TL;DR
The assisted dying bill in England and Wales is set to fail as it runs out of time for a final debate in the House of Lords. The legislation aimed to allow terminally ill adults to receive assistance in ending their lives under specific conditions.
Proposed legislation to introduce assisted dying in England and Wales is set to run out of time to become law when a final debate ends in the House of Lords on Friday.
In its current form, the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill would allow people over the age of 18, who are expected to die within six months, to be given help to end their own life, subject to certain safeguards.
A separate bill that would have legalised assisted dying in Scotland was rejected by the Scottish Parliament in March.
So how did we get here, and what might happen next?
The bill was introduced to Parliament by Labour MP Kim Leadbeater back in October 2024.
It is known as a private member's bill because it was put forward by a backbench MP rather than the government.
MPs spent many days debating the draft legislation in the House of Commons and first voted in favour of the principle of the bill in November last year, by a majority of 55.
A smaller committee of MPs from both sides of the debate then spent months considering more than 500 proposed changes.
Further debate and votes on amendments followed in the Commons before MPs voted by a majority of 23 in June for the bill to progress to the House of Lords.
Since then, peers have been carrying out line-by-line scrutiny of the legislation and proposing their own changes.
The bill can only become law if both Houses of Parliament agree on its final wording.
This must happen before the current session of Parliament ends, which is expected to be next week.
Members of the House of Lords proposed more than 1,200 changes to the bill - known as amendments - which experts believe is a record number for a bill proposed by a backbench MP.
Supporters of assisted dying have criticised the number of amendments, as well as the slow progress debating them, claiming this is a delaying tactic by opponents aimed at blocking the bill from becoming law.
They argue it is undemocratic for unelected peers to frustrate a bill which has already been approved by elected MPs.
Opponents insist they are not obstructing the bill but say significant changes are needed to make it safe and ensure vulnerable people are protected.
Despite extra days being allocated for debate, peers still have not considered the vast majority of amendments put forward.
As a result, there is no chance they will have enough time to debate them on Friday. This means the bill will fall when the current session of Parliament ends.