In a rebuke to President Emmanuel Macron’s push for one of the world’s most permissive euthanasia laws, the French Senate last week dismantled the “loi Falorni” bill, stripping out all provisions for assisted suicide and voluntary killing. Instead, senators transformed it into a mandate for enforceable palliative care, explicitly rejecting lethal substances and affirming the sanctity of life from conception to natural death.
The original text, backed by Macron and adopted by the National Assembly in May 2025, would have allowed doctors to prescribe or administer poisons with minimal safeguards—consulting a colleague via teleconference, a mere 48-hour cooling-off period, and no binding conscientious objection for pharmacists or Catholic healthcare facilities. Penalties loomed for anyone hindering access, turning mercy into mandated death and eroding protections for the innocent unborn and afflicted alike.
Senators rewrote key articles to prioritize pain relief without intent to kill: “Everyone has the right to the best possible relief from pain and suffering… without any voluntary intervention intended to cause death.” This echoes prior laws like Claeys-Leonetti, which already permit slow euthanasia by withholding hydration—highlighting the slippery slope toward a culture of death.
Pro-life leaders hailed the move as a warning. Fondation Jérôme-Lejeune’s Jean-Marie Lejeune urged citizens to pressure the Assembly: “Resistance against procured death is deeper than imagined.” Critics link the bill to Masonic ideology, rejecting God’s law for human autonomy. The amended bill failed Senate passage 181-122, returning the original to the Assembly mid-February.
This delay offers hope: Amid Europe’s moral decline, France’s upper house has signaled that true dignity means compassionate care, not state-sanctioned killing. Defending life’s inviolability demands vigilance against ideologies cheapening existence.
