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October Tory leadership contest – where candidates stand on abortion & assisted suicide

With Liz Truss announcing that she will be officially resigning as Conservative leader and Prime Minister of the UK, a number of Tories have indicated, or are soon expected to announce, that they will be putting their name forward as candidates in the leadership contest that will take place over the next week. The new leader of the Conservatives and the UK’s next Prime Minister will be in place by next Friday 28 October.

Conservative MPs will first nominate candidates, with a 2pm deadline on Monday 24th. A maximum of three candidates can be nominated, with each who receives at least 100 nominations then being whittled down to two by Conservative MPs. The final pair then go to an online vote of Conservative members later in the week.

The contest starts just 45 days after Liz Truss became Prime Minister following a summer-long contest to replace Boris Johnson, and will take place at a time when the Conservatives trail Labour in the polls by a big margin. 

Right To Life UK has put together the following voting record outline that details the voting records across 20 individual votes on abortion and assisted suicide for each of the current or likely leadership candidates. This includes voting records on the most recent vote on life issues, which was on Stella Creasy’s amendment to the Public Order Bill to introduce nationwide abortion clinic buffer zones. This vote took place on Tuesday 18 October.

These records come from the Where Do They Stand database – you can view voting records for other MPs on the platform here. This table will be updated as candidates put their names forward.

The United Kingdom is about to enter a critical period for the abortion issue. There is currently a renewed push from the abortion lobby to make extreme changes to abortion legislation in England and Wales

Polling shows Conservative grassroots want pro-life changes to abortion legislation

Polling from Savanta ComRes shows that, among the population who states that they intend to vote Conservative, there is strong support for a number of changes to abortion legislation. 91% agree that gender-selective abortion should be explicitly banned by the law, 79% oppose taxpayer money going to fund abortions overseas and 73% agree that parental or guardian consent should be required for girls aged 15 or under to undergo an abortion. Support for these pro-life changes to abortion legislation is higher among this part of the population than in the general population.

Similarly, another poll from Savanta ComRes showed that two-thirds of Tory councillors (67%) support abortion remaining a devolved matter for Northern Ireland and believe that it should be up to politicians in Northern Ireland to decide whether or not to change the law on abortion in Northern Ireland. 

Both polls are likely to be an accurate proxy of voter sentiment on life issues among the grassroots Conservatives who may ultimately decide the new leader of the Conservatives and the country’s next Prime Minister. 

Beyond Grassroots Conservatives, polling shows the general public is also supportive of a number of changes to abortion legislation. For example, 60% of the general population and 70% of women believe that the current 24-week gestational limit for abortion should be reduced. A full outline of the changes to abortion legislation that the public support is available here.

Full data for each leadership candidate

Links to the full voting record profile for each of the candidates on the Where Do They Stand platform is provided below the following chart. This has been included as it may be difficult to read the details of each of the votes on the chart as a large amount of content has been outlined in a small area. A description of each of these votes can be clearly read on the Where Do They Stand platform.

A running tally of the MPs who are backing each of the candidates is available here.

Green squares represent the MP casting a pro-life vote, red represents a pro-abortion or pro-assisted suicide vote, yellow is an abstention and grey indicates that the MP was not in office at the time of the vote.

Voting record – MPs who are expected to stand as candidates

Voting record – MPs who are expected to stand as candidates

Key for table above

  1. Amendment to introduce censorship zones around abortion clinics that make it a criminal offence to offer support or pray – 18/10/2022.
  2. Motion to approve regulations to give the Northern Ireland secretary further powers to impose the commissioning of abortion services on Northern Ireland – 22/06/2022.
  3. Amendment to make ‘DIY’ home abortions permanently available in England – 30/03/2022.
  4. Motion to approve regulations to give the Northern Ireland secretary new powers to impose the commissioning of abortion services on Northern Ireland – 27/04/2021.
  5. Introduce censorship zones around abortion clinics that make it a criminal offence to offer support or pray – 24/06/2020.
  6. Motion to approve regulations to impose abortion legislation on Northern Ireland – including introducing abortion up to birth for Down’s syndrome, cleft lip and club foot – 17/06/2020.
  7. Amendment to impose law change on Northern Ireland to introduce abortion – 09/07/2019
  8. Amendment to put pressure on the Government to change abortion legislation in Northern Ireland – 24/10/2018.
  9. Introduce abortion on demand, for any reason, up-to 24-weeks in Northern Ireland. Remove many of the current legal safeguards around abortion provision in England and Wales – 23/10/2018.
  10. Introduce abortion on demand, for any reason, up-to-birth (‘Decriminalisation’) – 13/03/2017.
  11. Legalise assisted suicide – 11/9/2015 
  12. Explicit ban on sex-selective abortion – 23/02/2015.
  13. Independent abortion counselling – 07/09/2011.
  14. Reduce abortion limit to 22 weeks – 20/05/2008.
  15. Reduce abortion limit to 20 weeks – 20/05/2008.
  16. Reduce abortion limit to 16 weeks – 20/05/2008.
  17. Reduce abortion limit to 12 weeks – 20/05/2008.
  18. Better information and counselling for parents facing a disability diagnosis in pregnancy – 20/05/2008.
  19. Counselling and 7-day cooling-off period – 05/06/2007.
  20. Parental notification for girls 15 and under seeking an abortion – 14/03/2007.

Full voting record data from the Where Do They Stand platform

Rishi SunakSajid JavidSuella BravermanPenny MordauntBoris Johnson
Grant ShappsBen WallaceKemi BadenochNadhim Zahawi

Dear reader,

MPs are preparing to vote before Christmas on a Bill that, if passed, will legalise assisted suicide. This is a critical moment for our country.

The introduction of the Bill comes at a time when many elderly people are heading into winter with their Winter Fuel Payment cut by the Government. Palliative care services are in crisis with over 100,000 people dying each year without receiving the palliative care they desperately need. Our wider healthcare system is in a state of crisis, with Labour’s own Health Secretary describing the NHS as “broken”.

Within this context, this proposed assisted suicide law is a disaster waiting to happen.

This Bill is the most serious threat to vulnerable lives since the Abortion Act was introduced in 1967.

It’s now crucial that all MPs and the Government urgently see that there is a large number of voters in each constituency who don’t want this dangerous and extreme change to our laws - changes that would put the vulnerable at risk and see the ending of many lives through assisted suicide.

You can make a difference right now by contacting your MP to ask them to stop assisted suicide from being rushed into law. It only takes 30 seconds using our easy-to-use tool, which you can access by clicking the button below.