
Esther Rantzen and terminally ill preacher make case for assisted dying Bill
The broadcaster made a plea to parliamentarians on the eve of Friday's vote to change what she branded a 'current, cruel, messy criminal law'.
The House of Commons will have a debate and vote on the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill on Friday, which will see it either progress to the House of Lords or fall completely.
Dame Esther, a staunch supporter of Kim Leadbeater's Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill, has been a prominent voice in the conversation on assisted dying.
Last week, Labour MP and Bill opponent, Rupa Huq, pledged to be a voice for the voiceless, noting that the Childline founder and others' views are already well-known.
She added: 'We know that Esther Rantzen wants this. We know (broadcaster) Jonathan Dimbleby wants this.
'But our role is to be voice of the voiceless as well.'
Dame Esther, who is terminally ill with cancer, said the 'truly voiceless' are the terminally ill who face ' an agonising death' and their relatives.
She told the PA news agency: 'This is a crucial debate for the truly voiceless.
'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 crime if they try to assist or even stay alongside to say goodbye.
'These are the truly vulnerable and voiceless who depend on our lawmakers to change our current, cruel, messy criminal law.
'All this Bill allows is choice for desperately ill adults who are dying anyway but want the confidence of knowing that they can ask for help to choose what we all hope for; a quick, pain-free death with good memories left behind as their legacy for those they love.
'Please allow us terminally ill the dignity of choice over our own deaths. A change in the law cannot come in time for me, but will transform the final days of generations in the future. Those who disagree with assisted dying under the new law will have the right to their own choice, please allow the rest of us to have the same right.'
Dame Esther's words came as a group of terminally ill and bereaved people shared their stories at a press briefing alongside the Labour Bill sponsor, Ms Leadbeater, on Thursday.
Church of England lay preacher Pamela Fisher, who is terminally ill with cancer, made an impassioned speech against the religious arguments made by some who oppose assisted dying.
She said: 'I completely reject the assumption that the sanctity of life requires terminally ill people to undergo a distressing and painful death against their will. I disagree with those that say it is God alone who decides how and when we die.
'Yes, life is a gift from God to be honoured, but it's nonsensical to say that assisted dying is wrong because suffering is part of God's plan for us.'
The Catholic Archbishop of Westminster, Cardinal Vincent Nichols – who is opposed to assisted dying – has previously argued that the suffering of human beings is 'an intrinsic part of our human journey, a journey embraced by the eternal word of God, Christ Jesus himself'.
Meanwhile, Anil Douglas, whose father took his own life having suffered with multiple sclerosis, recalled the trauma of finding him.
He said a six-month police investigation followed, and told the press conference: 'The law in this country failed my father.'
He added: 'The (current) law leads people like my father to make lonely and dangerous decisions. It does not protect against coercion. It does not offer protections or choice for dying people.
'It does not offer terminally ill, mentally competent adults with six months or less to live, the chance to choose a safe and compassionate death when even the very best palliative care is not enough. It leads to lonely, dangerous, traumatic deaths.'
Bill opponents have argued it is not robust enough to protect the most vulnerable against coercion, and others who might choose assisted dying because they feel they are a burden.
The proposed legislation would allow terminally ill adults in England and Wales, with fewer than six months to live, to apply for an assisted death, subject to approval by two doctors and a panel featuring a social worker, senior legal figure and psychiatrist.
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The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Assisted dying bill faces crunch vote in House of Commons
Update: Date: 2025-06-20T07:28:27.000Z Title: assisted dying bill Content: The relatively narrow majority of 55 from the historic yes vote in November means every vote will count on Friday. As an example, the would fall if 28 MPs switched directly from voting yes to no, but only if all other MPs voted exactly the same way as they did in November, including those who abstained, reports the PA news agency. MPs are entitled to have a free vote on the bill, meaning they decide according to their conscience rather than along party lines. A YouGov poll of 2,003 adults in Great Britain, surveyed last month and published on Thursday, suggested public support for the bill remains high at 73% – unchanged from November. The proportion of people who feel assisted dying should be legal in principle has risen slightly, to 75% from 73% in November. Update: Date: 2025-06-20T07:24:43.000Z Title: MPs prepare for crunch vote on assisted dying bill on Friday Content: Assisted dying could move a step closer to becoming law in England and Wales as parliament prepares for a crunch vote on the issue. The outcome on Friday could see the terminally ill adults (end of life) bill either clear the House of Commons and move to the House of Lords, or fall completely. The debate will begin at 9.30am. In what will be seen as a blow to the bill, four Labour MPs confirmed on the eve of the vote that they will switch sides to oppose the proposed new law, reports the PA news agency. Labour's Paul Foster, Jonathan Hinder, Markus Campbell-Savours and Kanishka Narayan wrote to fellow MPs to voice concerns about the safety of the proposed legislation. They called it 'drastically weakened', citing the scrapping of the high court judge safeguard as a key reason. Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch also urged her MPs to vote against the legislation, describing it as 'a bad bill' despite being 'previously supportive of assisted suicide'. As it stands, the proposed legislation would allow terminally ill adults in England and Wales, with fewer than six months to live, to apply for an assisted death, subject to approval by two doctors and a panel featuring a social worker, senior legal figure and psychiatrist. Bill sponsor Kim Leadbeater has insisted the replacement of high court judge approval with the multidisciplinary panels is a strengthening of the legislation, incorporating wider expert knowledge to assess assisted dying applications. Ahead of confirmation of the four vote-switchers, Leadbeater acknowledged she expected 'some small movement in the middle' but that she did not 'anticipate that that majority would be heavily eroded'. She insisted her bill is 'the most robust piece of legislation in the world' and has argued dying people must be given choice at the end of their lives in a conversation which has seen support from high-profile figures including Esther Rantzen. Leadbeater has warned it could be a decade before assisted dying legislation returns to parliament if MPs vote to reject her bill on Friday. Meanwhile, culture secretary Lisa Nandy has been on the media rounds this morning talking about this topic and sharing her support for the bill. More on this in a moment, but first here is a summary of the latest UK politics news: Higher tax receipts were unable to prevent a rise in public sector borrowing in May to £17.7bn, up from £17bn a year earlier and the second highest for the month on record. A poll of City economists had forecast public sector net borrowing – the difference between public spending and income – would be £17.1bn. The figures will add to the concerns that the government is struggling to bring down the annual deficit to keep within strict spending rules. Thousands of European airline staff are being trained to stop people boarding flights to Britain without valid visas, in a move billed by the foreign secretary as a digital upgrade to border controls. David Lammy said the measures marked a step towards 'more secure, more digital and more effective' borders, but the move could raise questions about human rights safeguards. Cuts of £5bn to the UK overseas aid budget cannot be challenged in the courts, government lawyers have said, even though ministers have no plan to return spending to the legal commitment of 0.7 % of UK gross national income (GNI). The Labour MP Vicky Foxcroft has resigned as a whip in protest at the government's welfare plans, saying she will not be able to vote for the cuts to disability payments. Children in England face prolonged 'lost learning' caused by extreme heat and flooding at school, according to research on the potential impact of the climate crisis on education. School leaders and teachers said the scenarios published by the Department for Education made for grim reading and urged ministers to move quickly to improve school resilience.


ITV News
an hour ago
- ITV News
Assisted Dying Bill faces crunch Commons vote as MPs switch sides
The crucial vote would see the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill either clear the House of Commons and move to the Lords, or fall completely.


ITV News
an hour ago
- ITV News
Mother of teen who drowned in sea off Bournemouth beach raises water safety issue in Parliament
The mother of a teenager who drowned in the sea off Bournemouth beach, has travelled to Westminster - to raise the case of water safety in Parliament. Joe Abbess who was 17, and from Southampton, died in the tragic incident during a day out with friends, alongside 12-year-old Sunnah Khan from Buckinghamshire in May 2023. The pair got caught in a rip current. Joe Abbess' mother Vanessa Abbess joined forces with her local MP - Labour's Darren Paffey - to lead a debate on water safety education. Speaking to ITV Meridian Mrs Abbess said: "They have lessons where they basically lay like starfish on the floor of the classroom. "That's something that sticks in a child's head. "So then if they are in a scenario where they are in danger, they think 'oh yeah - float to live'. "It's as automatic as learning to cross the road, riding your bike - it could be so straightforward and a generation could learn that." Vanessa Abbess, Joe Abbess' mother Darren Paffey said 150 children had lost their lives to drowning in the past three years and called for every child to be given the 'opportunity to learn and to live'. As many people head to the UK's waters during this weekend's warm weather, the MP for Southampton Itchen urged the Government to commit to a national swimming and water safety strategy. Swimming lessons are included in the current curriculum, with all children expected to be able to swim 25 metres unaided by the time they leave primary school. But Mr Paffey has argued this does not go far enough, with just 74% of children leaving school with the ability to swim 25 metres, and those from the most deprived areas twice as likely to drown. Speaking in the Commons, Mr Paffey said: 'My major request of Government is that when the national curriculum is updated, following the review currently happening, and is then taught in every school as mandated in the Children's Wellbeing and Schools Bill, will the Government use that opportunity to enshrine water safety as a core compulsory part of every child's education? 'The point of the curriculum, we know, is not just to pass exams, it's to prepare our young people for life. And if Labour's mission is to break down barriers to opportunity, then here is just about the greatest opportunity we can offer them – the opportunity to learn and to live.' He added: 'Will the Government commit to a national swimming and water safety strategy based on up-to-date evidence about children's access across this country to swimming lessons and water safety education?' Mr Paffey also pressed the Government to create a dedicated water safety ministerial role, as is the case in Wales and Scotland. He added: 'So I ask, why doesn't England? The National Water Safety Forum and the World Health Organisation have both urged the Government to appoint such ministers, and I echo that call today.' Referring to the incident at Bournemouth during his speech, Mr Paffey said: 'They were swimming waist high in the sea, as Joe, who was a strong swimmer, had done many, many times before. They were between the safety flags, in full view of lifeguards, but in an instant, a rip current turned their fun into tragedy.' He added: 'The coroner reported that this was an accident, a devastating and fatal act of nature. But they also report that rip currents can occur anywhere along the UK coastline at any time. 'How many people, especially children, know that? How many members in this chamber would understand, recognise and rightly respond to a rip current? 'On sunny days like we're enjoying at the moment, many will rightly want to go and enjoy rivers and beaches, but we have to ensure that we are doing everything we can to make sure that they can do that safely.' Labour's Rebecca Long Bailey urged the Government to 'provide just a little funding to open up these supervised, lifeguarded swim areas to the public for free, and for longer during the summer months'. 'That way, no young person is tempted to risk their life in dangerous areas when they can have full access to a supervised one,' the Salford MP added. Responding to the debate, education minister Catherine McKinnell said: 'The Children's Wellbeing and Schools Bill, which was introduced in December 2024 and is making its way through this House, does put that requirement on all state-funded schools, including academies, to teach the national curriculum, and will, once implemented, extend the requirement to teach swimming and water safety to all state-funded schools. 'Data from Sport England's active life survey reported in 2024 that 95.2% of state primary schools surveyed reported that they do provide swimming lessons, and we do want all pupils to have the opportunity to learn to swim.' She added: 'We are working to ensure that teaching pupils the water safety code at primary and secondary school will feature in our new RSHE (relationships, sex and health education) statutory guidance, which will be published shortly.'