.”

Once the two houses had agreed the wording of the legal text, Macron had the choice to hold a national referendum or call a joint parliament­ary “congress” made up of 577 MPs and 348 senators at Versailles where it required three-fifths of votes cast to pass.

Monday’s session is the first to be held to change the constituti­on since 2008, when Nicolas Sarkozy took steps to modernise French institutio­ns, including limiting presidents to a maximum of two consecutiv­e five-year terms in office.

Since 1958, the parliament­ary congress has met 16 times and made 21 changes to the constituti­on.

The congress was overseen by Yaël Braun-Pivet, from Macron’s Renaissanc­e party, who is the equivalent of speaker of the lower house, and parliament­arians wereseated in alphabetic­al order.

The leaders of 18 political groups – 10 from the lower house, eight from the upper – were invited to each speak for five minutes on the change before the vote.

The text will nowbe authentica­ted by a “seal of congress” and sent to the government. Macron will attend a ceremony to finalise the constituti­onal amendment on Friday, Internatio­nal Women’s Day.

Political impetus was given to the constituti­onal change after the US supreme court’s 2022 decision to overturn Roe v Wade, a ruling that had recognised women’s constituti­onal right to an abortion and had legalised it nationwide.

Rightwing senators from the Républicai­ns party voted against a first attempt to change the constituti­on in October 2022. Later that year, the French parliament voted to extend France’s legal limit for ending a pregnancy from 12 to 14 weeks, amid anger that thousands of women were forced to travel abroad each year to terminate pregnancie­s in countries including the Netherland­s, Spain and the UK.

Anti-abortion protesters gathered in Versailles near the palace to oppose the constituti­onal change.

 ?? Photograph: Bertrand Guay/AFP/Getty Images ?? Mathilde Panot told the congress the abortion rights were ‘a promise … for all women fighting [for them] everywhere in the world’.
Photograph: Bertrand Guay/AFP/Getty Images Mathilde Panot told the congress the abortion rights were ‘a promise … for all women fighting [for them] everywhere in the world’.
 ?? ?? Members of parliament listen to the French prime minister in the Palace of Versailles. Photograph: Christophe Petit-Tesson/ EPA
Members of parliament listen to the French prime minister in the Palace of Versailles. Photograph: Christophe Petit-Tesson/ EPA

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