Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill — New Clause 10 — No obligation to provide assistance etc — 16 May 2025 at 13:45

“except that section 1(2) of that Act shall not apply”.
“, unless the person has Down syndrome or a learning disability, in which case a registered medical practitioner must not initiate, suggest, or raise the matter of assisted dying with that person”.
“specific and up-to-date training on”.
“and section (Replacing the coordinating or independent doctor where unable or unwilling to continue to act)(6)(a)(ii)”.
“, or
“I helped them out of compassion - and I think that is what’s missing from our current law.”
“No registered medical practitioner or other health professional is under any duty…to participate in the provision of assistance in accordance with this Act”,
“not to be subjected to any detriment”
“No person is under any duty to participate in the provision of assistance in accordance with this Act.”
“A person who would not otherwise meet the requirements of subsection (1) shall not be considered to meet those requirements solely as a result of voluntarily stopping eating or drinking.”
“at least 60 people around the world have been euthanised or assisted in suicide”
“anorexia nervosa listed by name as a terminal condition.”––[Official Report, Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Public Bill Committee, 29 January 2025; c. 139, Q175.]
‘If, for instance, you say to a vulnerable patient who has just been told they have a diagnosis of terminal cancer, “Have you thought about assisted dying?”, I would suggest that stating it broadly like that is a form of pressure and that you are potentially unintentionally coercing that patient.’––[Official Report, Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Public Bill Committee, 28 January 2025; c. 75, Q93.]
“The freedom for a registered medical practitioner (RMP) to raise/discuss the option of seeking help to die in clause 4(2) is ethically problematic.”
“Professional advice regarding treatment will be received by the patient as a recommendation”,
“The thought of being locked in unable to communicate is not how I want to spend the last months of my life. To end my life on my terms when the time comes would give me comfort.”
“has made the decision that they wish to end their own life voluntarily and has not been coerced or pressured by any other person”.
“we believe that the Bill as drafted is flawed, and the risks to older, vulnerable people, residing within social care environments are substantial.
We believe that any assumption by those drafting the final legislation that it is not intended for use by those living with conditions regarded as part of the ageing process, would be mistaken. Any legislation would be immediately tested and assumed to be accessible to such a cohort of people.
To that end we believe that in order to provide the necessary protections to such a vulnerable part of our society, the Bill must be explicit in its reference to older people living in residential services.”
“The Bill must take account of the current unfairness and instability at the heart of our social care system, and question whether such legislation can be introduced whilst such problems exist.
The Bill must recognise that an individual health/social care professional’s ability to remove themselves from the process of Assisted Dying is so difficult, that specific exclusion of the care home sector should be a feature of the Bill. In any case, organisations, and sites, should be given the ability to exclude themselves from the act of an assisted death without prejudice to their approval as providers of services to the state.”
“Those that fund their own care pay substantial sums, often saved for over a lifetime-including property wealth. These savings will have been set aside for retirement and to pass on to loved ones. Instead, they are used to fund the costs of their own residential care, and to substantially subsidise the state.
We see the real prospect that those that might fit the criteria for assisted dying under the Bill, but have no wish to accelerate their death, would feel an immediate dilemma between prolonging their own lives, and the future quality of life of their loved ones. For illustrative purposes, the six-month period stated within the current Bill would equate to between £25,000 and £40,000 of expense borne by an individual paying for their own residential care in the current system.
Failings in the system mean that older people who should not be in hospital are held there, causing a burden to the NHS, and Local Authorities face an ever-growing proportion of funding needed to support social care, without a proportionate increase in funding from central government.”
“During the pandemic, we saw the appalling attempts at a widespread use of ‘Do Not Attempt Resuscitation’ arrangements for older people. This is a clear demonstration that an existing broken system places a lower value upon the lives of older people than of others.”
“Relationships within residential care for older people are both professional and intimate. Carers, Care Leaders, and Service Managers are all competent health and social care professionals, but they are also friends and confidantes of those that live within social care services. The relationships are familial in the sense of contact for hours each day and the extension of support to ordinary, everyday issues outside the scope of normal healthcare professionals.
Our employees deliver loving care and build relationships in a way that residents come to depend upon and take comfort from. Such relationships are key to excellent care provision, and these important relationships enhance and prolong lives by providing a sense of purpose and place to older people.”
“In such a setting, it renders the ability for an individual to refuse to partake…as useless.
In an environment such as a care home, there is no way in which a professional could be fully ‘separated’ from assisted dying, should a resident they work with closely seek to enquire about or make a request.
Imagine a scenario where an individual living in social care is at the point where they will be provided with the approved substance to bring about their own death: In a care home, this is likely to be in their own room, which will be in close proximity to many other older people who live within that setting. It will be commonplace and understandable that the magnitude of the event will mean that the individual will wish to have company and comfort up to and immediately before/during the period in which the substance is taken.
A request for the company of a care professional will create a substantial moral dilemma for that person, profoundly so if they are individually opposed to Assisted Dying.”
“Even where they are not, it will mean that they will intimately witness the death of someone with whom they have a strong bond, with that death having come about through facilitation, rather than naturally.”
“The scenario is made worse by the prospect of an assisted death not resulting in a quick nor painless death. There are examples from other jurisdictions of significant complications leading to painful deaths and deeply traumatic experiences for loved ones. Social care professionals should not be exposed to the risk of such experiences.”
“to consider the unworkable nature of individual exclusion from the processes of Assisted Dying for social care professionals. Consequently, specific exclusion of the care home sector should be a feature of the Bill. In any case, organisations, and sites, should”-
“be given the ability to exclude themselves from the act of an assisted death.”
“A difficult subject for most of us to contemplate, but in his particular case the possibility of assisted dying would have given him much comfort.”
“Unless you are actually affected by something as desperate as MND, you cannot understand what it really means to have such an option.”
“I have gone into those communities and I have spoken to them about this Bill. What they say overwhelmingly to me is, ‘We’re scared. We’re really fearful that this is going to result in a disproportionate impact on our community. We have seen that through covid and we’re so scared.”––[Official Report, Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Public Bill Committee, 29 January 2025; c. 187, Q245.]
“Almost every week, one of the first things I have to reassure patients about is that I cannot legally do anything to shorten their life. This is front and centre of the fear for those patients and we see it all the time.”––[Official Report, Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Public Bill Committee, 29 January 2025; c. 190, Q247.]
“There are some proceedings, though civil in form, whose nature is such that it is appropriate to apply the criminal standard of proof,”
“Guy had always been a bit of an old cowboy, and he always said that he wanted to die with his boots on. I am proud to say that that is what he did. At the end, we were holding hands, and I said to him, ‘Don’t be afraid.’ He said, ‘I’m not afraid,’ and he winked at me just before he closed his eyes.”––[Official Report, Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Public Bill Committee, 30 January 2025; c. 258, Q334.]
“Those who had a wish to hasten death were 18 times more likely to also feel suicidal”.––[Official Report, Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill Public Bill Committee, 30 January 2025; c. 275, Q359.]
“We know that effective palliative care can change a terminally ill person’s point of view from wanting to die to wanting to live.”––[Official Report, Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Public Bill Committee, 28 January 2025; c. 70, Q84.]
“Notably the proposed mechanisms of decision making are not in line with good clinical and professional practice… Parliament must address these critical issues in the legislation or risk failing to protect vulnerable patients and uphold the integrity of clinical practice.”
“real concerns about the practical and legal implications”
“do not know much about or have not heard of palliative care”,
“the person has a clear, settled and informed wish to end their own life”
“It is not clear what a psychiatrist’s role on a…panel would be”.
“Panels are to determine referrals in public”.
“The chair of a panel may, at the request of the person to whom a referral relates, decide that the panel is to sit in private.”
“severe pain and discomfort that cannot be reasonably relieved”
“No health professional shall raise assisted dying…unless that person has first raised it.”
“You have the right to be involved in planning and making decisions about your health and care with your care provider or providers, including your end of life care, and to be given information and support to enable you to do this.”
“A person is not to be treated as unable to make a decision unless all practicable steps to help him to do so have been taken without success.”
“capacity is a very serious consideration in our concern.”––[Official Report, Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Public Bill Committee, 29 January 2025; c. 178, Q232.]
“For some psychiatrists who wish to conscientiously object, this would constitute being involved”
“We are deeply concerned about the risks of coercion and undue influence. In particular, people with Down’s syndrome and intellectual disabilities are at significant risk of coercion and undue influence, in part because of their need to trust and rely upon caregivers and medical professionals.”
“The Mental Capacity Act was created to safeguard and support people who do not have the capacity to make decisions about their care or treatment or matters like finances. Should the Bill become law in England and Wales, implications for both the Mental Capacity Act and Mental Health Act need to be considered.”
“can reasonably be expected within six months”,
“the registered medical practitioner must ensure that the person has no remediable suicide risk factors which pose a significant risk to their life”
“a significant risk to their life”

Debate in Parliament |

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Party Summary

Votes by party, red entries are votes against the majority for that party.

What is Tell? '+1 tell' means that in addition one member of that party was a teller for that division lobby.

What are Boths? An MP can vote both aye and no in the same division. The boths page explains this.

What is Turnout? This is measured against the total membership of the party at the time of the vote.

PartyMajority (Aye)Minority (No)BothTurnout
Alliance0 10100.0%
Con15 77076.0%
DUP0 50100.0%
Green4 00100.0%
Independent1 11085.7%
Lab207 (+2 tell) 125 (+2 tell)183.6%
LDem55 10090.3%
PC4 00100.0%
Reform UK1 40100.0%
Traditional Unionist Voice0 10100.0%
UUP0 10100.0%
Total:287 235183.5%

Rebel Voters - sorted by party

MPs for which their vote in this division differed from the majority vote of their party. You can see all votes in this division, or every eligible MP who could have voted in this division

Sort by: Name | Constituency | Party | Vote

NameConstituencyPartyVote
Peter BedfordMid LeicestershireCon (front bench)aye
Aphra BrandrethChester South and EddisburyCon (front bench)aye
James CartlidgeSouth SuffolkCon (front bench)aye
Geoffrey Clifton-BrownNorth CotswoldsCon (front bench)aye
David DavisGoole and PocklingtonConaye
Caroline DinenageGosportCon (front bench)aye
Oliver DowdenHertsmereConaye
Ashley FoxBridgwaterCon (front bench)aye
Mark GarnierWyre ForestCon (front bench)aye
Alicia KearnsRutland and StamfordCon (front bench)aye
Kit MalthouseNorth West HampshireCon (front bench)aye
Andrew MitchellSutton ColdfieldConaye
Chris PhilpCroydon SouthCon (front bench)aye
Neil Shastri-HurstSolihull West and ShirleyCon (front bench)aye
James WildNorth West NorfolkCon (front bench)aye
Diane AbbottHackney North and Stoke NewingtonLabno
Debbie AbrahamsOldham East and SaddleworthLab (minister)no
Zubir AhmedGlasgow South WestLabno
Bayo AlabaSouthend East and RochfordLab (minister)no
Rushanara AliBethnal Green and StepneyLab (minister)no
Rosena Allin-KhanTootingLabno
Fleur AndersonPutneyLab (minister)no
Scott ArthurEdinburgh South WestLab (minister)no
Jessica AsatoLowestoftLab (minister)no
James AsserWest Ham and BecktonLab (minister)no
Catherine AtkinsonDerby NorthLab (minister)no
Olivia BaileyReading West and Mid BerkshireLabno
David BainesSt Helens NorthLab (minister)no
Alex BakerAldershotLab (minister)no
Richard BakerGlenrothes and Mid FifeLab (minister)no
Antonia BanceTipton and WednesburyLab (minister)no
Johanna BaxterPaisley and Renfrewshire SouthLab (minister)no
Polly BillingtonEast ThanetLab (minister)no
Sureena BrackenridgeWolverhampton North EastLab (minister)no
David Burton-SampsonSouthend West and LeighLab (minister)no
Dawn ButlerBrent EastLabno
Liam ByrneBirmingham Hodge Hill and Solihull NorthLab (minister)no
Nesil CaliskanBarkingLab (minister)no
Juliet CampbellBroxtoweLab (minister)no
Markus Campbell-SavoursPenrith and SolwayLab (minister)no
Feryal ClarkEnfield NorthLab (minister)no
Ben ColemanChelsea and FulhamLab (minister)no
Tom CollinsWorcesterLabno
Liam ConlonBeckenham and PengeLabno
Jennifer CraftThurrockLab (minister)no
Mary CreaghCoventry EastLab (minister)no
Torcuil CrichtonNa h-Eileanan an IarLab (minister)no
Ashley DaltonWest LancashireLabno
Jonathan DaviesMid DerbyshireLabno
Shaun DaviesTelfordLab (minister)no
Marsha de CordovaBatterseaLab (minister)no
Tan DhesiSloughLab (minister)no
Anna DixonShipleyLab (minister)no
Anneliese DoddsOxford EastLab (minister)no
Stephen DoughtyCardiff South and PenarthLab (minister)no
Maya EllisRibble ValleyLab (minister)no
Florence EshalomiVauxhall and Camberwell GreenLab (minister)no
Chris EvansCaerphillyLab (minister)no
Patricia FergusonGlasgow WestLab (minister)tellno
Vicky FoxcroftLewisham NorthLab (minister)no
Mary FoyCity of DurhamLab (minister)no
Daniel FrancisBexleyheath and CrayfordLabno
James FrithBury NorthLab (minister)no
Barry GardinerBrent WestLab (minister)no
Allison GardnerStoke-on-Trent SouthLab (minister)no
Mary GlindonNewcastle upon Tyne East and WallsendLab (minister)no
John GradyGlasgow EastLab (minister)no
Andrew GwynneGorton and DentonLab (minister)no
Emma HardyKingston upon Hull West and HaltempriceLab (minister)no
Helen HayesDulwich and West NorwoodLab (minister)no
Meg HillierHackney South and ShoreditchLab (minister)no
Jonathan HinderPendle and ClitheroeLabno
Rupa HuqEaling Central and ActonLab (minister)no
Patrick HurleySouthportLabno
Leigh InghamStaffordLab (minister)no
Sally JamesonDoncaster CentralLabno
Terry JermySouth West NorfolkLab (minister)no
Adam JogeeNewcastle-under-LymeLab (minister)no
Darren JonesBristol North WestLab (minister)no
Lillian JonesKilmarnock and LoudounLab (minister)no
Ruth JonesNewport West and IslwynLab (minister)tellno
Gurinder JosanSmethwickLab (minister)no
Sojan JosephAshfordLabno
Mike KaneWythenshawe and Sale EastLab (minister)no
Satvir KaurSouthampton TestLabno
Uma KumaranStratford and BowLab (minister)no
Peter LambCrawleyLab (minister)no
Emma Lewell-BuckSouth ShieldsLab (minister)no
Justin MaddersEllesmere Port and BromboroughLab (minister)no
Shabana MahmoodBirmingham LadywoodLab (minister)no
Seema MalhotraFeltham and HestonLab (minister)no
Rachael MaskellYork CentralLabno
Douglas McAllisterWest DunbartonshireLab (minister)no
Martin McCluskeyInverclyde and Renfrewshire WestLab (minister)no
Siobhain McDonaghMitcham and MordenLab (minister)no
Chris McDonaldStockton NorthLab (minister)no
Blair McDougallEast RenfrewshireLab (minister)no
Lola McEvoyDarlingtonLab (minister)no
Gordon McKeeGlasgow SouthLab (minister)no
Catherine McKinnellNewcastle upon Tyne NorthLab (minister)no
Frank McNallyCoatbridge and BellshillLab (minister)no
Anneliese MidgleyKnowsleyLab (minister)no
Julie MinnsCarlisleLab (minister)no
Grahame MorrisEasingtonLabno
Margaret MullaneDagenham and RainhamLab (minister)no
Katrina MurrayCumbernauld and KirkintillochLab (minister)no
Josh NewburyCannock ChaseLab (minister)no
Chi OnwurahNewcastle upon Tyne Central and WestLab (minister)no
Abena Oppong-AsareErith and ThamesmeadLab (minister)no
Kate OsamorEdmonton and Winchmore HillLab (minister)no
Taiwo OwatemiCoventry North WestLab (minister)no
Darren PaffeySouthampton ItchenLab (minister)no
Matthew PatrickWirral WestLab (minister)no
Stephanie PeacockBarnsley SouthLab (minister)no
Bridget PhillipsonHoughton and Sunderland SouthLab (minister)no
David Pinto-DuschinskyHendonLab (minister)no
Richard QuigleyIsle of Wight WestLab (minister)no
Mike ReaderNorthampton SouthLabno
Martin RhodesGlasgow NorthLab (minister)no
Bell Ribeiro-AddyClapham and Brixton HillLab (minister)no
Marie RimmerSt Helens South and WhistonLabno
Matt RoddaReading CentralLabno
Sam RushworthBishop AucklandLab (minister)no
Michelle ScroghamBarrow and FurnessLab (minister)no
Naseem ShahBradford WestLabno
Michael ShanksRutherglenLab (minister)no
David SmithNorth NorthumberlandLab (minister)no
Sarah SmithHyndburnLab (minister)no
Kenneth StevensonAirdrie and ShottsLabno
Wes StreetingIlford NorthLab (minister)no
Graham StringerBlackley and Middleton SouthLabno
Kirsteen SullivanBathgate and LinlithgowLab (minister)no
Lauren SullivanGraveshamLab (minister)no
Alison TaylorPaisley and Renfrewshire NorthLab (minister)no
Nick Thomas-SymondsTorfaenLab (minister)no
Stephen TimmsEast HamLab (minister)no
Laurence TurnerBirmingham NorthfieldLab (minister)no
Liz TwistBlaydon and ConsettLabno
Valerie VazWalsall and BloxwichLabno
Melanie WardCowdenbeath and KirkcaldyLabno
David WilliamsStoke-on-Trent NorthLabno
Sean WoodcockBanburyLab (minister)no
Gill FurnissSheffield Brightside and HillsboroughLab (minister)both
Gideon AmosTaunton and WellingtonLDem (front bench)no
Steve DarlingTorbayLDem (front bench)no
Tim FarronWestmorland and LonsdaleLDem (front bench)no
Monica HardingEsher and WaltonLDem (front bench)no
Paul KohlerWimbledonLDem (front bench)no
Angus MacDonaldInverness, Skye and West Ross-shireLDem (front bench)no
Brian MathewMelksham and DevizesLDem (front bench)no
Sarah OlneyRichmond ParkLDem (front bench)no
Al PinkertonSurrey HeathLDem (front bench)no
Jamie StoneCaithness, Sutherland and Easter RossLDem (front bench)no
Richard TiceBoston and SkegnessReform UKaye

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