Skip to main content
Disabilities activists to protest against assisted dying Bill

DISABILITIES campaigners will protest against the “very real dangers” of the assisted dying Bill as the Commons votes on it, they announced yesterday.

Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) said that legalising assisted suicide would “remove, rather than give, choice.”

MPs will vote on the divisive issue for the first time in 19 years on September 11, when Wolverhampton South West MP Rob Morris’s Bill faces its second reading.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
Sophie Blake (centre) and Becky Scott (right) join supporters of the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life Bill), during a photocall at Parliament Square in London, June 8, 2026
Healthcare / 15 June 2026
15 June 2026
Campaigners protest outside Parliament in Westminster, London, ahead of a debate in the House of Commons on assisted dying, April 29, 2024
Opinion / 27 February 2026
27 February 2026

Evidence to peers from medical leaders, patient safety officials and the children’s commissioner has intensified fears that the Bill’s safeguards are inadequate, writes ADAM JAMES POLLOCK

Pro-assisted dying campaigners outside the Houses of Parliament, London, ahead of Assisted Dying Bill being debated in the House of Lords for the first time. Picture date: Friday September 12, 2025
Scotland / 4 November 2025
4 November 2025