At the General Election the strongly anti-Brexit LAB MP, Heidi Alexander, came out with a share of 67.9% and a margin of 44.8% over the second place Conservatives in Lewisham East. The question, on which Ladbrokes have a market, is how the party will do on votes in the by-election two weeks on Thursday.
Comments
A mistake to assume that it is only the religious lobby which is against this.
There is nothing stopping anyone taking their own life. What is at issue is when a person is unable to do so and needs someone else to put an end to their life.
In those circumstances it is not just about the rights of the person suffering but about the obligations that a society would be placing on others to, let's be blunt, kill someone. Now people, including doctors, have been "mercy" killing for years and a very few people have ever been charged let alone convicted. Given the recent CPS guidelines I would be surprised if this were to change.
But once you create a right to be killed by others, you create an obligation on a third party, you have to define the circumstances in which that obligation can be carried out & when it can't, you have to deal with actual & potential conflicts of interest - should someone who benefits financially from the death of the person concerned ever be involved in the decision, for instance?, you have to deal with those who make money out of such a business & you have to deal with subtle & not so subtle pressure on those who are suffering to take the easy way out / save others' money. These are not easy questions & there are good reasons why all civilised societies have had a taboo about the deliberate taking of a life, particularly of the most vulnerable.
So it trivialises the issue to turn it into some priest stopping someone ending their own life & that's all there is to it.
I don't know what the answer is. I have had people in my own family suffer in such a way. If I were to end up in such a position I would refuse to have pointless medical interventions & simply seek palliative care & if that meant that strong drugs hastened my end so much the better. Living wills may be one answer.
This is a difficult & delicate topic. Those who for all sorts of compassionate reasons think that assisted dying should be made legal need to accept that it crosses a boundary which can lead to all sorts of unforeseen consequences, some of which will not be desirable & which may make matters worse for some. A compassionate society is one which looks properly after the weakest & most vulnerable, not one which places cost above other factors and sees only the strong and sentient as worthy. We do not need to look far into our own history to know what happens when such views take hold.
I am a great supporter of the hospice movement & have raised money for it. It is one charitable endeavour which needs far more support than it gets.
I still think that future societies will be appalled that we ever legalised abortion.
https://twitter.com/DegenRolf/status/1001442853002805251
It's very hard to see a close result, let alone a by-election upset, on these numbers.
Let's suppose the Labour vote goes down by 20%. So what? Still an ultra safe seat.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2550282/Wife-scandal-hit-NHS-chief-overpaid-hospital-staff-1-3m-634-overpayments-handed-Birmingham-Childrens-Hospital.html
Wherever you draw the line on assisted dying, there will always be hard cases on the other side of it. So, there will always be pressure to water down the limitations, until you reach the position of Belgium, where euthanasia is available for children.
https://www.bloomberg.com/quote/GBTPGR10:IND
For the record I'm for assisted dying but have reservations on how it will pan out in practice.
There is a difference between saying that the state will not (generally) prosecute someone who helps a person who wants to die to do so and creating a legal right for someone to get a doctor or other health professional to end their life. Rights and obligations go together.
Every other constituency around this point is either
a) A Lib Dem/Tory marginal (+ Brighton)
b) A place where Labour is very weak (Often coincides with A)
c) A constituency with a large Jewish population (Well Finchley)
d) Clegg's Tories heading home to hand Labour victory in Sheffield Hallam.
The closest normal Lab/Con constituency is Battersea
https://twitter.com/Pulpstar/status/1001458627985670144
https://twitter.com/Pulpstar/status/1001460989244727296
I may consider that in principle there are circumstances in which I would assist someone to end their own life, but disagree with the particular decision that I'm being asked to assist with.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5782667/EDL-founder-Tommy-Robinson-jailed-13-months.html
That said, I sympathise with the Italian President's logic: this shouldn't be done by stealth. Though I think he is probably making a political mistake.
If they can't do that feat in the wake of the recent Tommy Robinson jailing then I guess UKIP is destined to live on as the zombie far right party of choice.
The fact he needs to make this comment tells us all we need to know about the mindset in Brussels.
https://twitter.com/DegenRolf/status/1001456056864718848
No-one is talking about someone having a legal right to help end their life and demanding it of their doctor or friend. "You must kill me or you will be prosecuted". Ridiculous!
We are talking about someone having the legal right to help someone else end their life (subject to myriad safeguards). There is no obligation. Rights and obligations do not always go together. That is a clique that is often trotted out and it is rubbish.
Today there are hundreds of thousands of young men in France who - like Mr Gassama - arrived after a long and dangerous journey, have no proper papers and survive (just about) by working in the black economy.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-44291810
that'll end well
If her supporters get it fixed into her head that she resigns = abortion is legalised they'll be even more determined not to let her quit.
He should know as he also knows how the EU feels.
Wait, it's already here.
The NI electorate will of course have their say via their future choice of representatives.
Maybe we should have started with a smaller referendum, say on the Lisbon Treaty rather than going the whole hog with a forced in/out of the EU question ?
It's perfectly possible to be pro-abortion rights, yet want any change to be done in the right way, and May should make this clear.
Beyond such cases I have not seen people saying that they want to go round generally helping others to end their lives. In the UK anyway.
There is Dignitas, of course. Do they make a profit from what they do?
8 referendums on various aspects of Europe.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/switzerland/7851615/Dignitas-founder-is-millionaire.html
https://twitter.com/LucidTalk/status/1000433763611041792?s=19
O/T I see Oerttinger’s petrol on the fire comments are being widely reported on Italian sites. What a plonker. He’s just written 5 Star’s slogan for the (presumed) upcoming elections. All they need is a bus.
http://www.dignitas.ch/?lang=en
"I have not seen people saying that they want to go round generally helping others to end their lives". Nor have I. They would be a bit sinister I think.
The usual case is someone with a terminal illness living in pain who wants to die and needs help to die but their relative or doctor feels threatened with prosecution if they help. There is a case reported just a few hours ago on the bbc website.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-north-west-wales-44285111
The danger is if it becomes generally accepted that there will be no prosecutions yet there is no legal provision of the necessary safeguards. We may already be at that stage.
Let N.I. vote.
Since NI has a protestant minority sub 35 this obviously will impact one community more than the other. No doubt the SNP will give it a zany topical name like No More Catholics.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/blog/live/2018/may/29/failing-to-prepare-for-no-deal-brexit-would-be-incompetent-and-weak-says-rees-mogg-politics-live
(I did try to warn y'all...)
The current process is by order-in-council, I am sure that process can be changed by primary legislation, but at what cost.
not biting
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-38301428
This is the further problem for May, far more than some posturing by Labour and Sinn Fein over abortion. She can't even put pressure on Foster to go as she relies on her for a majority, but at the same time Stormont won't be reconvened while she might be in a position of power.
I am 90% sure a majority Tory government would have had devolution back up and running by now.