Luxembourg has joined France as the second nation to embed abortion as a constitutional “freedom,” a move that entrenches the killing of unborn children under the guise of rights.
On March 1, 2026, 48 out of 60 members of the Chamber of Deputies voted in favor of the amendment to Article 11 of the Constitution, achieving the required two-thirds majority. Six voted against, and two abstained. The proposal, initiated in 2024 by the leftist party déi Lénk, was approved by the State Council in June 2025 after being submitted as a draft law in May.
The debate centered on terminology, with the Christian Social People’s Party objecting to labeling abortion a “right,” arguing it would impose a state duty. A compromise settled on “freedom,” which ensures legality but allows restrictions. Efforts to extend the abortion limit to 14 weeks and guarantee contraception rights were rejected. Under current law, abortion is legal on demand up to 12 weeks, with changes in July 2025 eliminating a three-day waiting period and mandatory pre-abortion counseling.
Luxembourg’s history includes Grand Duke Henri’s 2008 opposition to euthanasia, which led to reduced monarchical powers. International scholars from Harvard, Oxford, and elsewhere warned in an open letter that “freedom” would be judicially interpreted as a “right,” removing abortion from democratic debate and impacting conscientious objection, free speech, and religion.














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