The Post

Seymour offers to amend bill

- Ruby Macandrew and Thomas Manch

Significan­t changes to the End of Life Choice Bill have been proposed by ACT MP David Seymour.

The bill’s strongest supporter in Parliament has suggested limiting legalised euthanasia solely to cases of terminal illness.

He has sought to exclude mental illness and disability from the bill’s provisions; to send it to a public referendum; and to incorporat­e aspects of a palliative care bill drafted by his loudest critic, National MP Maggie Barry. Seymour’s concession­s are a bid to earn votes from his parliament­ary colleagues and allay concerns among the 37,000 who submitted on the bill.

The suggestion­s have drawn both praise and ire from advocates and opponents. Seymour, who is the bill’s sponsor, has published a report detailing amendments he expects Parliament’s justice select committee to consider.

The suggested removal of permitting assisted death in cases of grievous and irremediab­le illness would come as a disappoint­ment to many, he said.

He has also addressed nuances such as: explicitly eliminatin­g advanced directives; clarifying the required capacity for informed consent; allowing pharmacist­s to conscienti­ously object to involvemen­t; and ensuring medical profession­als aren’t liable for criminal prosecutio­n. Many of the specificat­ions, such as the removal of mental illness, were already implicit in the bill, he said.

‘‘I’m not saying the bill was flawed but some people want things spelt out, so I’m happy to do that.’’

Seymour said detailed discussion­s with MPs made clear certain changes were required.

A public referendum was a condition required for the support of the nine NZ First MPs, while the eight Green MPs wouldn’t support the bill’s coverage for those without terminal illness due to fears held by the disabled community.

A bill restricted to terminal illness and headed for a public vote was also more likely to gain support of individual Labour and National MPs, he said. ‘‘Those are the political considerat­ions. But also, everything in my report is a result of public feedback.’’

Seymour has mentioned Barry specifical­ly, suggesting her proposed Access to End of Life Palliative Care Bill be incorporat­ed into his own – a suggestion the National MP says is ‘‘ridiculous’’.

The justice select committee is expected to report back after March next year.

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