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TUE · 2026-06-16 · 17:00 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0616-84982
News/Labour MP bringing back assisted dying bill urges House of L…
NSR-2026-0616-84982News Report·EN·Legal & Judicial

Labour MP bringing back assisted dying bill urges House of Lords to finish its job

Labour MP Lauren Edwards is reintroducing the assisted dying bill to the House of Commons after it failed to pass the House of Lords due to extensive amendments. Edwards stated she will not be deterred by concerns about Labour divisions, emphasizing her duty to constituents and the country, and criticizing the bill's previous halting as "anti-democratic." The bill, co-sponsored by MPs Marie Tidball and Alex Davies-Jones, will have its first reading on Wednesday and a second reading in early September.

Jessica Elgot Deputy political editorThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-06-16 · 17:00 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 4 min
Labour MP bringing back assisted dying bill urges House of Lords to finish its job
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
4min
Word count
908words
Sources cited
3cited
Entities identified
9entities
Quality score
100%
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Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Labour MP Lauren Edwards is reintroducing the assisted dying bill to the House of Commons after it failed to pass the House of Lords due to extensive amendments. Edwards stated she will not be deterred by concerns about Labour divisions, emphasizing her duty to constituents and the country, and criticizing the bill's previous halting as "anti-democratic." The bill, co-sponsored by MPs Marie Tidball and Alex Davies-Jones, will have its first reading on Wednesday and a second reading in early September. Edwards hopes the Lords will scrutinize and improve the bill rather than block it, but indicated the Parliament Act could be used if filibustering occurs. She also addressed past controversial social media comments, expressing regret and asking to be judged on her overall work.

Confidence 0.90Sources 3Claims 5Entities 9
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Legal & Judicial
Political Strategy
Tone
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AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.60 / 1.00
Mixed
LowHigh
Sources cited
3
Well sourced
FewMany
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Key claims

5 extracted
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Edwards intends to reassure MPs that the Parliament Act will not be used unless filibuster tactics are employed in the Lords.

quoteLauren Edwards
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The bill will have its first reading in the Commons on Wednesday and a second-reading debate in early September.

factual
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Edwards stated her motivation is the "anti-democratic" halt of the bill in the Lords.

quoteLauren Edwards
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The bill was blocked from a vote in the House of Lords due to over 1,000 amendments.

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Labour MP Lauren Edwards is bringing back the assisted dying bill to the Commons.

factualLauren Edwards
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Full report

4 min read · 908 words
The Labour MP Lauren Edwards who will bring the assisted dying bill back to the Commons has said she will not be dissuaded by concerns about Labour divisions, saying MPs should allow the House of Lords to finish its work on the bill after it was blocked from a vote by peers.It also can be revealed that the Labour MP and disability rights campaigner Marie Tidball is to co-sponsor the bill, alongside the former minister Alex Davies- Jones.Lauren Edwards, the MP for Rochester and Strood, said she was motivated primarily by the “anti-democratic” way the terminally ill adults bill had been halted in the Lords after being passed by the Commons.“I’m a proud Labour MP, I’ve got a huge trade union background, I have always been Labour, I will die Labour, but I can’t be in a position of saying: ‘I’m not going to do this because it might be a little bit tricky for the parliamentary Labour Party,’” Edwards said, in a pointed address to critics who have expressed concern about the division at a time of great party turmoil.“My role as a member of parliament is to do what I think is right for my constituents and what I think is right for the country, and that’s why I’m pursuing this.”The bill ran out of time to pass the upper house, after more than 1,000 amendments were submitted by opponents who say the bill is flawed.Edwards told the Guardian she had disengaged from all social media shortly after becoming an MP and would not be swayed by opposition campaigners who have mobilised significantly online.The backbench MP, who came second in the private member’s bill ballot, will present the bill for a first reading in the Commons on Wednesday and it will return for the second-reading debate in early September.The return of the bill could give supporters a chance to use the Parliament Act to potentially bypass the Lords if it were to be blocked for a second time – but to do so it must pass the Commons again unamended.Edwards said she would seek to reassure MPs that she did not intend to use the Parliament Act unless there were attempts to block the bill in the Lords using filibuster tactics.“I want to reintroduce it primarily so that we can allow that legislative process to continue and send it back as soon as we can to the House of Lords, so that people can continue to have faith in our democratic system,” she said. “Faith in politics and democracy at the moment is not particularly strong. It’s a major driving factor, as well as my principled support for the bill.”Edwards, who took several weeks to announce she would use her private member’s bill to return the subject to the Commons, said she had felt a duty to do so from the moment the ballot was announced. “There was definitely a feeling of overwhelming responsibility. But I really see it as an interrupted conversation that we’ve been having as legislators that really needs to come to a conclusion.”She said she believed the Lords could still amend the legislation, as long as it then went to a vote and returned to the Commons. MPs will not be able to amend the bill before it goes to the Lords, or else the Parliament Act cannot apply. But Edwards said MPs would be able to suggest suitable amendments to be made in the Lords and that she hoped peers would seek to scrutinise and improve rather than block the bill.Edwards has faced some criticism from disability groups, many of whom are opposed to the bill, and has apologised for past social media comments in which she referred to “retards”.She said had been prepared for the comments from 2009, which resurfaced after her election in 2024, to be part of the criticism of her and she was deeply regretful.“It’s right that they bring it up and I fully expected it to be brought up,” she said. “Unfortunately, that language was very prevalent. But no one was more horrified than me when I saw that, within a few months of being elected. I can just only apologise again and say that it certainly doesn’t reflect any broader attitudes or feelings that I have towards disabled people.”Edwards said she had been supportive of disability rights campaigns in her constituency and opposed welfare changes that would have affected personal independence payments.“I signed that reasoned amendment because I was so concerned that it would have a really detrimental impact on the lives of disabled people who need Pip to be able to live their lives with dignity,” she said. “I guess I would ask people to judge me on all of my behaviours and all of the work I do.”The bill will have new co-sponsors for its return to the Commons but those will include its original sponsor – the Labour MP Kim Leadbeater.Others include the Conservative MP Peter Bedford, which will come as a blow to opponents who had previously claimed Bedford was among those wavering on the bill. Andrew George, the Liberal Democrat MP, will also co-sponsor it with Davies-Jones and Tidball.Several other MPs have also signed up to co-sponsor including those on the previous bill’s scrutiny committee, the Conservative Kit Malthouse, the Labour MPs Dr Peter Prinsley and Dr Simon Opher, as well as the Lib Dem MP Josh Babarinde, the Green MP Sian Berry and the Plaid Cymru MP Liz Saville-Roberts.
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Entities

9 identified
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Keywords & salience

8 terms
assisted dying bill
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house of lords
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labour mp
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parliamentary process
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democratic system
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terminally ill adults
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disability rights
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parliament act
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Topic connections

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