New poll suggests public back peers in voting down assisted dying bill
Members of the House of Lords are set to ignore warnings and push to attempt to kill off Kim Leadbeater’s assisted dying bill.Peers opposed to the controversial legislation which narrowly passed in the Commons have been emboldened by a new poll which suggests that 70 per cent think they have the right to vote it down.The move comes despite the Bill’s sponsor in the Lords, Labour peer Lord Falconer, warning it would be wrong for the unelected upper chamber to overrule the will of the democratically elected chamber.In an interview with the BBC, Lord Falconer was asked whether the role of the Lords was to “ultimately uphold something that the directly elected members of the Commons have decided to go ahead with”. He replied “That’s correct”.Kim Leadbeater introduced the assisted dying Bill to the House of Commons (Jonathan Brady/PA) More
