A large french flag fluttering under the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, for article on constitutional abortion rights

France becomes world’s first country to enshrine abortion rights in constitution

For the first time in history, a country has written the right to abortion directly into its national constitution. France took that step when lawmakers gathered at the Palace of Versailles voted 780 to 72 in favor of the measure — a margin that crushed the three-fifths threshold required to amend the French constitution. The amendment guarantees a “freedom” to abortion, a word choice that sparked debate but ultimately held, and sets a precedent no other nation had reached before.

At a glance

  • Constitutional abortion rights: France’s parliament voted to embed abortion protections in the constitution, becoming the first country in the world to do so formally.
  • French parliament vote: The joint session at Versailles tallied 780 votes in favor and just 72 against — well above the three-fifths supermajority required.
  • Simone Veil legacy: France first legalized abortion in 1975 C.E. following a campaign led by then-Health Minister Simone Veil, an Auschwitz survivor who became one of the country’s most celebrated feminist icons.

Why France moved now

The amendment’s roots trace directly to June 2022 C.E., when the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and returned abortion regulation to individual states. The decision sent a shockwave through Europe.

French Justice Minister Éric Dupond-Moretti put it plainly in January 2024 C.E. debates in the National Assembly: history is filled with examples of rights that were believed safe until they were stripped away. “We now have irrefutable proof,” he said, “that no democracy, not even the largest of them all, is immune.” The argument landed. Before 2022 C.E., President Emmanuel Macron’s own government had argued that enshrining the right was unnecessary given France’s broad social consensus on abortion. The U.S. decision changed that calculation.

Far-right governments restricting reproductive rights in Hungary and other parts of Europe added urgency to the case. Lawmakers across parties framed the vote as a signal beyond France’s borders — a declaration that reproductive freedom deserves the same constitutional weight as any other fundamental liberty.

A long arc, a specific debt

Monday’s vote at Versailles was the final step in a process that had already cleared both the Senate and the National Assembly individually, each by wide margins. It marked the 25th amendment to the French Fifth Republic’s constitution, which was founded in 1958 C.E.

Prime Minister Gabriel Attal framed the vote in moral terms before it was cast. He said lawmakers owed a “moral debt” to women who had been forced to undergo illegal abortions in the decades before legalization. “Above all,” Attal said, “we’re sending a message to all women: your body belongs to you.”

After the result was announced, the Eiffel Tower was lit up with the words “my body my choice.” President Macron announced a formal ceremony to mark the amendment’s passage on International Women’s Rights Day.

What the amendment does and doesn’t do

The text guarantees a “guaranteed freedom” to abortion rather than explicitly calling it a “right” — a distinction that drew criticism from some lawmakers and advocacy groups who pushed for stronger language. The difference matters legally: a freedom can still be subject to conditions, while a right carries broader protective weight. This remains an open question in French legal scholarship.

The Catholic Church was among the few organized voices in opposition. The Vatican’s Pontifical Academy for Life issued a statement arguing there can be no right “to take human life,” and a conference of French bishops reiterated the church’s position in the days before the vote. Their opposition, however, represented a small fraction of French public opinion — abortion has long enjoyed broad support across French society and across party lines.

Some lawmakers who voted against the amendment did so not from opposition to abortion itself but from the belief that the measure was redundant given that consensus. Their concern was procedural, not ideological.

A milestone with global resonance

No country had taken this step before. Legal protections for abortion exist in many nations, but embedding it directly in a constitution — the document that sits above ordinary law and is far harder to repeal — is different in kind. It means that no future parliament, no future court, no temporary political shift can erase the protection without clearing an enormously high bar.

That durability is exactly what advocates have argued is needed. Amnesty International and other human rights organizations have long noted that statutory abortion rights are vulnerable to reversal, as the American experience demonstrated. France’s move offers one model for how democracies might respond — not just by defending existing laws, but by lifting reproductive freedom to constitutional status where it becomes structurally harder to attack.

Whether other countries follow is an open question. The global picture on reproductive rights remains uneven, with access expanding in some regions and contracting in others. France’s amendment does not resolve that tension. But it does raise the ceiling for what constitutional protection can look like — and it does so at a moment when that question is anything but settled.

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