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The bill on "aid in dying" was definitively adopted by the National Assembly on June 30. However, the Senate has just adopted a rejection motion in committee, revealing a political impasse. Meanwhile, voices are rising to say what the law does not: the torment of survivors.
We had followed step by step the progression of the text on "aid in dying": the rejected motion, the demonstrations, the approaching final vote. On June 30, 2026, the National Assembly definitively adopted the bill. The Church of France immediately declared it would enter into resistance. What we had not anticipated: the Senate's twist on July 1.
According to Généthique, the bioethics monitoring site of the Jérôme Lejeune Foundation, the Senate adopted a rejection motion in committee and called on the government to "take full measure of this political impasse." This motion does not mechanically block the law's promulgation—only the Constitutional Council would have that power—but it reveals that the law was adopted without legislative consensus, against the explicit opinion of the upper chamber.
Meanwhile, La Croix gives voice to relatives of people who died by euthanasia or assisted suicide abroad. Their testimony is scathing: "Provoked death can become the torment of surviving loved ones." Guilt, impossible mourning, the feeling of having participated in an irreversible decision—realities the law ignores.
The Church's teaching on this point is unambiguous. John Paul II's Evangelium Vitae (1995) condemns euthanasia as "a grave violation of the law of God, insofar as it involves the morally unacceptable deliberate killing of a human person" (no. 65). The Catechism states: "Whatever its motives and means, direct euthanasia consists in putting an end to the lives of handicapped, sick, or dying persons. It is morally unacceptable" (CCC 2277).
This is not one position among others: it is the universal ordinary Magisterium, binding for the conscience of every Catholic. A state may legalize what moral law forbids; it cannot change its nature.
The law does not provide for an institutional conscience clause for Catholic healthcare establishments. Without this protection, Catholic palliative care homes—including the Maison Jeanne-Garnier, which Pope Leo XIV was to visit before this stop was removed from the program—could be forced to carry out an act contrary to their founding identity.
The individual conscience clause for caregivers exists but remains fragile in a context of institutional pressure. The French Bishops' Conference will have to take a public stance on the legal protection of these establishments.
The Senate's resistance is symbolically strong but legally limited. Possible recourses—Council of State, priority question of constitutionality—remain open but uncertain. The real battle will shift to the drafting of implementing decrees, where details (access conditions, deadlines, role of caregivers) will be decisive.
The testimony of surviving relatives raises a question that proponents of the law refuse to ask: what about the psychological collateral damage of "provoked death" on families? A law that deals with death cannot ignore what it does to the living.
"Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind" (Rom 12:2). Faced with a law contrary to moral law, fidelity does not lie in silence or resignation. Let us support Catholic caregivers in their right to conscience and Catholic institutions in their upcoming legal battle.
- **June 30, 2026**: Definitive adoption of the law by the National Assembly
- **July 1, 2026**: Senate adopts a rejection motion in committee
- **Next steps**: Possible referral to the Constitutional Council, drafting of implementing decrees
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Ma mère est morte en soins palliatifs, on lui a tout donné sauf le choix. Une loi comme ça, c’est pas un peu d’humanité en plus ?
Cette loi ne console personne. On parle chiffres et débats, mais qui voit les familles qui pleurent la nuit ?
À 80 ans, j’ai vu trop de gens souffrir sans rien pouvoir faire. Si cette loi évite ça à d’autres, c’est déjà une forme de miséricorde.
Aide à mourir : le référendum bloqué, l'Assemblée dans la semaine du vote