
President Emmanuel Macron’s government said last year it wanted to change the law which currently restricts to heterosexual couples treatments such as in vitro fertilisation (IVF) that are widely available to all women in countries such as Britain, Belgium and Spain.
The Conseil d’Etat, France’s highest administrative court that advises the government on legal issues, will hand its report on planned revisions to the Bioethics Law to the prime minister on Friday, Le Figaro reported.
A synopsis of the report did not flag up any reasons why extending the right to medically-assisted reproduction to all women would contravene the constitution or common law, the newspaper said.
A spokesman for the court could not immediately be reached out of working hours.
If confirmed, the Conseil d’Etat’s stance would open the door to a major extension of gay rights in France.
France legalised gay marriage in 2013, after a tortured debate that aroused stronger than the expected opposition in a country where the influence of the Catholic Church was thought to have been in decline.