Exclusive

Keir Starmer says current assisted dying laws 'don't really work' as he calls to change the rules

5 January 2024, 10:24 | Updated: 15 February 2024, 09:43

Keir Starmer tells Nick Ferrari he would advocate to change assisted dying law

By Ana Truesdale

Sir Keir Starmer has called for a change to the rules on assisted dying, as he said it's not for prosecutors to try and make the law work.

Listen to this article

Loading audio...

Helping someone with assisted dying or going with them so it can be done abroad carries a sentence of up to 14 years in prison.

Dame Esther Rantzen revealed in December she joined the Swiss assisted-dying clinic Dignitas, prompting a renewed conversation about changing the rules around assisted dying.

"I am an advocate to change the law," said Sir Keir Starmer, "Obviously that change has to be very carefully crafted."

He told Nick Ferrari he would vote in favour of assisted dying "subject to it being the right change" in the law.

The Labour leader looked at cases of assisted dying during his time as Head of the Crown Prosecution Service.

Labour Party leader Sir Keir Starmer took calls on LBC's Nick Ferrari at Breakfast show
Labour Party leader Sir Keir Starmer took calls on LBC's Nick Ferrari at Breakfast show. Picture: Alamy

"There were obvious cases of compassionate acts usually by loving family members in accordance with the wishes of somebody who wanted to end their own life", Sir Starmer said.

"We had to protect people from being exploited, of course", he added, but he saw that not all cases involved exploitation.

The Labour leader continued: "it would be better for parliament to actually change the law", because "it shouldn’t really be for the prosecutor to try and make the law work when it doesn’t really."

Sir Starmer said the law needs "a better framework from parliament."

The Labour leader recognised that Dame Esther Rantzen and her family "make a very powerful case" for assisted dying.

Dame Esther was told in 2023 that her lung cancer was terminal, and that it was unclear how long she had to live.

Journalist Dame Esther Rantzen announced she had been diagnosed with lung cancer in January 2023
Journalist Dame Esther Rantzen announced she had been diagnosed with lung cancer in January 2023. Picture: Alamy

The That's Life! presenter told the BBC: "I have joined Dignitas. I have in my brain thought, well, if the next scan says nothing's working, I might buzz off to Zurich – but it puts my family and friends in a difficult position because they would want to go with me.

"And that means that the police might prosecute them. So we've got to do something. At the moment, it’s not really working, is it?"

Dame Esther said she would want a free vote in Parliament on the subject had she been prime minister for a day.

"Why should you not be given the choice about how you want to go and when you want to go?" she said.

Read more: Time for new debate on assisted dying, says Wes Streeting as Dame Esther Rantzen reveals Dignitas plan

Read more: 'Most awful thing ever': Ex-cop tells of mother's Dignitas death as Esther Rantzen reveals assisted dying plan

Last year, Work and Pensions Secretary Mel Stride told Nick Ferrari that the government was not looking at the issue of assisted dying.

"It’s not something that the government has any plans to bring back to my knowledge," he said.

"But I do think that Esther - and my word, what a special and dignified person she is - has really raised the salience of this issue.

"And I’ve no doubt it will have raised the issue of members of Parliament across the road in Westminster in perhaps looking at it again.

"But I know from a government standpoint I don’t think there are any plans to bring forward any legislation on that."

An assisted dying bill was overwhelmingly rejected by MPs in 2015, the first time the Commons had voted on the issue in 20 years.

More Latest News

See more More Latest News

The scene on Streatham Common

18-year-old in 'life threatening condition' after stabbing in Streatham Common playground

A pro-palestinian protest

Pro-Palestine marches 'could be shut down by police' under new plans, amid anti-Semitism and disruption concerns

Wes Streeting has said that the NHS is a 'service, not a shrine'

Wes Streeting vows to create 2 million more NHS appointments in first year of Labour government to cut backlog

UK temperatures could hit 30C

Exact dates weather to hit 30C with 'big and historical heatwave' expected

Victims are campaigning for compensation - and the results of the public inquiry will be announced on Monday

What is the infected blood scandal? What you need to know about 'worst NHS treatment disaster'

Exclusive
Grant Shapps has said the world needs to know Israel's plans for Gaza

'The world needs to know': Grant Shapps urges Israel to reveal plan for Gaza after war with Hamas ends

Israel Palestinians

Women and children die in Israeli air strike on Gaza

File photo of the Ovingham Bridge across the River Tyne

Boy, 14, dies and another, 13, in critical condition after getting into difficulty in the River Tyne

Giovanni Pernice's dance partner Amanda Abbington quit Strictly

Strictly's Giovanni Pernice 'stamped on Amanda Abbington's foot' in 'bruising' training, as dancer vows to 'clear his name'

Russia Ukraine War

Ukraine and Russia launch multiple drone attacks on each other

South West Water's Susan Davy has apologised for the Devon water crisis

Water boss apologises to customers after 'hundreds' fall ill, as she says parasite crisis 'shouldn't have happened'

Abortion

Judge to consider Ohio law banning nearly all abortions

Exclusive
Patricia and Buster Price

Pensioners forced out of their home by 'flood' of sewage - and say Thames Water blamed them

Exclusive
Infected blood victim Bill Wright has criticised the payout scheme

'This isn't about money, people died': Infected blood victim calls Jeremy Hunt payout announcement 'sinister'

NRA Convention Trump

Donald Trump makes election pitch to gun owners after NRA endorsement

The boys got into trouble in the water near Ovingham Bridge

Two teenage boys missing after getting into trouble in River Tyne, as rescue teams and helicopter scrambled to search