Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Twenty-second sitting) Debate

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Department: Ministry of Justice
“the Bill is entirely silent as to how the panel is to deal with the kind of issue exemplified by the Canadian case…where the patient’s partner intervened and obtained an interim injunction because of concerns about what was happening. What if the patient’s partner and relatives, excluded from participation in the panel process, discover, only after the panel has granted a certificate…facts of the kind which…prompted an eleventh-hour intervention by the Canadian judge? What are they to do? They cannot appeal. Can they somehow apply to the panel but which is now probably functus officio? Or can they apply to the Family Division and pray in aid the inherent jurisdiction? Or do they apply to the Administrative Court by way of judicial review? Who knows, and the Bill does not tell us.”
Tom Gordon Portrait Tom Gordon (Harrogate and Knaresborough) (LD)
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The hon. Lady has highlighted a few different legal cases from around the world; is she aware of the case currently going on in Spain, where a family member is challenging his daughter’s wish to have an assisted death? That challenge has been funded by religious groups—Christian groups—and is not actually going through the parent. He had the option and ability to raise the case, and it has then been funded and hijacked by outside groups. How would the hon. Lady see her amendment as helping to protect against that sort of thing?

Rebecca Paul Portrait Rebecca Paul
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This is a really important opportunity to share all these examples. I have to be honest that I am not sure I see the relevance of how a case is funded, and I cannot speak on that person’s behalf. I am going to talk about some of the inequalities that come from this, because there will be people—we will come to this when we discuss judicial review—who will rely on legal aid to challenge a decision. If we do not get this right, we are in danger of creating a situation in which poor families cannot appeal and rich families can. That could give rise to the less than ideal situation the hon. Gentleman has raised. If we get this right and make sure that an appeals process is available on an equal basis to everyone in the country, that will prevent the kind of situation the hon. Gentleman has raised. I thank him for that, because he has helped to support the case for my amendment.