Blue Labor Party leader Dan Carden is turning to vote against the death bill with help With the help of death
The leader of the Blue Labor Group said that he will vote against the death bill with the help of-one of the most prominent transformers-as both sides vote their final calls to deputies before the crisis voted on Friday.
This comes at a time when activists and bereaved relatives joined the workers’ MP Kim Ledbter before the third reading of the draft law, to urge Parliament to support reforms, saying that it would be at least a decade of time to change the law.
The draft law had helped death for mentally specialized adults in the last months of their lives.
Dan Carden, who previously declined, said he was one of the basic violations that led him to vote against the bill. He said: “The legalization of suicide with the help of the normalization of the choice of death for life, care, respect and love.” “I rely on my family experience, and I take care of my father who died of lung cancer three years ago.
“I am really afraid that the legislation will take us in the wrong direction. Family values, social ties, responsibilities, time and society will decrease, with isolation, offspring and individual victory again.”
“For the people who live with the reality of the hard-line public services, especially since the end of the ending life, poverty, poverty, and broken societies are a fact of facts,” added the representative of Liverpool Walton, whose group seeks to promote the province culturally-or what it says are blue-collars within the party.
At a press conference on Thursday morning, deputies who support the draft law said that the failure to pass legislation can condemn thousands of people with medical diseases and their families to years of shock, confidentiality and fear of prosecution.
“Hours and hours have passed, and colleagues have been this bill since November,” Leadbeater said on Thursday. “If we do not pass this law tomorrow, this may be another contract before this issue to Parliament. At that time, how many stories [of suffering] Will we hear? “
About 15 deputies who supported the bill or refrained from reading it said that they are likely to vote against it. In November, deputies supported the principle of death with the help of England and Wales by 55. If his third reading passes on Friday, he will go to the House of Lords.
Kiir Starmer indicated that he will continue to support the bill, saying that his position on death with the help of “long -term and well -known”. But former Prime Minister of the Labor Party, Gordon Brown described the Leadbeater Bill as mainly defective and urged deputies to reject it.
In the office of the conservative deputy and former Minister Andrew Mitchell on Thursday, activists participated in the initial certificate that the current law would fail. Anil Douglas narrated the story of his father, Ian, who died in suicide after seeking opium on the dark network.
Douglas said he was suffering from secondary progressive sclerosis, and he was no longer able to face pain. “On the night he died, I found him still alive. He cracked and called GP, had a legal commitment to contact an ambulance, and the paramedics soon arrived.”
They tried to revive his father. “Two days later, the police investigations were suspended on our heads for more than six months. Nothing can promise you to experience sadness in the actual time, this type of shock.”
Pamela Fisher, an England church, said a preacher with peripheral breast cancer, that she supported the bill not despite her Christian faith, but because of this. She said, “I don’t want to die now, but I am in a horror of the possibility of the last weeks.” “Even the best careful care has limits.”
Fisher rejected religious objections to help in death as a Christian value. She said: “My God is not God harsh and controls God.” “My God, the god of love that calls us to work with to create more sympathy conditions [in] community. Religious arguments against the draft law sometimes ignore the concept of free will. “
The Catholic Westminster Archbishop, Cardinal Vincent Nichols – who opposes auxiliary death – has argued that human suffering is “a fundamental part of our human journey, a journey adopted by God’s eternal word, Christ Jesus himself.”