Yorkshire Post

Assisted dying should now be legal, says MP

- Kevin Hollinrake Kevin Hollinrake is Conservati­ve MP for Thirsk and Malton.

A YORKSHIRE MP says the death of his elderly mother has made him even more convinced that assisted dying should be legalised.

Kevin Hollinrake lost his mother during last year’s General Election campaign and the Thirsk and Malton MP believes public opinion backs a law change.

Writing in The Yorkshire Post, the Tory backbenche­r says: “As she died, her final hours were difficult, particular­ly due to the invasive treatments she needed to clear fluid from her lungs.

“It was not only distressin­g for her as she reached the end of her life, but greatly distressin­g for those of us who loved her and saw her suffer in her last moments with us, and indeed her fellow patients on her ward.”

Urging MPs to hold a new inquiry, he adds: “It cannot be right to force people to suffer like that when they would much rather die peacefully, on their own terms.”

AS MPS in a representa­tive democracy, we are elected to use our judgements, collective and personal, and not to simply act as a delegate for our constituen­ts’ views.

This is the foundation of our Parliament and it’s also a useful argument for those who take the opposite view to me on assisted dying.

But when we look at the enormous, and growing, public support for law change, it must give us cause to stop and think.

When I was elected as an MP for the first time in 2015, one of the first votes I cast was to support the legalisati­on of assisted dying. I was in a minority then of a small number of Conservati­ve MPs who took that view, but it had been informed by my own beliefs and the views of my constituen­ts.

Shortly before the debate I was invited by a local bishop to talk to the congregati­on about the upcoming vote and was surprised, as indeed was the bishop, to find that around 80 per cent of those who attended the discussion were in support of law change. That figure is borne out by repeated surveys showing an overwhelmi­ng majority support assisted dying.

In those intervenin­g years, I have been struck by the changing discussion amongst MPs about the issue. I have spoken to many of my friends and colleagues who have either regretted their opposition in 2015 or who are taking a more balanced view.

It was demonstrat­ed strongly to me in a Westminste­r Hall debate in January that the mood is shifting when I saw a majority of MPs – and, most pleasingly, a number of MPs from the new intake – who supported a review of the current law.

I know Ministers have been in lengthy discussion­s with campaigner­s on both sides of the issue and see this as an issue that Parliament must grapple with and soon.

This month sees the publicatio­n of a new book, Last Rights: The case for assisted dying, that explores the arguments and puts them in the current context.

Not only does it look at the surge in support for assisted dying around the world – including in Canada, Australia and New Zealand, not to mention a further six states in the USA, all of whom have changed their laws since our vote in 2015 – but the more recent events of the coronaviru­s outbreak, where the questions over how we die have never been more pertinent.

During the election last year, I lost my mother. As she died, her final hours were difficult, particular­ly due to the invasive treatments she needed to clear fluid from her lungs. It was not only distressin­g for her, but greatly distressin­g for those of us who loved her and saw her suffer in her last moments with us, and indeed her fellow patients on her ward.

Many more people will have experience­d similar deaths over the past few months due to coronaviru­s, and many more will continue to die in such ways even after the pandemic has been controlled. It cannot be right to force people to suffer like that when they would much rather die peacefully, on their own terms.

To those of my colleagues who are understand­ably cautious about moving towards the legalisati­on of assisted dying, I would remind them of two things.

First, that this is an issue where our constituen­ts are very nearly unanimous in their views, and in these rare cases we must take note and listen to their views.

Second, and perhaps most importantl­y, we all recognise that this must be done carefully and with proper checks and balances.

But this is where we should take heart: this is not a voyage into the unknown, but one where we can come together as a Parliament to craft a law that works for our country by looking at the best practices from overseas.

We must look to other countries in the wide world that share similar outlooks on life, in the USA, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, and figure out what we can learn from their experience­s. They each tackle the subject in their own way and we, in Britain, will be able to do the same and get it right for ourselves.

But we cannot continue to allow people to suffer as they die and our constituen­ts will not allow us to prevaricat­e on this any longer. We should do what the public expects us to do – to grasp the nettle, beginning with an inquiry into the existing law on assisted dying and how it should change.

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