Scottish lawmakers reject bill to let terminally ill people end their
lives
[March 18, 2026]
By JILL LAWLESS
LONDON (AP) — Lawmakers in the Scottish Parliament on Tuesday rejected
legislation that would have made Scotland the first part of the United
Kingdom to allow terminally ill adults to end their lives.
Members of the Edinburgh-based legislature voted 69 to 57 against a bill
that would have let people in Scotland with six months or less to live
seek help to end their life. There was one abstention.
It came after an emotional debate that lasted around three hours and saw
lawmakers tear up and applaud as they took turns to express their views
on the issue.
They had been given a free vote on the assisted dying bill, which meant
they could decide according to their consciences, rather than along
party lines.
Scotland is part of the U.K. — alongside England, Wales and Northern
Ireland — and has a semi-autonomous government that has authority over
many areas of policy, including health.
Liberal Democrat lawmaker Liam McArthur, who drew up the Scottish bill,
had urged colleagues to back it.
“If you believe that dying people should not have to suffer against
their will and you have heard, like I have, of the many instances where
they have been simply failed by the lack of compassion and safety in our
current law, you now have to back this bill,” he said. “It is time to
look terminally ill Scots in the eye and make this change.”
But opponents of assisted dying argued that vulnerable, elderly, ill and
depressed people could be pressured to end their lives so they’re not a
burden on others.
Deputy First Minister Kate Forbes of the governing Scottish National
Party said she would vote against the bill. Some medical organizations,
including the Royal College of Psychiatrists and the Royal
Pharmaceutical Society, are also opposed.
“Doctors, psychiatrists, pharmacists and palliative care specialists —
the people who would be tasked with implementing this — are asking us
not to do it,” Forbes said. “They think this bill is unsafe.”

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Liberal Democrat lawmaker Liam McArthur joins a rally of supporters
ahead of MSPs debating his Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults
(Scotland) Bill, in the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh, Scotland,
Tuesday, March 17, 2026. (Neil Pooran/PA via AP)
 Some also expressed concerns over
how such legislation could impact disabled people, putting them at
further risk. Lawmaker Pam Duncan-Glancy insisted that “disabled
people don't have real choices in life,” adding that it was
“inconceivable to suggest the introduction of assisted dying is
about choice.”
The defeat is a setback for efforts by supporters of assisted dying
to change Britain’s laws. A similar bill that would legalize
assisted dying in England and Wales is currently bogged down in the
British Parliament in London.
The House of Commons approved The Terminally Ill Adults (End of
Life) Bill in June, but it has been held up by more than 1,000
amendments in the House of Lords. Supporters of the bill say that is
a stalling tactic by opponents. Some members of the chamber,
however, say they are providing necessary scrutiny to strengthen the
legislation.
It looks likely that the bill will not be passed by both houses of
Parliament before the end of the current parliamentary session,
expected in May. If that happens the bill will die and any new
attempt to legalize assisted dying would have to start from scratch.
The islands of Jersey and the Isle of Man, which are British Crown
possessions but not part of the U.K., have passed similar laws that
are waiting for the formality of approval by King Charles III. Both
small islands are self-governing but reliant on the U.K. for defense
and some foreign affairs.
Assisted suicide — where patients take a lethal drink prescribed by
a doctor — is legal in countries including Australia, Belgium,
Canada, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Portugal, Spain,
Switzerland and parts of the U.S., with regulations on qualifying
criteria varying by jurisdiction.
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