Politics
War, Trump and Washington’s Gridlock | Sen. Katie Britt
Politics
‘Nacho Parenting’ Explained And Why It Can Help Stepparents (At First)
This article features parenting and relationship advice from counsellor Aimee Righton and psychotherapist Debbie Keenan.
Counsellors and therapists are noticing a trend among blended families where stepparents will take on more of a ‘nacho parent’ role.
Per Pop Sugar, in very basic terms it means “not your kid, not your problem” – so if someone’s stepchild is acting out, the stepparent would take a step back and not get involved with disciplining them or asserting authority, leaving that instead to the child’s biological parent.
“In many cases this is not even a formally agreed parenting strategy but rather something that evolves naturally within the family dynamic as adults attempt to reduce conflict or tension between the stepparent and the child,” says Counselling Directory member Aimee Righton.
While she is noticing the trend more and more in her work – “this is something that is appearing more often in my private practice and increasingly within wider society,” she tells HuffPost UK – she acknowledges it can be “a rather non-committal approach” that carries both positive and negative consequences for wider family relationships.
Let’s dive into why this might be…
The pros of nacho parenting
Connection is hugely important for children – and by taking a step back, stepparents can focus on this during what will probably be quite a tricky time for kids.
Activities centred around shared interests, and everyday interaction, can all help to allow the child to become familiar with the new adult without feeling that their existing family structure is being replaced or overridden, suggests Righton.
Conversely, if a stepparent were to move too quickly into a disciplinary or authoritative role, it might feel intrusive or threatening to the child and may lead to resistance or resentment. “In many cases this can damage the possibility of developing a trusting relationship in the future,” adds the counsellor.
Like Righton, psychotherapist Debbie Keenan, who is also a member of Counselling Directory, sees nacho parenting as a “useful initial approach for stepparents entering blended families” because it allows the stepparent to focus on building trust and connection with the stepchildren.
“The positives are that the stepparent isn’t seen as the ‘bad parent’,” she tells HuffPost UK. “It allows the stepparent to embed compassion and empathy into the relationship, while supporting the biological parents’ authority.”
But while it might help reduce conflict early on, both experts don’t necessarily recommend ‘nacho parenting’ as a long-term strategy.
The cons associated with nacho parenting
When this approach isn’t openly discussed or consciously chosen, it can create confusion around roles and emotional responsibility within the family.
“From a child’s perspective, the presence of an adult who does not respond in ways they typically expect from adults can be confusing or unsettling,” says Righton.
Kids might say/think: “I really act out in front of my stepdad and he doesn’t care – I can do whatever I like.” Or, “My stepmum hates me, she is always leaving the room whenever anything big is going on in my life.”
Righton continues: “A child will question why this adult in their home does not correct behaviour, enforce rules, or respond to situations in the same way other adults do. This can lead to feelings of uncertainty, bewilderment, or even rejection.”
Children might also try to play parents off against each other, and Keenan adds there is a danger that the stepparent’s role/authority becomes undermined, especially if they are not putting boundaries and consequences in place for bad behaviour.
While nacho parenting might initially reduce tension in the romantic relationship; over time, cracks may start to show.
“When implemented without open conversation and thoughtful discussion, this style of parenting can have a detrimental impact on the romantic relationship between the adults,” says Righton.
“The biological parent may perceive the stepparent’s withdrawal from parenting responsibilities as a lack of commitment to the family unit. In some situations it can feel as though the message being communicated is that ‘your children are not my responsibility’.”
Obviously this can cause emotional distance between partners, particularly if one parent feels they are doing the lion’s share of parenting, while the other doesn’t get involved. This is when resentment can creep in thick and fast.
The key to navigating this successfully
If ‘nacho parenting’ occurs unconsciously or without reflection, “the doubt it creates can place strain on both the couple’s relationship and the developing bonds within the blended family, often causing irreparable rupture in family systems,” concludes Righton.
Unsurprisingly then, communication really is the key to getting it right. “For blended families to navigate this successfully, ongoing dialogue between both the adults and children is essential,” she continues.
“When the approach is discussed openly and adapted to the needs of all, it may serve as a temporary framework while relationships develop. Family meetings (even blended family meetings) are key to this.”
Over time then, as trust develops, stepparents might want to naturally take on more responsibility within the family, without the relationship feeling forced.
Politics
Julie Redmond: Drug addicts sleeping rough on our streets should not be accepted as normal
Julie Redmond is a former nurse and Conservative candidate for Westminster City Council and the London Assembly. She has seen firsthand the impact of mental ill-health, addiction and homelessness in Westminster, both on the frontline of nursing and through her work as a community campaigner.
Step off the Tube in central London and the reality hits you. How often do we emerge onto the pavement and see a tent pitched against railings, or someone clearly in the grip of addiction, dealing, or injecting in plain sight? In Vincent Square, Pimlico and many other Westminster wards, residents regularly report open drug use and associated anti-social behaviour spilling into our residential streets, and in some cases in close proximity to our children’s nurseries and schools. Alongside petty theft, shoplifting and intimidation, the daily erosion of public order.
Westminster Conservatives will not accept this as the new normal.
The current response to tackling these issues is fragmented. The council funds public health. The NHS commissions treatment. The police enforce the law. Probation manages prison release. Charities conduct outreach. The system as a whole lacks integration. The result is a revolving door: too often mental health challenges lead to addiction, addiction leads to prison, prison leads to the street, the street leads to reoffending and round again.
It is time for a more serious and structured response.
I am proposing a Westminster Street Recovery & Public Safety Plan centred on the creation of a 50-bed Recovery and Stabilisation Centre, a true Centre of Excellence for mental health stabilisation, drug recovery, and structured street transition.
This would not be a simple shelter. It would be a controlled, clinically led facility with four clear pathways.
First, individuals leaving prison particularly high-risk or repeat offenders, would be transferred directly into short-term stabilisation, linked to probation supervision and structured recovery plans. No more release with a travel warrant and nowhere to go.
Second, hospital discharge patients with addiction or homelessness risk would move straight into supported stabilisation beds. No discharge back to the street.
Third, individuals arrested for possession or anti-social behaviour linked to drug misuse could be diverted into mandatory engagement at the centre as part of a conditional caution. Treatment with consequences. Refusal to engage would mean prosecution proceeds.
Fourth, those with severe mental health needs and dual diagnosis would receive rapid psychiatric assessment and, where required, referral under the Mental Health Act.
This model is not theoretical. Finland has shown that a properly funded, integrated Housing First strategy can dramatically reduce rough sleeping by combining permanent accommodation with wraparound support. Switzerland, after facing an escalation in open drug use in Zurich in the 1990s, combined firm policing with medically supervised treatment and heroin-assisted therapy. Open drug markets were dismantled. Overdose deaths fell. Public order was restored. It’s a shame that Sadiq Khan has not chosen to learn from these approaches during his decade as Mayor of London.
The common thread was clarity and integration. Approaches did not oscillate between leniency and crackdowns. They built capacity, aligned agencies and made long-term commitments. London struggles because we have not done the same. Treatment beds have declined. Mental health services are stretched. Housing shortages undermine recovery. And enforcement without pathways simply has people travelling round the destructive circle.
The cost of 50-bed stabilisation centre would be modest in comparison to the combined costs of policing our troubled communities, imprisoning addicts, A&E admissions, and emergency accommodation. Funding could come from a blend of council public health budgets, NHS Integrated Care Board contributions, Ministry of Justice support for prison-release cases and targeted Home Office grants.
The principles are straightforward: compassion with enforcement; treatment with accountability; structured recovery pathways; public safety restored. Westminster has the visibility, the resources and the responsibility to lead and should not tolerate open drug addiction and street disorder any longer.
Safer streets and structured recovery are not opposing goals. They are the same goal. Compassionate Conservatism in action.
Politics
Republican group attacks Thomas Massie for his opposition to Iran war
Republicans attempting to oust Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie in a bitter primary are deploying his opposition to the war in Iran.
The Republican Jewish Coalition Victory Fund on Thursday planned to release an supporting Ed Gallrein, the candidate endorsed by President Donald Trump, that focuses on Massie’s opposition to the war.
“America is at war with a fanatical regime that seeks nuclear weapons. American hero Ed Gallrein stands with President Trump, our country and our military,” a narrator says in the 30-second spot, shared with POLITICO ahead of its release.
“Thomas Massie, he stands with Iran and radical leftists in Congress,” the narrator says, “opposing Trump just like he did on the border and taxes.”
The campaign ad appears to be among the first attempts to use the Iran war to support a candidate, a risky choice since polls show the high-risk operation is not popular with voters. Massie, who faces Gallrein in a May primary, is a top Trump target for a number of perceived sins — most notably because the outspoken Kentucky lawmaker successfully pushed with Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna of California for the release of the Epstein files.
The ad from the RJC Victory Fund was scheduled to drop hours after the House rejected an effort led by Massie and Khanna to force the president to halt the attack.
Massie claimed a win, though, by saying “we put everyone on record” about a military operation that “could last months.”
Massie has been outspoken in his opposition to the conflict in Iran, accusing Trump of forsaking his “America First” doctrine and challenging members of his own party to rein in the president’s ability to wage war without the approval of Congress.
As the RJC Victory Fund funneled millions of dollars into attacking him, Massie cast his race as “about whether the Global Military Industrial Complex and Israel’s government controls the United States” and began fundraising off his opposition.
Andrew Howard contributed to this report.
Politics
Thousands flee Beirut suburb after Israeli terrorism
Israel’s racist colonial regime has demanded the immediate evacuation of the southern suburb of Lebanon’s capital Beirut. Fascist Israeli government minister Bezalel Smotrich announced that the southern suburbs will be “like Khan Younis”:
The threat has forced thousands of Lebanese civilians to flee on foot amid heavy bombing that has flattened or badly damaged large areas of the city. Israel has notionally had a ceasefire agreement with Lebanon since its 2024 terrorist attacks using exploding pagers killed and maimed thousands across the country, including children. However, the occupation regime has violated it multiple times daily and is now attempting to invade southern Lebanon. It is reportedly meeting heavy resistance from Lebanese militia, with several tanks destroyed and retaliatory attacks on Israeli bases.
The evacuation order shows the extent of the area of the city Israel thinks it has the right to order residents to flee:
Israel, which has already begun to sell Lebanese land it doesn’t own, to would-be illegal settlers, has also ordered the evacuation of all of southern Lebanon up to the Litani river, which runs more than half the length of the country.
Israeli military spokespeople have confessed to Hebrew-language broadcasters that Israel did not expect the fierce resistance its troops have encountered.
The rogue and terror state being its usual appalling self.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Why An Olympic Trans Ban Would Solve Nothing
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Politics
US military calls BS on Trump’s ‘plenty of defence missiles’ claim
US generals have told a ‘closed door’ Congressional meeting that their air defences in West Asia won’t be able to keep up for long with the rate at which Iran is firing its drones and missiles. The stark warning contradicts US president Donald Trump’s wild and self-contradicting claims on his ‘Truth Social’ platform that the US has “unlimited” stocks of air defence missiles but somehow “we are not where we want to be”.
Iran has been launching a stream of attacks on US bases and interests in their vassal states in the region, as well as on Israel. These have mostly consisted of its basic ‘Shahed’ drones, yet US systems have failed to intercept many even of these low-cost weapons despite abundant footage showing multiple interceptors launched at each incoming drone:
The senior officers briefing members of Congress included General Dan Caine, the chair of the ‘Joint Chiefs of Staff’. They acknowledged the “thousands” of Iranian attack drones were forcing the United States and its allies to expend huge quantities of extremely expensive defensive weaponry and even then many were getting through.
Many analysts say the US only has stocks to last a week or two at best and potentially only a few days. Iran has also destroyed two US radar installations essential for targeting incoming missiles, as well as at least two ‘THAAD’ interceptor batteries. The THAAD launchers are the most expensive air defence systems in the world. The United States reportedly only has three of these specific radar installations.
The chaos caused by the constant Iranian barrage saw Kuwaiti-based US systems shoot down three US fighter jets in a single day on 2 March 2026.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
NATO chief Rutte confirms alliance is for US to project power
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte appears to suggest in an interview that the alliance is a “platform for the United States to project power on the World stage”.
His revealing comments come as increasing divisions are seen across NATO member states. This divide comes in their leaders’ position on the US-Israel war of aggression on Iran. Whilst France, UK, Germany and Italy have come to Trump’s heel like good little lapdogs, Spain has strongly condemned the illegal war and refused any military involvement in Western attacks on the Middle East.
Rutte’s comments have sparked widespread disgust as finally it is clear that the ‘defence alliance’ is merely a front for US imperial interests.
Finally!
The head of NATO has said the quiet bit out loud:
“NATO is a platform for the United States to project power on the world stage.”
Ireland must never join this openly war mongering alliance that hides behind a “defensive” smokescreen.
— Daniel Lambert (@dlLambo) March 5, 2026
‘Making use of key assets here in Europe’ — NATO
For the past 2.5 years, citizens across NATO states have become increasingly concerned. In fact, they have often expressed anger about their governments’ response to the US-backed genocide in Gaza carried out by Israel. Now, Rutte’s comments appear to confirm what we have long suspected. The transatlantic alliance is merely a vassal group for furthering US power and imperialism across the World.
Rutte’s controversial comments in full:
NATO is there to protect us collectively against any adversary, be it Russia or whoever, or terrorism.
But also, it is a platform for the United States to project power on the world stage. Because this whole operation now, this whole campaign in Iran, needs these basic requests to be positively engaged with by NATO allies, as they are doing, making use of key assets here in Europe.
So, the fact that we stick together, the United States and Europe and Canada, is crucial also for the success of this American-Israeli campaign.
However, Spain is currently standing firmly in opposition to the ‘American-Israeli campaign’. This clearly indicates that the illegal war does not have the collective support that Rutte so desperately wants to assert above. This all comes whilst Israel is rapidly losing support amongst US citizens as consent plummets.
Furthermore, if Rutte’s comments can be relied upon, then the reverse must also be true. Therefore, if Europe and Canada staunchly abide by international law, refraining from goose-stepping to the war-hungry US and Israeli presidents, then the illegal campaign would surely fail.
The UK needs to leave @NATO
It is a protection racket for America https://t.co/VaOPuVfRFL
— An Honest Mouthful (@ahonestmouthful) March 5, 2026
Calls have since been made for Ireland to stop in its tracks comes as it appears to bow down to the NATO ‘war machine’. Ireland has suffered at the hands of colonial Britain so it should know better than to further the imperial ambitions of the US and Israel:
IRELAND MUST NEVER JOIN NATO https://t.co/hWU1mRqlt8
— Alison 3652444 (@AlisonAon) March 5, 2026
‘Grubby footnote in an ugly march toward European rearmament’
Our own Robert Freeman discussed Ireland’s recent steps closer to NATO, writing recently:
Taoiseach Micheál Martin has acknowledged he will be spending almost €1 million on a war room. He didn’t describe it that way, of course, instead referring to:
“…secure meeting facilities to allow continued engagement with international partners.”
He did, however, accept that the room, designed to be surveillance proof, would be key for meetings of the nations backing Ukraine in the war against Russia. Martin revealed a further clue to the purpose of the project by saying it is “NATO proof”. In other words, up to the standards required by the NATO war machine.
Most of the Irish population would like the country to be NATO proof, but in entirely the opposite meaning of the way in which Martin used the term. I.e. – proofed from co-option by the belligerent and expansionist alliance.
Freeman concluded:
It amounts to one more grubby footnote in an ugly march toward European rearmament that will ultimately make the world less, not more, secure. It fills the coffers of the military-industrial complex, whose profits lie in death and destruction. With greater wealth, their ability to push governments in that direction increases.
The Irish population strongly backs neutrality, partial though it may always have been. That voice must now be heard louder than ever to pull Ireland back from the clutches of the NATO death cult.
It might not even be that hard to achieve, as far-right supporters of Trump’s barbarism in the Middle East are asking the US to withdraw its forces. Please, do keep threatening us with such a good time:
That summit would be a good time to announce American withdrawal from Europe and NATO. That would force the UK and other European countries that have omitted to rearm and tackle the Islamist crusade to reconsider. https://t.co/1WWPe2hVLO
— RoJo (@Twit_200124) March 5, 2026
US must be kicked out
This revelation from Rutte is hardly a surprise. Many have raised repeated concerns about the nefarious intentions at work in NATO. We also wrote last month about NATO’s ‘highest profile corruption scandal’ exposed by the Arms Trade Corruption Tracker (ATCT). The ATCT published a damning report in which corruption has been exposed between staff at NATO and Elbit Systems. Elbit Systems is an Israeli arms company that has sites across the UK and across the West.
Thankfully, some NATO staff members have resisted the alliance’s direction of travel and growing corruption. Yet those who show such courage soon face the consequences. We wrote last month:
Suggesting internal whistleblowers are facing typical abuse and negative consequences as a result of raising concerns about internal corruption, they [ATCT] added:
“The fallout did not stop with the suspects. Inside the alliance, senior officials began raising alarms of their own. The NSPA’s Director of Human Resources and its Chief Audit Executive and Head of Investigations flagged internal corruption and wrongdoing within NATO’s structures. Their interventions came at a cost: both saw their positions either suspended or left unrenewed.”
We must resist this march to war. It is clearly not in the interests of ordinary people trying to live safe and secure lives. After all, it is only in the interests of those with power who will profit. As a result, member states must hold firm and reject Mark Rutte’s invitation to allow the US to use “key assets” across the West. Going further, we should revisit all agreements for US military to be on British soil reducing their ability to ‘project power’ beyond its borders.
If we do not, we risk turning an illegal war into our own — while cementing our status as a threat to world peace and stability.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
MPs are foxtrotting while the world burns
Footage was shared widely yesterday of about 40 MPs enjoying a dance class in Westminster’s Portcullis House, overseen by Strictly Come Dancing hosts Angela Rippon and Alex Kingston. It is a measure of the impact that Adam Curtis’s haunting documentary style has had on our collective imagination, that almost everyone who saw this segment online felt they were watching one of his iconic, ironic newsreel juxtapositions unfold in real time.
Instead of using footage from, say, a Flappers’ Ball on the eve of the Great Depression – usually under a jarringly modern club anthem – to illustrate an American public drunk on hedonistic pursuits, we were watching a political class merrily hoofing away, apparently oblivious to the sheer hatred, the exasperation, the poisonous contempt in which they are held by the millions who fund their paper-shuffling and moral evasions. Surely, their vapid, hopeful expressions and tentative toe-pointing seemed to innocently plead, they must, as human beings, be able to shrug off the quotidian stresses of managed decline long enough to just shake a tail feather now and again? Life, after all, is not about waiting for the storm to pass – it is about dancing in the rain, ideally in one of the grandest atriums in Central London.
And so, just as we, as a people, prepare to go over yet another watershed and another step closer to oblivion, Adam Curtis at least will be saved some valuable hours rifling through the BBC archives. Just press play.
The harsh reaction to our waltzing MPs wasn’t confined to members of the public. Even some within their own ranks found the scenes bewildering. Reform UK MP Lee Anderson told the Daily Mail: ‘I walked into Portcullis House this morning and thought I’d walked straight into Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” video.’
This is funny, though in truth, the ‘Thriller’ video would have been more in keeping with the prevailing mood. As it becomes obvious that zombie ideas, buried deep in the texts of religious scriptures inked thousands of years ago, are animating the escalating threat in and around Iran as much as pragmatic geopolitical realism, it does feel increasingly close to midnight, on one famous clock in particular.
Meanwhile, if you are of a certain political bent, then seeing new Green Party MP Hannah Spencer – fresh from a campaign in Gorton and Denton that seemed to consist largely of dancing and Urdu – had joined Labour’s assisted-dying ghoul, Kim Leadbeater, on the floor will have shored up your suspicions no end.
The only shame was the lack of a be-toga’d figure contributing a few licks on the fiddle. Rejected, perhaps, not for being too on the nose (what, after this, could be?), but for demanding a familiarity with classical antiquity too learned and exclusionary to those afflicted as a result of the present education system – like many of our foxtrotting MPs seem to be. ‘Nero? Do you mean the café?’
There is, lest I be accused of unmitigated sourness, nothing wrong with dancing. Even – perhaps especially – when things are getting you down. Alone, slipping around on the kitchen lino in your socks, with a partner or friends. Or even, sure, in a class – a structured and tutored environment – getting to know your neighbours and breaking down the effects of ‘hunkering’ identified in Robert Putnam’s Bowling Alone, a quarter century ago.
And who better to promote that ideal than Rippon – still sprightly at 81, and the perfect advertisement for remaining rhythmically limber? It might well lift the clouds of mental ill-health, and even end up saving the NHS money, or at least rerouting it from depression medications and CBT referrals into sprained wrists and twisted spines.
But much as I dislike the phrase when deployed against someone who has spoken an unpalatable but necessary truth, it is sometimes wise to ‘read the room’. There is a genuinely frightening kinetic war unfolding in the most volatile region on the planet, with Britain looking dangerously irresolute in asserting its position. There are all the unresolved problems that Keir Starmer inherited 19 months ago, and has only gone on to exacerbate. It should hardly need to be said that now is not the time for our elected representatives to give the faintest hint that they might be feeling exuberant, triumphalist or even vaguely satisfied with their performance.
It was cute when a fitness instructor accidentally caught the motorcade occasioned by a military coup in Myanmar on her dance video, five years ago. It is not so cute when Commons speaker – Lindsay Hoyle – can so easily be intercut with live footage of hell being rained down on the people of Iran.
Portcullis House is named for the symbol of the House of Commons, an ancient method of defence in a castle gatehouse – which, along with a moat and an elevated drawbridge, made the thing all but impregnable to unwarranted entry. It is a painfully ironic reminder of the degree to which recent parliaments have failed to defend our nation’s castle moat. And perhaps of another, sharper construction that has historically been lowered, at speed, when occasion demanded.
Simon Evans is a spiked columnist and stand-up comedian. Tickets for his tour, Staring at the Sun, are on sale here.
Politics
Will Britain ever stop the rape gangs?
The post Will Britain <em>ever</em> stop the rape gangs? appeared first on spiked.
Politics
Don’t mourn the death of the ‘assisted dying’ bill
The Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill is on its last legs. Having been voted through by the House of Commons at second reading in November 2024 with a majority of 55, it was approved at a third reading in June 2025 with a reduced majority of just 23. It is now in the House of Lords, with little hope of progressing any further.
According to Lord Falconer, the bill’s sponsor in the Lords, 1,253 amendments have been tabled by peers. There remain over 850 left to debate. With only five allocated days left before the next parliamentary recess, there is almost no hope of getting through them. Last week, the Labour government refused to allocate more time before the bill’s May deadline, effectively signing its death warrant.
What went wrong? Ultimately, the bill’s advocates made a major strategic error. Their plan was (and always has been) to push through the legislation with as little debate and discussion as possible. They wanted to – dishonestly – represent this monumental legal change as a simple act of compassion, affecting only a handful of people who are in pain, already on death’s door and who merely wish to speed up the process. The issue is, of course, much more complex, and the pro-suicide forces have been hoist by their own petard in their attempts to pretend otherwise.
The first way they attempted to pull the wool over the eyes of the public was in trying to brand assisted suicide as ‘assisted dying’. Whenever it is pointed out that ingesting poison with the intent of ending one’s life cannot honestly be described as anything other than suicide, the bill’s supporters have no answer to this except to say that it is ‘deeply offensive’, ‘stigmatising’ and ‘derogatory’.
Avoiding debate has been the modus operandi of the bill’s proponents from the outset. The Labour Party did not include assisted suicide in its General Election manifesto. Instead, then opposition leader Keir Starmer ‘made a promise’ to the terminally ill television personality, Esther Rantzen, that he would provide ‘time for a debate’. Then, when Labour MP Kim Leadbeater came top of the ballot for private members’ bills in September 2024, there was pressure on her to drop her interest in puppy smuggling, and to use her position instead to push assisted suicide. Private members’ bills are allocated far less time for debate than government bills, which are generally introduced by a minister and prioritised above others. Unlike government bills, they can fall if time runs out.
Even the way Leadbeater introduced the bill did not allow for much scrutiny. As Ruth Fox and Matthew England of the Hansard Society observed: ‘The bill is unusually long for a [private members’ bill], spanning 32 pages of legal text, comprising 43 clauses and six schedules, and with financial and other consequences for the NHS and the court system’. Two impact assessments – of 24 and 150 pages respectively – were released on Friday 2 May 2025 – the same day as a momentous by-election result. The intention was clearly that as few people should read them as possible.
At the outset, pro-assisted suicide organisations like Dignity in Dying argued that MPs, even if they weren’t certain about all elements of the bill, should support it on the basis that scrutiny in the House of Lords would improve it. ‘Meaningful second-chamber oversight still to come’, they assured MPs. ‘With specialist expertise amongst its membership, and additional committees engaging in the process, there’s a robust safeguard phase ahead, ensuring that the final legislation is refined, balanced, and workable.’
Now that these ‘experts and specialists’ are scrutinising the bill in the Lords, assisted-suicide proponents have changed their tune. ‘A handful of hardline opponents in parliament’s unelected chamber’, they complain, are now ‘filibustering’ the bill.
Once again, the language here is deceptive. ‘Filibustering’ is what US senator Strom Thurmond did when, in 1957, he set a record for speaking for 24 hours and 18 minutes to try (unsuccessfully) to stop the passage of the Civil Rights Act. The average speaking time on the assisted-dying bill, in contrast, is less than five minutes. Instead, peers are, as the normally pro-assisted death Times noted this week, trying ‘to clarify the shockingly woolly language’ of the bill.
The arrogance and incompetence of pro-suicide lobby has not healped either. Leadbeater and her supporters in the Commons unconvincingly recycled stock phrases from Dignity in Dying, while failing to address genuine concerns. In the Lords, Falconer and others have brushed away warnings about the bill expressed by medical colleges like the Royal College of Psychiatrists and the Royal College of Physicians, along with the British Geriatrics Society, Liberty and even the Lords Delegated Power Committee. They have preferred to treat any criticism and scrutiny as part of a plot to stop the legislation. As Lord Toby Young noted in the Telegraph, ‘Falconer is more of a demolition expert than a bridge builder’.
In the end, the whole mess must be laid at Keir Starmer’s feet. It is he who at first pushed the bill and, like so many of his other policies, has dropped it as opposition has got louder.
There is no point in keeping this bill, already on artificial life support, alive. It deserves to die. To paraphrase Oscar Wilde on the death of Little Nell, one must have a heart of stone to hear about the death of this bill and not laugh.
Kevin Yuill is emeritus professor of history at the University of Sunderland and CEO of Humanists Against Assisted Suicide.
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