France Repeals Slavery-Era Black Code

Conflicting Facts
  • May 28, 2026 at 1:49 PM ET
  • Est. Read: 2 Mins
France Repeals Slavery-Era Black CodeAI-generated illustration — does not depict real events

Key Takeaways

France's National Assembly unanimously voted to repeal the 1685 Code Noir, which classified enslaved people as property. The symbolic vote marks a rare moment of unity in French politics but does not address ongoing racial inequalities or reparations.

  • France's National Assembly votes 254-0 to repeal slavery-era Black Code
  • Lawmaker Steevy Gustave emphasizes the vote cannot repair centuries of harm
  • President Macron supports repeal but avoids committing to reparations
  • Overseas territories remain economically disadvantaged despite being French departments

France's National Assembly voted unanimously on Thursday to repeal the Code Noir, a 1685 royal decree that classified enslaved people as property and governed their treatment in France's colonies. The vote, supported by all 254 lawmakers present, marks the formal abolition of a law that remained on the books despite slavery being abolished in 1848.

Lawmaker Steevy Gustave, descended from enslaved people from Martinique, delivered an emotional speech during the debate. 'We are not descendants of slaves,' he said through tears. 'We are descendants of human beings born free, then reduced to the worst — reduced to slavery.' The Code Noir's 60 articles included provisions allowing for brutal punishments and denying enslaved people any legal standing.

President Emmanuel Macron expressed support for repealing the law but stopped short of endorsing reparations. 'The silence, even the indifference, that we have maintained for nearly two centuries toward this Black Code is no longer an oversight,' he said last week. 'It has become a form of offense.' The debate over reparations remains contentious in France, with some arguing it's necessary to address historical injustices and others opposing financial compensation.

The repeal comes as France continues to grapple with racial inequalities, particularly in its overseas territories like Guadeloupe, Martinique, French Guiana, and Réunion. These departments, made full parts of France in 1946, have higher poverty rates and lower economic opportunities than mainland France. Lawmaker Max Mathiasin, who introduced the repeal bill, noted that 'In Guadeloupe... the most important positions in the structures of the state are held by whites.' The vote is seen as a symbolic step toward acknowledging France's colonial past and its lasting effects.

How this summary was created

This summary synthesizes reporting from 3 independent publishers using AI. All sources are cited and linked below. NewsBalance is a news aggregator and media literacy tool, not a news publisher. AI-generated content may contain errors or inaccuracies — always verify important information with the original sources.

Read our full methodology →

Read the original reporting ↓