France enshrines abortion rights in Constitution
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France enshrines 'freedom' to abortion in Constitution, in world first
A joint session of Parliament voted to adopt a constitutional reform to protect the 'freedom of women to voluntarily terminate a pregnancy, which is guaranteed.' -
I would assume so too. But Le Monde prints this blurb:
The decision by the US Supreme Court to strip women of the right to abortion has reverberated across Europe's political landscape, forcing the issue back into public debate in France at a time of political upheaval.
Which is of course nonsense. Perhaps they should rename themselves Le Merde.
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I would assume so too. But Le Monde prints this blurb:
The decision by the US Supreme Court to strip women of the right to abortion has reverberated across Europe's political landscape, forcing the issue back into public debate in France at a time of political upheaval.
Which is of course nonsense. Perhaps they should rename themselves Le Merde.
@Mik said in France enshrines abortion rights in Constitution:
I would assume so too. But Le Monde prints this blurb:
The decision by the US Supreme Court to strip women of the right to abortion has reverberated across Europe's political landscape, forcing the issue back into public debate in France at a time of political upheaval.
Which is of course nonsense. Perhaps they should rename themselves Le Merde.
And that's the narrative. Your comment about renaming the paper is spot-on.
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I would assume so too. But Le Monde prints this blurb:
The decision by the US Supreme Court to strip women of the right to abortion has reverberated across Europe's political landscape, forcing the issue back into public debate in France at a time of political upheaval.
Which is of course nonsense. Perhaps they should rename themselves Le Merde.
@Mik said in France enshrines abortion rights in Constitution:
I would assume so too. But Le Monde prints this blurb:
The decision by the US Supreme Court to strip women of the right to abortion has reverberated across Europe's political landscape, forcing the issue back into public debate in France at a time of political upheaval.
Which is of course nonsense. Perhaps they should rename themselves Le Merde.
How is that nonsense?