Assisted Dying Bill to Return to Commons as Labour MP Takes Up Cause

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A group of protesters stand behind a banner which reads: 'Give me choice over my death'. The Houses of Parliament can also be seen in the background
Campaigners have continued to call for a change in the law since the legislation was blocked in the Lords. Photograph: Ben Whitley/PA
Campaigners have continued to call for a change in the law since the legislation was blocked in the Lords. Photograph: Ben Whitley/PA
Assisted dying

Assisted dying bill set to return to the Commons

Labour MP Lauren Edwards to use private member’s bill to put issue before MPs again

Jessica Elgot Deputy political editor
Sun 14 Jun 2026 22.54 CESTLast modified on Sun 14 Jun 2026 23.18 CEST
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The assisted dying bill is set to return to the Commons after Labour MP Lauren Edwards agreed to use her private member’s bill to put the issue before MPs again.

Edwards said she wanted to give the legislation another chance because it had been blocked by the House of Lords after being passed by MPs. The return of the bill would give supporters a chance to use the Parliament Acts to potentially bypass the Lords if it was blocked for a second time.

Edwards said her decision was above all about democracy and that the bill “was prevented from passing only by the decision of a minority in the House of Lords to talk it out and stop it coming to a vote.”

“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,” she said. “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 bill, which gives terminally ill adults over the age of 18 the right to end their life with the agreement of a panel of experts, passed the Commons last year but ran out of time to pass the House of Lords, after peers opposing the bill submitted more than 1,000 amendments.

Edwards, the MP for Rochester and Strood, came second in a ballot of private members’ bills, meaning she will have a good chance of passing the bill should MPs continue to support it.

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Edwards was born in Victoria, Australia – the first state in the country to legalise assisted dying – and previously described the reform as “one of the most important, compassionate and empowering changes to healthcare we’ve seen in a generation.”

Sarah Wootton, chief executive of Dignity in Dying, said: “This announcement will come as an enormous relief to terminally ill people and their families. After decades of campaigning, and historic parliamentary progress towards giving dying people proper choice and protection at the end of life, many feared that [the] law change had been derailed despite the clear support of both the public and elected MPs.

“Lauren Edwards’s decision ensures that this vital conversation can continue. Every day, dying people are forced to endure suffering they would not choose, while others take desperate measures because the law offers them no safe, compassionate alternative. They deserve better.”

MPs must present their bills this Wednesday in parliament and Edwards must present a bill identical to the version originally passed by the Commons last year, when it was sponsored by Kim Leadbeater.

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