Ask your MP to vote NO to assisted suicide on Sept 11
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in asking MPs to vote NO on 11 September.
Royal Colleges, doctors and groups representing people who could be put at risk have raised serious concerns about the negative impact this dangerous Bill would have on vulnerable people, including:
People affected
by eating disorders
Women experiencing
domestic abuse or coercive control
People who cannot
get the palliative care they need
Older people
at risk of abuse or pressure
Despite the many serious concerns with the Bill, Lauren Edwards MP has decided to bring back the failed Leadbeater assisted suicide Bill
In response, we have launched the new
After the Bill was shown to be irreparably flawed in the last session – during which it used up large amounts of parliamentary time and political energy – the same Bill is now being brought back by Lauren Edwards MP.
If the Bill passes at Second Reading, it would dominate not only the remainder of the parliamentary session but also the rest of the Parliament, given the implementation period would likely carry on until 2031.Â
This Bill would put vulnerable people at risk, as outlined by numerous Royal Colleges, institutions that would be responsible for implementing the Bill and groups representing vulnerable people.
Even since Lauren Edwards announced her intention to reintroduce the Bill, the Royal College of Physicians, Hospice UK, Sue Ryder charity, the British Association of Social Workers and the British Geriatrics Society have all reiterated their serious concerns with the Bill.
Of particular concern is the possibility of the Parliament Acts being used to force this Bill into law and hold the House of Lords to ransom. Contrary to the misleading claims of campaign groups that a small number of Peers blocked the previous Bill in the House of Lords, nearly 150 Peers actively opposed the Bill in the Lords, including a former President of the Royal College of Psychiatrists and President of the British Medical Association, the former Chief Executive of NHS England, a leading Professor of palliative medicine, the former Chief Nursing Officer, Peers living with disabilities, and legal experts, including two former Attorney Generals and the former President of the Family Division of the High Court.
Sir David Beamish, the respected former Clerk of the Parliaments, confirmed that âwe havenât seen anything look like filibusteringâ after campaigners began to make this claim, while both the House of Lords Constitution Committee and the Hansard Society stated at the start of Lords scrutiny that there was no constitutional prerogative for the Lords to pass the Bill and return it to the Commons, since the Bill was not a manifesto commitment at the last General Election.
In its lead article, The Times newspaper said that the use of the Parliament Acts for the assisted suicide Bill would be âunconscionableâ and a âconstitutional outrageâ. The Parliament Acts have never been used for a Private Membersâ Bill and it would be deeply irresponsible for MPs to pass the same, dangerous Bill to the House of Lords once again in the hope that Peers could somehow fix it, knowing that the flawed Bill would become law with all its defects if Peers are unable to support the Bill or scrutinise it fully within the time constraints of a Private Membersâ Bill.
Introducing assisted suicide is not a public priority at the moment. In a landmark new poll, it came bottom of a list of possible law changes that the public wanted their MPs to focus on in this new session, with just 7% of the public listing it as a priority, and only 8% supporting forcing a non-manifesto Bill into law without the approval of both Houses, as would be the case if the Parliament Acts were invoked (full details on the MRP polling, including constituency level data for every consituency in Great Britain is available here).
We are at a time when MPs need to come together to focus on the core issues facing our country. The last thing Britain needs now is for another divisive battle over a controversial issue that will distract from the publicâs priorities.Â
MPs should oppose this Bill and instead commit together to investing in better palliative, hospice and social care at the end of life.
Enter your postcode above to use our EasyAction tool to write to your MP and ask them to vote NO to the revived Leadbeater assisted suicide Bill on 11 September 2026.
We are at a time when MPs need to come together to focus on the core issues facing our country. The last thing Britain needs now is for another divisive battle over a controversial issue that will distract from the publicâs priorities.
âWestminster should learn from Scotland: assisted dying isnât a progressive causeâ
Rhoda Grant – Labour List
âThis Bill is simply not up to scratch, whatever view one might take on the principleâÂ
Georgia Gilholy – Conservative Home
“This Âshoddily constructed bill represents a danger to patients. It belongs in one place: the history books”
The Times lead article – 16 June 2026