David Cameron has become the first former UK prime minister to throw his support behind the assisted dying bill.
Lord Cameron had previously opposed moves to change the law, but said he had been won over to supporting the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill, set to be debated by MPs on Friday.
Writing for The Times, he said: “As campaigners have convincingly argued, this proposal is not about ending life, it is about shortening death.
“Many of these safeguards will be familiar from previous proposals. But this new Bill protects the vulnerable still further, including by making coercion a criminal offence.”
Former PMs Liz Truss, Boris Johnson, Baroness Theresa May and Gordon Brown have all said they are opposed to the bill.
It comes as Dame Esther Rantzen has urged MPs guided by their religious beliefs to be honest about why they will vote against plans to legalise assisted dying.
She told LBC: “I mean, what worries me is the number of people who are guided by their faith – that’s fine, that’s their choice, whether they’re Evangelical, Christian or Catholic. Yes, they have the right to choose, but please be honest about your real motivation.”
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Joe Middleton28 November 2024 09:05
EXCLUSIVE: Starmer faces ‘total humiliation’ with Chagos deal on brink of collapse
Sir Keir Starmer has been warned that he faces “total humiliation” on the world stage with his plans to hand over the Chagos Islands to Mauritius on the brink of collapse in the next 48 hours.
With Sir Keir’s national security adviser Jonathan Powell heading to the US in a late bid to dissuade Donald Trump from vetoing the controversial deal, doubts have now also been raised by the new prime minister of Mauritius, Navinchandra Ramgoolam, who has expressed doubts about the deal struck with his predecessor.
After a meeting with Mr Powell earlier this week, Mr Ramgoolam said: “I informed them that I wished to have more time to study the details with a panel of legal advisers.”
David Maddox and Millie Cooke report
Joe Middleton28 November 2024 08:55
Esther Rantzen defends Starmer’s silence on assisted dying debate
Dame Esther Rantzen has defended Sir Keir Starmer for staying silent on how he plans to vote on the assisted dying bill on Friday.
With the vote teetering on a knife edge, the prime minister has faced criticism for refusing to reveal his stance – despite high profile interventions from ministers including Wes Streeting and Shabana Mahmood.
Sir Keir has confirmed he will vote, but not yet whether he will support Kim Leadbeater’s bill.
But Dame Esther Rantzen, who is terminally ill and has argued strongly for a change in the law, has defended the prime minister;s decision not to reveal how he will vote.
Joe Middleton28 November 2024 08:53
Rantzen reiterates disappointment in Wes Streeting
Dame Esther Rantzen has reiterated her disappointment in health secretary Wes Streeting after his intervention in the assisted dying bill.
Mr Streeting – who plans to vote against the assisted dying bill – has suggested there may need to be cuts to other NHS services if the policy was brought in.
Cabinet ministers were told not to campaign for a change in either direction. Ms Rantzen hit out at the health secretary and said “he has been very vocal in his opposition”.
Ahead of Friday’s Commons debate, Dame Esther has written to MPs urging them all to take part and vote.
Joe Middleton28 November 2024 08:51
Dame Esther Rantzen urges MPs to be honest about assisted dying views
Dame Esther Rantzen has urged MPs guided by their religious beliefs to be honest about why they will vote against plans to legalise assisted dying for the terminally ill.
The broadcaster, who is terminally ill, has been a strong advocate for changing the law to allow dying adults to take their own lives in limited circumstances, without fear of their families being prosecuted for helping them.
The 84-year-old revealed in December last year that she had joined Dignitas, to give her the choice of an assisted death in Switzerland.
Ahead of a debate on the assisted dying Bill on Friday, Dame Esther said she was “heartened” by the fact Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood had disclosed it was her religion which was informing her opposition to the Bill.
The senior Cabinet minister came under fire from Labour peer Lord Falconer for a strongly-worded letter to constituents in which she made clear her opposition to the Bill.
Dame Esther told the broadcaster LBC: “I mean, what worries me is the number of people who are guided by their faith – that’s fine, that’s their choice, whether they’re Evangelical, Christian or Catholic. Yes, they have the right to choose, but please be honest about your real motivation.”
The journalist and television presenter also said some opponents of the Bill had been “claiming facts which are not facts, distorting evidence, when really their reason is that they believe for faith reasons, religious reasons, that this Bill should be opposed”.
Joe Middleton28 November 2024 08:42
David Cameron backs assisted dying bill in shock U-turn by former prime minister
Former prime minister Lord David Cameron has backed the move to legalise assisted dying for terminally-ill adults after previously opposing the legislation.
The Private Member’s Bill is due for its second reading in the House of Commons on Friday, in the first debate and vote of its kind in the House since 2015.
MPs will be given a free vote on the issue, allowing them to decide according to their conscience rather than in line with party policy.
The Bill, which covers England and Wales, says that only terminally ill adults with less than six months left to live and a settled wish to die would be eligible.
Joe Middleton28 November 2024 08:40