Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill Debate

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Department: Ministry of Justice

Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

Lord Beith Excerpts
Friday 27th February 2026

(1 day, 9 hours ago)

Lords Chamber
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Baroness Cass Portrait Baroness Cass (CB)
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My Lords, I will be brief, because I believe that my Amendment 122 and the consequential amendments that follow it address a very straightforward and practical issue—saying that could be the kiss of death, but never mind. It is absolutely self-evident that, if this Bill passes into law, the monitoring of its implementation will be absolutely crucial.

There are several aspects of implementation that we will need to follow closely. The first is any evidence of the concerns that have been widely expressed in this House of coercion, particularly to take account of differentials in the socioeconomic circumstances of those seeking assisted deaths. Secondly, we need to be aware of postcode lotteries in implementation and particular challenges in staffing and delivery in certain localities. Thirdly, we need to be aware of creep, as has occurred in other jurisdictions.

In a later amendment, I have proposed that voluntary assisted dying services should be commissioned by the specialised commissioning team currently located in NHS England. This team commissions highly specialist small volume services, and the assisted dying services would fall within this definition. The advantage of this approach is that there would be a national service spec, nationally defined workforce requirements and quality standards, and monitoring of the contract by the national team.

In late January, the noble and learned Lord, Lord Falconer, notified us of his planned amendments to ensure that the service will be regulated by NHSE or the CQC, or both. However, it is not yet clear how that might work in practice. This leaves us with the currently proposed arrangements in Clause 4, in which the voluntary assisted dying commissioner has a dual role. He or she is required to take on much of the operational delivery of the process and, at the same time, monitor the operation of the Act and report on it to national authorities. I submit that it is not appropriate for the commissioner to be both poacher and gamekeeper and to mark their own homework, because they will be mixing their roles as shamelessly as I have just mixed my metaphors.

My amendments therefore seek to separate the role of the commissioner, to make it much more like that of the Children’s Commissioner, who is fully independent from the agencies she has oversight of, with a director to undertake the delivery aspects of the work. These may or may not be the finally agreed terms or mechanisms, but I think the intent is clear, and I leave it open to both the noble and learned Lord the sponsor and other noble Lords to discuss other ways in which this separation of roles might be achieved.

My only other point is to draw attention to my Amendment 131, which makes it clear that, although the commissioner is supposed to be an individual who has held high judicial office, neither the commissioner nor the director is discharging a judicial function in undertaking their responsibilities under this Act. On this point, I am just a warm-up for the noble Lord, Lord Weir of Ballyholme, who will doubtless speak further to his Amendment 129 on this aspect. I beg to move.

Lord Beith Portrait Lord Beith (LD)
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I will speak briefly to my amendment in this group because it is my duty shortly to chair the Committee. To broaden the debate that the noble Baroness, Lady Cass, introduced, I simply say that there is clearly a need to establish that this post can have confidence and a degree of consensus around it. I am not sure that that has been achieved by what has been proposed so far.

My amendment simply brings in the procedure used in the Commons for most regulatory posts: they are the subject of some sort of hearing process by the relevant Select Committee. That system was developed in the years when I was in the Commons, and as chair of the Justice Committee I operated it several times. It works reasonably well. In rare cases, the Treasury Committee, for example, has a veto on the appointment, as this amendment suggests, but it is a means of trying to ensure that the right questions are asked at the right time when appointments are made. Surely, after recent weeks, we have learned the lesson that, if you do not have proper scrutiny of appointments and a system in which the right questions are asked, things can go very badly wrong. We certainly do not want them to go badly wrong in this area. That is sufficient to explain what my amendment is about.

Lord Garnier Portrait Lord Garnier (Con)
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My Lords, I am grateful that the noble Lord was able to introduce his remarks before he has to go and perform his functions as chairman of the Committee. I have only a few things to say, and my amendment is discrete, in the sense that it does not really affect much of the rest of the Bill. It can be taken quite briefly, and I hope that the noble and learned Lord, Lord Falconer, will be able to agree to it, not least because it bolsters the job that he once held.

With respect, I disagree with only one point that the noble Baroness, Lady Cass, made. The function of the commissioner is not simply administrative; there is a judicial element to their work, which is found in Clause 4(4)(d). One of the principal functions of the commissioner is

“determining applications for reconsideration of panel decisions under section 18”.

That said, I fully accept that it is a mixed-function job: it is partly administrative and partly judicial—but then so are quite a lot of senior judicial jobs. The Lord Chief Justice and the Master of the Rolls all have heavy administrative burdens as well as having to perform a judicial function, and no one would suggest, I venture to say, that those people should be appointed directly by the Prime Minister.

It is more constitutionally appropriate for the voluntary assisted dying commissioner to be appointed, as so many other judicial and quasi-judicial posts are, by the sovereign on the recommendation of the Lord Chancellor. I appreciate that the office of the Lord Chancellor has changed a lot since the 2005 Act—more’s the pity, in my view, but there we are. That was a long time ago. When I become Prime Minister, of course, I shall have it changed.

There is a nice distinction to be drawn with the appointments made in the way that I suggest. If my amendment is accepted by the Committee or by the House as a whole, it will obviously have a knock-on effect on the appointment of the deputy commissioner under paragraph 3(1) of Schedule 1—but let us not delay ourselves with that. All I am saying is that it is more appropriate for this particular function to be appointed by the sovereign on the advice of the Lord Chancellor, as so many similar posts are.

A Minister responding for the Government in the other place said that the investigatory powers commissioner is appointed by the Prime Minister, and he, like the assisted dying commissioner, has to be a sitting or retired member of the senior judiciary. But that is a false point. The distinction between this job and the investigatory powers commissioner is that the investigatory powers commissioner deals with matters of national security—which are essentially a matter for the Prime Minister—whereas this assisted dying commissioner will deal not with matters of national security, foreign policy or anything of that nature but simply with the workings of this Bill, or this Act as it may yet become.

This a very short and simple point that I am sure the noble and learned Lord can easily agree with, because it does not damage the Bill. It is simply a technical adjustment of the route to appointment, and I urge the Committee to support it.