Daily Mail

MPs poised to decriminal­ise abortion in historic vote

- By Claire Ellicott Whitehall Editor

ABORTION is poised to be decriminal­ised in an historic vote next month.

At present, women who end a pregnancy after the 24-week legal time limit and outside other permitted circumstan­ces can be jailed.

But after a surge in police investigat­ions polling suggests a majority of MPs think women should no longer be prosecuted for having an abortion after this point.

They will have the opportunit­y to vote according to their conscience on the matter next month, making it likely the law will be changed.

The move would bring England and Wales into line with Northern Ireland where abortion was decriminal­ised in 2019.

The current law comes from the Offences Against the Person Act which was passed in 1861.

Labour MP Dame Diana Johnson will bring an amendment to the Criminal Justice Bill to exempt

‘Women threatened with prison’

women from prosecutio­n if they have an abortion outside the limits.

It would not change the 24-week rule, and women seeking to terminate a pregnancy would still need to meet the conditions of the 1967 Abortion Act, which also requires the authorisat­ion of two doctors.

Medical profession­als who assist could still be prosecuted if the abortion does not meet the Act’s rules.

However, women who end pregnancie­s outside these limits would no longer face criminal prosecutio­n under the 1861 law.

The amendment has cross-party support, with polling suggesting less than one in four MPs back legal action.

It showed 55 per cent of MPs did not think women should be prosecuted for having abortions outside the time limit.

Only 23 per cent supported prosecutio­ns, with the rest answering ‘don’t know’, according to the YouGov polling for abortion provider British Pregnancy Advisory Service and shared with The Times.

Some 81 per cent of Labour MPs were in favour of decriminal­isation, compared with 37 per cent of Conservati­ves.

There has been a rise in the number of women facing police investigat­ion, with around 100 cases since 2019.

That surge has been partly attributed to the abortion ‘pills by post’ scheme, which was introduced during Covid for unwanted pregnancie­s up to ten weeks and involved just a telephone call with a medical profession­al to be prescribed.

Dame Diana told the Mail her amendment had support from six parties, including the Conservati­ves.

‘Vulnerable women are being threatened with jail using a law from the Victorian era, which was passed before women even had the right to vote or sit as MPs,’ she said.

‘Parliament has moved on and society has moved on.’

Rachael Clarke, of BPAS, which is campaignin­g to change the law, told the Times there was ‘support for change from both sides of the house’.

A Department for Health source said Health Secretary Victoria Atkins had made it clear abortion was a matter of conscience for MPs and she would respect the rights of individual­s to make up their own minds.

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