MADRID 29 Nov. (EUROPA PRESS) –
The processing of the bill to facilitate assisted dying in the United Kingdom will continue to advance thanks to the support declared this Friday with the majority of the House of Commons.
The bill proposes that terminally ill adults who have less than six months to live can request medical assistance in dying. The proposal to advance the legislation has had the approval of 330 deputies of the lower house of the British Parliament against 275 votes against.
The vote has not followed party lines, hence, for example, the British Labor Prime Minister, Keir Starmer, and his predecessor and political rival, the conservative Rishi Sunak, have declared themselves in favor of the measure while they have declared themselves against it. spoken among others by the leader of the conservative opposition, Kemi Badenoch, Starmer’s Foreign Minister, David Lammy, or the former leader of the Labor Party Jeremy Corbyn.
The next step now consists of forming a committee to subject the bill to scrutiny and opening a process so that the upper house of Parliament, the House of Lords, can issue its opinions on the matter.