Western Daily Press

MPs debate law on assisted dying

- PRESS ASSOCIATIO­N REPORTERS

POLITICIAN­S must get off the fence on the issue of assisted dying, broadcaste­r Jonathan Dimbleby has said as MPs began a lengthy debate on the law at Westminste­r.

Campaigner­s both for and against legal reform gathered outside Parliament yesterday afternoon after a petition backed by Dame Esther Rantzen gathered more than 200,000 signatures.

Three hours were set aside for the Westminste­r Hall debate, at which various MPs can air their views on whether or not they feel a change in the law is necessary, but there was no vote at the end.

A number of high-profile figures have spoken out on the issue in recent months.

Dame Esther, who has stage four lung cancer, is not attending due to her health but has vowed to watch the debate closely, saying a change in the law “would mean that I could look forward in confidence to a death which is pain-free surrounded by people I love”.

Her efforts in speaking out on the issue have been praised by fellow pro-change campaigner Dame Prue Leith, who cannot make the debate due to filming commitment­s but has called for “less pearl-clutching” and more “serious, constructi­ve debate”.

Mr Dimbleby, who gathered with pro-change campaigner­s yesterday, has previously described the current law as “increasing­ly unbearable” following the death of his younger brother Nicholas, who suffered with motor neurone disease (MND).

In a message to MPs, he said: “Get off the fence, don’t sit on your hands, have a proper full debate about all the implicatio­ns, and at the end of that I am sure they will introduce legislatio­n.”

He described the Not Dead Yet protest being held next to the Dignity in Dying demonstrat­ion as impassione­d but unreasonab­le, saying some of the slogans were “scare stories that I wish that people wouldn’t deploy because of their own very strong feelings”.

Those who oppose a change in the law have voiced concerns that legalising assisted dying could put pressure on vulnerable people to end their lives for fear of being a burden on others and argue the disabled, elderly, sick or depressed could be especially at risk. Dr Gordon Macdonald, chief executive of the campaign group Care Not Killing, described Monday’s debate as a missed opportunit­y to talk about fixing the UK’s palliative and social care system.

He said: “Instead of discussing this dangerous and ideologica­l policy, we should be talking about how to fix the UK’s broken and patchy palliative care system so everyone can have a dignified death.”

The issue was last voted on in the Commons in 2015, when it was defeated at second reading stage by 330 votes to 118.

Opening the Westminste­r Hall debate, Labour MP Tonia Antoniazzi, a member of the Petitions Committee, said: “The fact that in less than two years we have had two petitions debates on this subject clearly indicates to me and to others that this issue is one our constituen­ts are highly engaged in.”

She added that “whatever our own views we must recognise that public opinion on assisted dying has shifted in one direction”, citing polls by Dignity in Dying showing “overwhelmi­ng support for law changes with safeguards in place”.

 ?? Jordan Pettitt/Press Associatio­n ?? Campaigner­s in support of voluntary euthanasia protest outside Parliament in Westminste­r, London, ahead of a debate in the House of Commons on assisted dying. A petition for a debate gained more than 200,000 signatures and has been backed by Dame Esther Rantzen
Jordan Pettitt/Press Associatio­n Campaigner­s in support of voluntary euthanasia protest outside Parliament in Westminste­r, London, ahead of a debate in the House of Commons on assisted dying. A petition for a debate gained more than 200,000 signatures and has been backed by Dame Esther Rantzen

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