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Assisted dying bill PASSES making it one step closer to being legal

Published on June 20, 2025 at 01:29 PM

TERMINALLY ill adults are set to be given the legal right to end their lives after MPs passed landmark assisted dying laws in a knife-edge final vote.

paves the way for the biggest shake-up in end-of-life care in decades after weeks of furious lobbying on both sides.

Screen grab of the benches filled with MPs during the debate of the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill, in the chamber of the House of Commons in Westminster, London. Picture date: Friday November 29, 2024. PA Photo. See PA story Politics AssistedDying. Photo credit should read: House of Commons/UK Parliament/PA Wire
MPs debating the assisted dying bill
Esther Rantzen at a commemoration event.
Esther Rantzen – who is battling stage 4 cancer – is among those supporting the bill
MP Kim Leadbeater listening to cancer sufferer Sophie Blake at a press conference.
MP Kim Leadbeater (left) listens to campaigner and cancer sufferer Sophie Blake speaking in the Houses of Parliament

to the House of Lords for further scrutiny before it can become law.

It would means adults in and with fewer than six months to live will be allowed to apply for a medically assisted death, under strict safeguards.

And comes after a campaign of support, including from TV personalities Dame , 84, who is battling stage four , and terminally ill Sophie Blake, 52.

Dame Esther said the terminally ill are “truly voiceless”; and face an “agonising death”; – adding: “This is a crucial debate for the truly voiceless.”;

She went on to say: “They are the terminally ill adults for whom life has become unbearable and who need assistance, not to shorten their lives but to shorten an agonising death – and their loved ones who under the current law will be accused of committing a if they try to assist or even stay alongside to say goodbye.”;

Sophie said: “This is not about wanting to die, but to be able to live the rest of my life with the peace and comfort of having choice.

“I have come to terms with the fact that my life has been shortened, and I do not fear death, but I do fear how I’ll die.”;

‘Correct the profound injustices’

Labour’s , who brought forward the Bill, called it a “compassionate and safe choice”; and said it would “correct the profound injustices of the status quo”;.

The new law means adults in and with fewer than six months to live will be allowed to apply for a medically assisted death, under strict safeguards.

Applications will need the approval of two doctors and a new expert panel made up of a legal figure, psychiatrist and social worker — a key change from the original plan which required sign-off from a High judge.

The final vote passed after fierce debate and a string of last-minute amendments.

Ms Leadbeater warned in the chamber that rejecting the Bill would not be a neutral act, but “a vote for the status quo”;.

Conservative MP Sir , opposing the move, pushed back on claims it was now or never, telling MPs: “There will be plenty of opportunities.”;

MPs accepted an amendment ruling out eligibility for anyone seeking to die solely due to stopping eating or drinking — with Ms Leadbeater stressing it would exclude those with .

Another amendment requiring ministers to assess the impact on palliative care within a year also passed, with Marie Curie warning this alone would not “make the improvements needed”; in end-of-life care.

Campaigners on both sides gathered outside , with signs reading “Let us choose”; and “Don’t make doctors killers”;.

Polling published ahead of the vote showed 73 per cent of Brits still support legalising assisted dying – the same figure as in November’s second reading.

Protestors holding signs supporting assisted dying.
Dame Esther’s daughter Rebecca Wilcox joins campaigners from the group Dignity In Dying

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