Major assisted dying update as bill set to return to Parliament | Politics | News


The assisted dying Bill is to be brought back to Parliament on Wednesday (June 17), with the first vote on legislation set to take place in September. It comes as the Daily Express continues to campaign for a specific legal framework that gives dying people autonomy over their final weeks.

Lauren Edwards, the Labour MP for Rochester and Strood, has now confirmed that she will bring back an identical Bill to the one passed by the Commons last year. It previously ran out of time to become law after stalling in the House of Lords despite MPs supporting the proposals to allow some terminally ill adults the right to seek help to end their lives. The Express’ campaign, Give Us Our Last Rights, launched in 2022 and calls for the Government to legalise assisted dying for terminally ill, mentally competent adults in the UK. It has influenced legislative debate and lobbied for a compassionate change to the law.

Ms Edwards has now agreed to use her private members’ Bill to put the issue before MPs again. The return of the Bill would give supporters a chance to use the Parliament Acts to bypass the Lords if it were blocked again.

The MP told the BBC: “Laws passed in the House of Commons are then refined by the House of Lords, but they don’t have the opportunity to block them. It’s perfectly reasonable for us to ask the House of Lords to finish the job.”

The proposed law, known as the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill, gives terminally ill people over the age of 18, who are expected to die within six months, the right to help end their own lives. However, their case must be agreed upon by a panel of experts.

Ms Edwards said: “We owe it to all those terminally ill people and their families who are depending on this bill to ensure that parliament can come to a final decision on the question of choice at the end of life. And I believe it undermines public trust in our democracy more widely if we cannot deliver on a measure that is supported by a very large majority of voters in all parts of the country.”

The previous attempt to legalise assisted dying was passed narrowly by MPs in June 2025. Despite the government holding an officially neutral stance, the then health secretary Wes Streeting stood in opposition.

Ms Edwards continued: “Should mentally competent terminally ill adults at the very end of their lives be offered the choice of a dignified, pain-free death with all the protections and safeguards the bill provides?

“An overwhelming majority of our constituents believe that they should. The House of Commons decided that they should. I believe as strongly as ever that we cannot and must not let them down a second time. Now is the opportunity for parliament to fulfil the trust the public have put in us to correct a glaring injustice and pass this compassionate, safe and long overdue reform.”

For more information on the Daily Express campaign, click here.

Leave comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked with *.