France’s constitutional court on Thursday would rule on the new law requiring the public to hold a health pass to eat in restaurants.
The court is to decide whether the new law that also says health workers that must be vaccinated against COVID-19 by mid-September complies with the republic’s founding charter.
President Emmanuel Macron announced the proposed legislation in July as the Delta variant fuelled a fourth wave of infections, delivering a plain message: get vaccinated.
It prompted a surge in the vaccination rate as the French faced the prospect of being denied access to bars, restaurants, cafes and cinemas without proof of either vaccination or a recent negative COVID-19 test.
Opponents of the measures accuse Macron of trampling on freedoms and discriminating against the unvaccinated.
Some 200,000 people marched through towns and cities across France in a third weekend of protests on Saturday and more are planned.
“Thousands of people have lost their minds to such an extent that they are capable of saying we live in a dictatorship,” Macron told Paris Match in an interview published on Wednesday.
It was irresponsible and selfish not to get vaccinated, the president has said, pointing to the renewed pressure on the healthcare system.
Hospitals along the Riviera, in Corsica and the southern Occitanie region have again triggered their crisis management plans that include postponing some surgeries to free up beds.
At the La Cabasse restaurant near the Mediterranean city of Toulon, manager Laurent Bondil said he was certain the health pass would hit his earnings but that he would adhere to the new regulations.
“Every day there’s a new rule,” he bemoaned. “But what counts is that we’re still here.’’
However, an Elabe survey showed that the majority of French people approve of the health pass requirements.