The bill to legalise assisted dying in England and Wales will begin its next parliamentary stage this month as a committee of MPs chosen by the bill’s sponsor, Kim Leadbeater, begins taking evidence.
MPs voted for the assisted dying bill to proceed in late November but there are still significant hurdles in the Commons and the Lords for it to become law.
The bill passed at second reading in the Commons with a 55-vote majority – though dozens of MPs have said they might change their minds and vote against the bill unless changes were made in the forthcoming parliamentary stage. The bill would allow assisted dying for terminally ill adults with less than six months to live.