Assisted Dying: MPs debate controversial bill – here’s what you need to know

MPs are spilling out of the benches today as they undergo a five hour debate on the ambivalent Assisted Dying Bill before a vote later this afternoon

Nov 29, 2024 - 08:00
Assisted Dying: MPs debate controversial bill – here’s what you need to know

LONDON, ENGLAND - OCTOBER 16: Campaigners in Parliament Square in favour of the proposed bill to legalise assisted dying, on October 16, 2024 in London, England. The 'Terminally Ill Adult (End of Life) Bill' seeks to help terminally ill people with six to 12 months left to live to end their lives legally. As a safeguarding measure, it proposes that a judge and two doctors would need to sign off on a patient's request for an assisted death. A recent poll showed a majority of the public would support assisted deaths for the terminally ill. (Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

Members of Parliaments are spilling out of the benches today as they undergo a five hour debate on the Assisted Dying Bill before a vote later this afternoon.

The Bill, known as Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life), if passed, will allow adults who are terminally ill, subject to safeguards and protections, to request and be provided with assistance to end their own life.

It was proposed by Labour’s Kim Leadbeater MP in mid-October and is set for a vote by MP’s later today to either kill the Bill or allow it to go forward for further scrutiny at a later date.

This vote comes nearly a decade after the last time this issue was before the House, as back in 2015, MPs rejected a ‘right to die’ Bill by 330 votes to 118.

The five hour debate commenced at the House of Commons at 9:30am, with a vote to be called before 2.30pm. Play Video

Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle said this morning that more than 160 MPs were bidding to speak in the debate, as the members aimed to get through the legislation line-by-line.

Labour’s Leadbeater MP said the assisted dying Bill will give people “choice, autonomy and dignity” as she opened the debate in the Commons.

But Conservative Danny Kruger MP told the House that Bill is “too big” and “too flawed” for MPs to make meaningful changes to it.

Ed Miliband and Hilary Benn are among those in favour, while Health Secretary Wes Streeting and the Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood were opposed.

Despite this, a recent YouGov poll found three quarters (74 per cent) are, in principle, in favour of legalising the practice, with only around one in eight (13 per cent) opposed.

Commenting on the Bill, Nicola Beasley, senior associate at Stowe Family Law explained, “by legalising assisted dying in the way that the bill as it stands intends, individuals would be able to choose to end their own life by self-administering a prescribed lethal substance.”