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A controversial bill which would give some terminally ill adults the right to end their lives is facing a crunch vote in the Commons today.
The Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill, more commonly known as the assisted dying bill, will be back for its third reading, which is the first time MPs will vote on the overall piece of legislation since the yes vote in November. That vote, during the bill's second reading, saw MPs vote 330 to 275 to approve the bill - a relatively narrow majority which means every vote will count later.
If the new amendments are voted through, the bill to give some terminally ill adults the right to end their lives will get closer to becoming law as it will go through to the next stage in the House of Lords. Speaking at a news conference on Thursday, Labour MP Kim Leadbeater, who introduced the assisted dying bill in October last year, said she felt confident the vote will be successful.
She said: "There might be some small movement in the middle, some people might change their mind or will change their mind the other way. "But fundamentally, I do not anticipate that that majority would be heavily eroded." Ms Leadbeater said if MPs fail to vote the legislation through, "it could be another decade before this issue is brought back to parliament".
She added: "It works and it is safe, and it provides dignity to terminally ill people. "This is not an either or when it comes to palliative care or assisted dying.
It is about choice for people." But on the eve of the vote, four Labour MPs confirmed they were switching their vote from yes to no as they branded the bill "drastically weakened.