In Depth:  The Right To Life Charitable Trust

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Assisted dying: Second Reading

Assisted dying: Second Reading

The Right To Life Charitable Trust

Lord Falconer’s Assisted Dying Bill received its Second Reading in the House of Lords on July 18, after which it passed to committee stage for further scrutiny.

A record number of 122 peers spoke in the debate, which lasted for nearly ten hours. Opening the debate, Lord Falconer of Thoroton asserted that opponents of the Bill were wrong and argued that the Oregon model has shown that the number of people who will choose to have an assisted suicide will be small, there will not be pressure placed on the disabled to end their lives, nor will they be made to feel a burden, because the Bill is restricted to those who are terminally ill, and the current law should not ‘just be allowed to continue’, on the grounds that it is inequitable, as only the rich can travel to Switzerland to have an assisted suicide.

Blank cheque on abortion

The Right To Life Charitable Trust

In late April, two national newspapers both reported that over 60 doctors who illegally signed blank abortion consent forms – without seeing the woman seeking an abortion – would not be charged.

The articles highlighted that one doctor signed so many forms that they were still being used by the abortion clinic four years after he left.