The opening of medically assisted procreation (PMA) to all women "will necessarily lead" to gestational surrogacy, "the commercialization of gametes" and "eugenics," said Sunday the Republicans boss Laurent Wauquiez, making a reference to the Nazi regime.

"Yes, it's a gear. And this gear will necessarily lead to the commodification of gametes, " said Sunday the president of the Republicans before the common sense troops, the conservative current of LR, about the Assisted Reproduction Medical (PMA).

"All this was done by a regime, it's Nazism"

"All this has a name, it is eugenics; all this was done by a regime, it's Nazism, " continued the leader of the opposition right, also considering that " this gear will lead us inevitably to surrogacy, because all the intellectual reasoning on which it rests (y) obviously leads .

"And do we consider that all this is merciless and has no consequences? He further questioned, calling for "defending the natural way of reproduction, of filiation, of transmission" .

"The child is not a right, the child is a duty"

"Beyond suffering, demands, expectations of a couple, there is also what we want for the future of our country," argued Laurent Wauquiez, saying that "the child is not a child. right, the child, it's a duty . "

Medically assisted procreation by donating anonymous gametes is now allowed in France for only couples of different sexes who are infertile or at risk of transmitting a disease to the child.

A draft law, to be presented by the government in the first half of 2019, plans to open it to couples of women, as well as to single people.

The speech of Laurent Wauquiez was worth test in common sense. Spearhead of the opposition to marriage for all and faithful support of François Fillon during the presidential campaign, the movement - which claims 9,000 supporters - is now a conservative sting at LR.

"I'm pragmatic, I listen to the speeches and I look at the actions of Laurent Wauquiez: for now, it's going in the right direction," said Sunday the president of the movement, Laurence Trochu, which had gathered about 500 people in the suburbs of Paris for debates and round tables.