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WED · 2026-05-20 · 16:59 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0520-77904
News/Former minister with terminal cancer urges MPs not to bring …
NSR-2026-0520-77904News Report·EN·Human Interest

Former minister with terminal cancer urges MPs not to bring back assisted dying bill

Former public health minister Ashley Dalton, who is undergoing lifelong treatment for terminal metastatic breast cancer, has urged MPs not to reintroduce the assisted dying bill in England and Wales. Dalton, a Labour MP, believes that while some rejected amendments could have strengthened the bill, it ultimately became a "pretty dangerous set of affairs." She expressed concern that the bill, which aims to legalize assisted death for those with a terminal illness, was too divisive and complicated, and could have unintended consequences for vulnerable individuals.

Jessica Elgot Deputy political editorThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-05-20 · 16:59 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 3 min
Former minister with terminal cancer urges MPs not to bring back assisted dying bill
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
3min
Word count
715words
Sources cited
2cited
Entities identified
10entities
Quality score
100%
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Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Former public health minister Ashley Dalton, who is undergoing lifelong treatment for terminal metastatic breast cancer, has urged MPs not to reintroduce the assisted dying bill in England and Wales. Dalton, a Labour MP, believes that while some rejected amendments could have strengthened the bill, it ultimately became a "pretty dangerous set of affairs." She expressed concern that the bill, which aims to legalize assisted death for those with a terminal illness, was too divisive and complicated, and could have unintended consequences for vulnerable individuals. Dalton also suggested that bringing back the bill as a private member's bill would be foolish given its contentious nature and the current political climate within the Labour party.

Confidence 0.90Sources 2Claims 5Entities 10
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Human Interest
Legal & Judicial
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AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.60 / 1.00
Mixed
LowHigh
Sources cited
2
Limited
FewMany
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Key claims

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Dalton believes the assisted dying bill, in its current form, was a 'pretty dangerous set of affairs' due to rejected amendments.

quoteAshley Dalton
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Ashley Dalton has incurable but treatable metastatic breast cancer that has spread throughout her body.

quoteAshley Dalton
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The ballot for a new round of private members’ bills will be drawn on Thursday morning.

factual
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The assisted dying bill would legalise an assisted death to those with a terminal illness with less than six months to live.

factual
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A former public health minister with terminal cancer has urged MPs not to bring back the assisted dying bill in England and Wales.

quoteAshley Dalton
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1.00
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Full report

3 min read · 715 words
A former public health minister facing terminal cancer has urged MPs not to bring back the assisted dying bill in England and Wales.The Labour MP Ashley Dalton revealed she would be on lifelong treatment for metastatic breast cancer, which has spread throughout her body – but said her parliamentary colleagues should not revive the bill, which would legalise an assisted death to those with a terminal illness.The ballot for a new round of private members’ bills will be drawn on Thursday morning. Backers of assisted dying hope to bring back the bill, which ran out of time to pass after it was talked out by the Lords in the last parliamentary session, despite passing the Commons.Supporters hope they can use the Parliament Act to bypass further blocks by the House of Lords, where the bill ran out of time for debate because opponents laid more than 1,000 amendments. Peers who opposed the bill said it was fundamentally flawed.Dalton, 53, had not previously made an intervention on the bill because she was serving as a government minister. She resigned from the role in March to focus on her cancer treatment, and so she could continue serving as a constituency MP for West Lancashire.“I’ve got incurable but treatable breast cancer,” she said. “Two years ago, I had some symptoms and they found a large tumour on my ovaries. And when they took it out and tested it, it was breast cancer which had spread.“I’ll be on treatment for ever. My breast cancer is what they call triple negative, which means it doesn’t respond to hormone treatment. I spent about 10 months on an oral chemotherapy and that recently stopped working. So I’ve just started on an intravenous chemotherapy, so I’ll be on that for as long as that works.”Dalton said she had found it hard to hear MPs speaking in the chamber about the bill and not be able to speak about her own feelings on having a terminal diagnosis. The bill, tabled by the Labour MP Kim Leadbeater, would legalise assisted dying for those with a terminal illness with less than six months to live.Ashley Dalton said the bill ‘has been so difficult, so divisive and so complicated’. Photograph: Sean Smith/The Guardian“I found that really frustrating, actually, because I hadn’t gone public with my diagnosis at that stage, but I was dealing with it. I’d had surgery. I knew that I had an incurable cancer,” she said. “I did find it difficult when people said: ‘I’ve got first-hand experience of this’ and then told a very secondhand experience.”Dalton said she had always been personally opposed to assisted dying but it had been more important to her to legislate properly, despite her own view. She said she was not “dogmatically against” assisted dying, but that by the time the bill had got to its third reading, she believed it was “a pretty dangerous set of affairs”.“A lot of amendments were rejected that I think could have made it a lot stronger,” she said. “I’m not saying I would definitely have supported it, but it certainly would have got me further down the road towards doing so.”She said she was relieved the bill had fallen in the Lords, because of the number of question marks that remained about how it could be applied.“I think it’d be really foolish to be honest, to bring back something as a private member’s bill that has been so difficult, so divisive and so complicated,” she said.“It is our responsibility of members of the Houses of Parliament to make good law. And that means detail, it means specifics. It means making sure that what we do doesn’t have unintended consequences that affect some of the most vulnerable people.”Dalton, who sat beside her former boss Wes Streeting as he gave his resignation speech in the Commons on Wednesday, said she feared the bill could put more pressure on an already deeply divided Labour Party.“The Labour Party [is] split down the middle – we’re not going to be able to unite on assisted dying. We’re looking at potentially a leadership challenge, we’re looking at having to really put in the hard yards to win back the trust of people in this country. Do we really want to spend political capital on opening up more division?”
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Entities

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Keywords & salience

9 terms
assisted dying bill
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terminal cancer
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parliamentary colleagues
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public health minister
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metastatic breast cancer
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private members’ bills
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chemotherapy
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parliament act
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house of lords
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