The Government spokeswoman, of the Republican (LR) Sophie Primas, clearly suggested on Monday, May 12, her personal opposition to the bill “helps to die” on Monday, May 12, whose exam begins in the Assembly on Monday, illustrating the executive divisions on the subject.
If Sophie Primas said in RTL “without knowing what would vote” if it were a senator, in fact he expressed his opposition when he returned, unexpectedly, to a column of a collective “of citizens and caregivers on the left” (“until the end of solidarity”) published in the site of the communist newspaper L’Anité.
“I would like to commit it to the site of humanity to see an absolutely exceptional platform, a group of doctors and nursing personnel who in fact ask for this text,” he said.
In this forum, this group judges that the law is “anti -social” because “the will to die does not fall from heaven, nor arises purely from the individual” but that it is “from an internalized speech, in a society that devalues certain lives (…) less productive, less independent.”
There is not enough framework
Sophie Primas has suggested that government amendments, defended by Minister Catherine Vautrin, who carries the text, to ensure that “access to help dying is very supervised,” was not far enough.
“If we observe, for example, the legislation in Canada, which was very restrictive at the beginning, tends today to expand over the vulnerable public,” he warned.
The deputies will discuss for two weeks, two proposals of laws, with one over palliative care and the other to help die.
Made unusual, the Government is very divided into the second text, especially with the Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau (LR) for a certain and Prime Minister François Bayrou quite reserved.
Source: BFM TV
