Kim Leadbeater, the Labour MP behind the assisted dying Bill, has expressed discomfort with a former prime minister’s description of it as the “assisted suicide bill”.Theresa May is among the peers who are vehemently opposed to the legislation, arguing that it there were not enough safeguards to prevent people being pressured into ending their lives.The former Conservative PM spoke as the House of Lords began its scrutiny of the Terminally Ill Adults Bill, which was passed by MPs with a majority of 23 in June.Responding outside the chamber, Leadbeater said terminally ill people supporting the Bill were “definitely not suicidal” but “they are dying, and they have no choice about that”.Outside Parliament, demonstrators for and against the plans made their views known as the Bill progresses towards potentially coming into force in England and Wales.Inside, the red benches in the Lords were packed with a record number of requests to speak as two days of consideration began, with Leadbeater, who introduced the Bill to the Commons, watching from the gallery.Baroness May spoke in opposition, warning of the risk of medical cover-ups, and saying she had a friend who calls it the “license to kill Bill” as a result.She said in her view the legislation would be “an assisted suicide Bill”, adding: “Suicide is wrong, but this Bill, effectively, says suicide is okay. What message does that give to our society?”The Bill did not have good enough safeguards to prevent people from being pressuris …
Article Attribution | Read More at Article Source
[mwai_chat context=”Let’s have a discussion about this article:nnKim Leadbeater, the Labour MP behind the assisted dying Bill, has expressed discomfort with a former prime minister’s description of it as the “assisted suicide bill”.Theresa May is among the peers who are vehemently opposed to the legislation, arguing that it there were not enough safeguards to prevent people being pressured into ending their lives.The former Conservative PM spoke as the House of Lords began its scrutiny of the Terminally Ill Adults Bill, which was passed by MPs with a majority of 23 in June.Responding outside the chamber, Leadbeater said terminally ill people supporting the Bill were “definitely not suicidal” but “they are dying, and they have no choice about that”.Outside Parliament, demonstrators for and against the plans made their views known as the Bill progresses towards potentially coming into force in England and Wales.Inside, the red benches in the Lords were packed with a record number of requests to speak as two days of consideration began, with Leadbeater, who introduced the Bill to the Commons, watching from the gallery.Baroness May spoke in opposition, warning of the risk of medical cover-ups, and saying she had a friend who calls it the “license to kill Bill” as a result.She said in her view the legislation would be “an assisted suicide Bill”, adding: “Suicide is wrong, but this Bill, effectively, says suicide is okay. What message does that give to our society?”The Bill did not have good enough safeguards to prevent people from being pressuris …nnDiscussion:nn” ai_name=”RocketNews AI: ” start_sentence=”Can I tell you more about this article?” text_input_placeholder=”Type ‘Yes'”]