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France’s parliament is set for a renewed showdown over assisted dying after the Senate rejected a government-backed bill on Jan. 28-29 by 181 votes to 122.
On Feb. 4-5 the National Assembly’s Social Affairs Committee approved a text mirroring the Assembly’s May 2025 version but notably removed a clause that had explicitly excluded “psychological suffering alone” from eligibility.
The committee’s endorsement paves the way for a second-reading plenary session beginning Feb. 16 and a solemn vote on Feb. 24.
The draft law would create a right to medical aid in dying for adults with grave, incurable illnesses in an advanced or terminal phase, limited to patients whose physical condition prevents self-administration.
Eligibility would require confirmation by a team of medical professionals — at least two doctors and a nurse — and the patient to be a French citizen or resident.
The bill also includes a conscience clause obliging objecting health workers to refer patients to willing colleagues.
If the Assembly approves the text again and no agreement is reached with the Senate, the lower house can have the final say; authorities aim for adoption by summer 2026.
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