France’s 21st annual March for Life drew around 10,000 resolute participants to Paris on January 19, 2026, shifting its spotlight from abortion to the looming threat of euthanasia. Timed near the anniversary of the 1975 abortion legalization, this year’s rally near Les Invalides—a monument to France’s heroic past—railed against President Emmanuel Macron’s agenda for “dying with dignity.”
In his New Year’s address, Macron vowed to advance legislation in 2026, despite political delays. Organizers decried the push as a “license to kill,” long forbidden but now a leftist priority. Two bills loom: one bolstering palliative care, the other enabling “aid to die”—already cleared by the National Assembly, with Senate debate on January 28 and final review in February. If passed, it would create one of the world’s most permissive euthanasia frameworks, eroding protections for the vulnerable.
Spokeswoman Geneviève Bourgeois, a geriatrician, warned of a deadly movement that has dulled societal conscience over decades. Marie-Lys Pellissier slammed the semantic sleight-of-hand, where the Senate swapped “right to assisted dying” for “medical assistance in dying,” masking murder as mercy. She tied this to radical feminist rhetoric framing abortion as routine “care.”
Bishop Rey, a champion of traditional liturgy, lent ecclesiastical weight. A poignant tribute honored Charlie Kirk, slain in September for pro-life advocacy. Notable figures included MEPs Margarita de la Pisa Carrión and Laurence Trochu, Christian Democratic leader Jean-Frédéric Poisson, and legitimist claimant Louis XX.
Marchers demanded a robust national palliative care plan and ironclad conscientious objection rights for medical professionals.This rally exposes the radical assault on life’s sanctity from womb to tomb, urging a cultural revival to shield the frail amid France’s ethical crossroads.














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