Protests planned as Scottish parliament holds free vote on assisted dying bill

A picture


Opponents of proposals to legalise assisted dying in Scotland have warned it is ethically wrong to allow the state to help someone take their own life,Campaigners against assisted dying, including the Silent Witness actor Liz Carr, are staging demonstrations outside the Scottish parliament on Tuesday, hours before MSPs hold a free vote on new legalisation proposals,Pam Duncan-Glancy, Scottish Labour education spokesperson and one of Holyrood’s few disabled MSPs, said it was a mistake to see this issue as one about choice and personal autonomy,It had far-reaching consequences, she added,She opposed the bill because “we are legislating for the state to assist someone to take their own life, and in almost every other circumstance we want the state to legislate for people to live and live well”.

That crossed a very significant ethical line, she added.“No one wants to be in pain; I have lived with chronic pain for 41 years, but the answer should be to ensure that as much palliative care should be in place as possible.”Tuesday’s stage one vote will allow the bill to be scrutinised in detail and amended by a committee of MSPs, but some prominent politicians have spoken out against it, including all three of Scotland’s most recent first ministers – John Swinney, Humza Yousaf and Nicola Sturgeon.The bill, first proposed by the Scottish Liberal Democrat MSP Liam McArthur in 2021, allows someone to request assisted dying if two doctors confirm they have an advanced and progressive terminal illness.The person must have the mental capacity at the time of death to understand their decision, and the ability to carry out the procedure to end their life without someone’s help.

McArthur’s bill does not include a time limit; a parallel bill being considered for England and Wales requires doctors to confirm the patient is likely to die in six months or less.In a post on Instagram on Monday, Sturgeon said she feared the bill’s provisions against coercion could not prevent “internal coercion” where an ill person felt “others might be better off” if they were not there, she said.“It would risk a situation in which a right to die might become, in the minds of some people, a perceived duty to die.”Fraser Sutherland, the chief executive of the Humanist Society of Scotland, who plans to speak in favour of the bill outside Holyrood on Tuesday, said the “vast majority” of Scottish voters supported its measures and urged MSPs to be “bold, brave, and compassionate”.“This bill is about compassion, dignity and the fundamental right to choose,” he said.

“Right now, too many Scots with terminal illnesses are forced to suffer or die abroad simply because the law denies them control over their final moments.That is not humane and it must change.“Assisted dying is not a fringe idea, it is mainstream.”McArthur, who also sits as one of Holyrood’s deputy presiding officers, said the current system left patients and their families unjustifiably traumatised and meant those suffering “took matters into their own hands”, with the wealthy able to afford assisted dying in Switzerland.“Scotland cannot put off this conversation.

And parliament cannot continue to leave this issue in the ‘too difficult’ box,” he said.“It must, at the very least, allow time for amendments to be considered to see if a bill can be agreed that commands majority support and public confidence.”
businessSee all
A picture

US monthly inflation rate slows amid Trump tariffs

The pace of inflation slowed in April, the month that Donald Trump announced his sweeping “liberation day” tariffs on the US’s largest trading partners.The annual inflation rate was 2.3% in April, down from an annual rate of 2.4% March, according to a new inflation report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).Core inflation, which excludes volatile energy and food prices, hit an annual rate of 2

A picture

Thames Water finances were ‘hair raising’, chair tells MPs

The chair of Thames Water has admitted its finances were “hair raising”, as he said bosses were in line for “substantial” bonuses linked to an emergency £3bn loan.The UK’s biggest water company came within just five weeks of running out of money, Adrian Montague told MPs on Tuesday.“Thames in the last year has come very close to running out of money entirely,” he said. He added there were times where it only had weeks’ worth of cash left. “Running a £20bn corporation on five weeks’ liquidity, honestly, it’s hair raising

A picture

Gold fever makes a comeback as buyers and bankers recoil from uncertainty

New York’s famous Diamond District was teeming last week. But the subject on many minds in the city’s jewelry district was not diamonds but gold.Covid, Ukraine and now Donald Trump’s trade wars have all sparked new interest in gold – which can trace its history as a currency back to 600BC.On West 47th Street, gold trader Becky Algozhoeva at GT Findings was showing coins and ingots stamped with the Roman goddess Fortuna, also known as “Lady Fortuna”, to customers.“Regular people are thinking gold is the key

A picture

Nissan to shut seven factories, cutting 20,000 jobs worldwide

Nissan is to close seven factories with the loss of 20,000 jobs around the world, after a tumultuous year for the Japanese carmaker.As it slims down production, Nissan will make a further 11,000 job cuts, after 9,000 job losses announced in November, collectively reducing its workforce by 15%. The decision will affect staff and contractor jobs across manufacturing, sales and administration, as well as research and development.Nissan did not say which factories were due to shut. However, its factory at Sunderland in north-east England, the carmaker’s only factory in Europe and where it employs 6,000 people, is not thought to be a likely candidate for closure

A picture

Drug price cuts: what is Trump planning and what will it mean for big pharma?

Donald Trump has used his executive powers to order sweeping cuts to the price of prescription drugs in the US, in an effort to bring them in line with other developed countries.The plans, first announced in a social media post on Sunday, triggered a sharp fall in drugmakers’ share prices on Monday. However, these later reversed amid growing scepticism that the shake-up would be as severe as promised.His order directs the US health secretary, Robert Kennedy, to send price targets to the pharmaceutical industry and kick off a round of negotiations within 30 days to reduce prices from their current levels. The US currently pays by far the most for its medications

A picture

Reeves’s tax rises on employers start to bite as unemployment jumps

For the past few months, the true impact of Labour’s increases in labour costs has been clouded by a fog of contradictory data, but the latest jobs figures suggest that murkiness could be beginning to clear.Those who feared the rise in employers’ national insurance contributions (NICs) would lead to job losses are being proved right. The unemployment rate climbed by 0.2 percentage points to 4.5% between January and March – the highest level for nearly four years