Assisted dying could lead to coercion – Streeting
The health secretary says changing the law could lead to ill people being “guilt-tripped” into ending their own lives.
The health secretary has said he is worried that legalising assisted dying could risk ill people feeling “guilt-tripped” into ending their own lives.
It emerged last week that Wes Streeting had privately told colleagues he would vote against the proposal next month.
MPs are due to debate the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill on 29 November, before voting on it.
Streeting told BBC Breakfast on Tuesday that he was “concerned about the risk of people being coerced into taking their own lives sooner than they would have liked, or feeling… guilt-tripped, feeling like a burden”.
Assisted dying generally refers to a person who is terminally ill seeking medical help to obtain lethal drugs, which they administer themselves.
Ms Leadbetter has previously said: “The current situation isn’t particularly safe and there isn’t actually the choice that I believe people deserve and should have.”
Earlier this month, Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he was “very pleased” MPs would get the chance to vote on the issue – and that he would look at the details of the bill to decide his own vote.
Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood has said she will not support the bill because of her “unshakeable belief in the sanctity and the value of human life”.