Macron expected to back Andorra’s moves to decriminalise abortion during visit – Europe live | France


Morning opening: Co-prince Macron visits Andorra

Jakub Krupa

Jakub Krupa

France’s president Emmanuel Macron is in Andorra, performing his duties as the state’s co-prince, alongside the Catholic Bishop of Urgell, Josep-Lluís Serrano Pentinat.

France's president and Andorra’s co-prince Emmanuel Macron arrives as he is welcomed by the second co-prince Josep-Lluis Serrano Pentinat (R), ahead of a dinner in Andorra.
France’s president and Andorra’s co-prince Emmanuel Macron arrives as he is welcomed by the second co-prince Josep-Lluis Serrano Pentinat (R), ahead of a dinner in Andorra. Photograph: Ed Jones/AFP/Getty Images

That in itself could be at best a factoid for your next politics geek pub quiz, but – as briefly covered in yesterday’s Europe Livethere is a serious element to it as his visit comes at a time of policy debate on abortion in the country, which continues to have some of the most restrictive laws in Europe.

Radio France International reported that Andorra’s prime minister Xavier Espot Zamora has “indicated he hopes to decriminalise abortion within a year, though not necessarily legalise it,” but the microstate’s governance setup involving a Catholic bishop makes it tricky.

During today’s speech as Andorra’s co-prince, Macron is expected to speak frankly about the issue and back the changes, as well as endorse plans for Andorra to ratify its association agreement with the European Union, which could be done as early as in July.

Last night, Macron raised a toast “from heart” to celebrate Andorra’s unique history and international position, with political talks only taking place behind the closed doors, but today we should hear more.

Andorra’s public broadcaster RTVA reported on Monday that Macron confirmed that abortion would feature in his speech, with the Catholic co-prince conceding that “we must move forward without breaking the institutional seams.” Let’s see what that means.

I will bring you the key lines from Macron’s speech later.

Separately, the European Parliament is expected to discuss the next EU budget, and the European Commission to talk about reforming its regulatory environment.

Again, I will keep an eye on this for you.

It’s Tuesday, 28 April 2026, it’s Jakub Krupa here, and this is Europe Live.

Good morning.

Key events

Media freedom ‘under sustained attack’ across EU as public trust drops, report finds

Jon Henley

Jon Henley

Europe correspondent

Journalists in the EU face increasing levels of harassment, threats and violence, while news outlets are owned by a shrinking number of proprietors and public trust in the media has plummeted, a report has found.

The Civil Liberties Union for Europe (Liberties) said the findings of its fifth annual media freedom report, released on Tuesday, should place EU officials “on high alert”, with media freedom and pluralism “under sustained attack” across mainland Europe.

Europe’s leading civil liberties group also warned public media independence was being steadily eroded by political interference and budget cuts, and journalists were being increasingly hampered by restrictions on free expression and access to information.

“A healthy, pluralistic media system is a litmus test and mirror of democracy,” said Eva Simon, Liberties’ senior advocacy officer. “Where the rule of law weakens – through deliberate government action or neglect – media freedom is undermined.”

Journalist safety in particular reached what the report called “a crisis point” in Europe in 2025, with reporters and media workers facing “extreme physical violence and systemic legal harassment”, including bomb attacks targeting investigative reporters.



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