Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill Debate
Full Debate: Read Full DebateBaroness Fox of Buckley
Main Page: Baroness Fox of Buckley (Non-affiliated - Life peer)Department Debates - View all Baroness Fox of Buckley's debates with the Department of Health and Social Care
(2 days, 19 hours ago)
Lords ChamberMy Lords, as legislators, all sorts of laws pass through our hands—the good, the bad and the ugly. All are consequential for our fellow citizens, but rarely does a Bill weigh as heavily as this one. Wherever we stand, this law change could have a seismic impact on social attitudes to life, illness and death. Our task is formidable because of how many norms the Bill will overturn; I will mention a few.
The Bill unsettles centuries-old medical ethics. It rebrands assisting someone to die as a medical treatment, upending its understood meaning. The Bill rewrites the role of doctors. They will no longer be guided by the “Do no harm” ethos of preserving and protecting life; instead, the Bill mandates that they actively engage in taking a patient’s life by supplying lethal drugs that will kill them. The Bill especially shakes the foundations of society’s attitudes to suicide—and, yes, that is the accurate word; we know this because, at present, intentionally assisting someone to end their life is a criminal offence. So the Bill is forced to amend the Suicide Act 1961 to allow medical professionals to plan, prepare and assist in intentionally ending the lives of a particular group of citizens.
My greatest dread is that this state licensing of suicide could unleash a regressive culture change. For decades, we have made concerted efforts to deter people from taking their own life; this was brilliantly documented last week by the noble Baroness, Lady May, and the noble Lord, Lord Jackson.
Now, I pause. Any of us who have known family or friends who have committed suicide know that it is gut-wrenchingly tragic; it brings an especially visceral, raw grief. This is compounded by guilt as loved ones endlessly soul-search, totally unfairly blaming themselves: “What more could we have done?” This is why, if we see someone about to jump from a bridge, even if they give us 100 objective reasons why their life is not worth living or even if they have only a few months to live, we do not just shrug and walk on—we cling on to them and plead, “Don’t do it. Don’t jump”. All this reflects our deep humanistic intuition that, when a person acts to end their life, it should be resisted with all the energy society can muster. What happens culturally, though, when the state shouts, “Jump”, or agrees with those who say that ending their life is a compassionate choice?
I worry especially about what message this sends to the young, who are already often nihilistic and prone to anxiety, self-harm and mental health problems. When we debated the censorious Online Safety Bill, those of us who raised its negative impact on free speech were metaphorically slapped down and hectored. The one indisputable reason for that law was to close down suicide sites—something echoed by the Prime Minister only yesterday. We had to protect the young from malign online suicide influencers, but I worry that this Bill is the legislative embodiment of a suicide influencer. What do we think will happen when we tell newly franchised teens that, in some instances, taking your own life equates to dying in dignity? Saying that it will be restricted to those with a terminal illness just will not wash with a generation immersed in the language of rights and entitlements: “Why not assist me when I am suffering so much? Why am I being discriminated against?”
That brings me to my final point. We have heard some fine speeches from supporters of the Bill, stressing the importance of autonomy and giving people control of their life. I usually champion such sentiments in a political sense, but not when they are used to justify the state having a role in ending human life—forgive my squeamishness. For those who state passionately, “My body, my life, my choice”, why back a Bill that limits that choice to the terminally ill? Surely logically that right should apply to anyone who wants to kill themselves. No doubt this logic will lead to demands to expand the law—God help us once human rights lawyers get involved. As I say, we have a weighty responsibility to ensure that such nightmarish unintended consequences do not become a reality.