UK Bill to Legalize Assisted Suicide Likely Headed for Massive Defeat
A controversial bill that would legalize assisted suicide in England and Wales is almost certain to fail in the current parliamentary session due to insufficient time for debate in the House of Lords, according to reports and statements from parliamentary sources.
The Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill, introduced by Labour MP Kim Leadbeater, passed through all stages in the House of Commons but now faces insurmountable procedural hurdles in the upper chamber.
The Labour chief whip in the Lords, Roy Kennedy, indicated this week that the government would not allocate additional time for the bill before the May deadline, when the parliamentary session ends with the King’s Speech and unfinished private members’ bills automatically fall.
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With only a limited number of sitting days remaining—reports indicate six before the cutoff—the legislation in its current form is expected to lapse without further government intervention to extend debate.
Opponents have submitted 1,200 amendments in the House of Lords, a move supporters describe as obstruction but defenders frame as necessary scrutiny. In a pro-life perspective, the mounting amendments and time constraints highlight broad resistance to what opponents view as a dangerous shift toward state-sanctioned suicide.
Dr. Gordon McDonald, chief executive of the anti-euthanasia group Care Not Killing, defended the process, saying: “This issue is very difficult, and it needs proper scrutiny – that’s what the members of the House of Lords have been doing. It didn’t get proper scrutiny in the House of Commons. It’s right that parliaments look at these bills properly and give them due consideration, that’s what the House of Lords is doing.”
The bill has drawn opposition from across the political spectrum, including some Labour government members such as Health Secretary Wes Streeting and Interior Minister Shabana Mahmood.
Critics, including the Catholic Church and organizations such as Care Not Killing, argue that legalization poses risks to vulnerable people, particularly amid concerns over NHS pressures and potential coercion.
Public understanding of the issue remains muddled, with surveys showing 39% to 42% of people mistakenly believing “assisted dying” refers to withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment rather than active assistance in suicide.
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