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The next debate on the assisted dying bill has been postponed to allow MPs more time to consider their positions following controversy over amendments.
Kim Leadbeater, the MP who introduced the bill, has sent letters to all 650 MPs saying the next debate will now take place on 16 May, instead of 25 April. She said she had listened to MPs "on all sides of the issue" who have said they would welcome more time to consider amendments made to the bill through a scrutiny committee of 23 cross-party MPs from both sides of the debate.
The new date is now after the local elections on 1 May. Politics latest: Trump tariffs 'very challenging', Starmer says Ms Leadbeater recently said 150 amendments have been adopted to the bill, which aims to allow terminally ill people to end their lives "on their own terms".
One of the biggest and most controversial amendments has seen the requirement for a High Court judge's involvement scrapped and replaced with a voluntary assisted dying commissioner. It will comprise of a judge or former judge to oversee assisted dying cases, along with expert panels featuring a senior legal figure, a psychiatrist and a social worker.
Ms Leadbeater also announced an impact assessment of the revised bill will now not be published this week, and she wants MPs to have time to look at it before the next stage (the report stage), when all MPs consider what has been done at the committee stage. She said the delay of three weeks "is now sensible.