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The Autonomous Community of Madrid adopts a law that legally recognizes the conceived child, against the Spanish national narrative. An isolated political signal, but doctrinally significant.
According to Généthique (July 14, 2026), the regional parliament of Madrid has adopted a law recognizing the legal status of a child conceived but not yet born. The text, introduced by the regional president Isabel Díaz Ayuso (PP), establishes a system of protection and support for pregnant women, particularly those in vulnerable situations, and asserts in its statement of motives the value of human life from the moment of conception. This regional initiative clashes with the national political line of Spain, which has been marked since 2023 by the liberalization of access to abortion and the trans law.
The wording adopted by Madrid is identical to that of Evangelium vitae (John Paul II, 1995, n° 60): from the moment the ovule is fertilized, a life is inaugurated, which is neither that of the father nor of the mother, but that of a new human being who develops for himself. The Catechism of the Catholic Church (n° 2270) reiterates this affirmation and bases on it the inviolability of the right to life from the first moment of its existence. The Madrid law therefore only translates into regional positive law what Catholic doctrine holds as anthropological evidence. The contrast with the national Madrid line illustrates the legal fragmentation of Europe around bioethics: regions remain spaces of normative resistance.
An autonomous community against the central state, a local law against the spirit of the times. Regional law may have become, in Europe, the last place where life can still be named without euphemism.
Article produced by artificial intelligence, reviewed under human editorial control.
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