Referendum on assisted dying 'right way to go'

Alex BlakeIsle of Man
News imageBBC Melanie Harris has light brown hair tied up and has sunglasses on. She is wearing a grey fleece jumper and is smiling. She's standing on a concrete walkway with a stone wall behind her, with terraced buildings and parked cars beyond that, on a sunny day.BBC
Kirk Michael resident Melanie Harris says she thinks a referendum was the only way to know "what the people want"

Some people in Douglas have welcomed calls for a referendum on legalising assisted dying on the Isle of Man.

The Isle of Man Medical Society (IOMMS) has renewed calls for a public vote, despite legislation being passed in March 2025.

While it passed through the branches of Tynwald, the Assisted Dying Bill 2023 has stalled after the UK's Ministry of Justice requested changes to be made before Royal Assent is granted.

Kirk Michael resident Melanie Harris said: "If you really want to know what the people want then a referendum is the right way to go."

She said that while she supported assisted dying, if a referendum would "solve the problem" then "we should go for it".

The bill would give terminally ill adults on the island, with a prognosis of less than 12 months to live, the right to choose to die.

Visitor Trish Roberts said she felt it was important for governments to "respect what the people think" and was also in favour of the new laws.

News imageTrish Roberts has fair blonde hair tied up with lose pieces falling by her face. She is wearing large sunglasses, and a dark blue cardigan, with a strap of a bag visible on the left over her shoulder. She is smiling sitting in front of a long stone wall with a pavement to the right behind her, on a sunny day.
Trish Roberts says governments should respect the individuals' choice

She added that if terminally ill people wanted "help to take their own life, then I think it's up to the person".

Ken Georgeson agreed that a referendum would be the fairest way forward.

He said: "It shouldn't be a small committee of people, however experienced they are in health issues.

"It should lie with the people".

News imageKen Georgeson has short grey receding hair. He is smiling and wearing sunglasses, sitting in front of a stone wall, with the long green leaves of aa bush behind it. It is a sunny day.
Ken Georgeson said a referendum was the most democratic approach

"A democratic society should always go that way," he added.

The medical society is made up of about 150 doctors across the island.

The IOMMS president, GP Martin Rankin, said the organisation believed there remained "a lack of democratic mandate" for the existing legislation.

'Democratic choice'

He said holding a referendum alongside the next general election would allow the issue to be settled directly by voters.

"This issue is very divisive and opinions of the public are polarised," he said.

Rankin also argued that, if the public supported assisted dying, any future legislation should return as a government bill rather than a private member's bill to allow for "proper scrutiny".

He also raised concerns about the impact the legislation could have on vulnerable patients and healthcare services.

"The whole thing is extremely prone to abuse," he said, citing fears some patients could feel pressure linked to care costs or becoming a burden on family members.

News imageDr Martin Rankin has short grey hair and a short grey bears. He is wearing a light brown blazer, with a white shirt under a brown jumper underneath. He is standing in front of the Noble's Hospital entrance which is blurry, and there are green bushes and trees behind him. It is a sunny day with cloudless blue skies.
Martin Rankin is the president of the Isle of Man Medical Society

But campaigner Sue Biggerstaff, who has been fighting for the law change since 2022, when her husband, Simon, who had motor neurone disease (MND), died, said: "What my husband went through, nobody should go through.

"He was in agony, begging for it to stop for two weeks… nobody should be in that position."

The IOMMS has called for a referendum to take place alongside September's general election, which would ultimately be a decision of Tynwald.

But as the legislation is a private member's bill, both the chief minister and Isle of Man Government have declined to comment at this time.

Rankin added that research carried out by the society found 74% of responding doctors on the island opposed the legislation, while 34% had considered leaving the island if it became law.

"If that happens the impact on health care on the island will be devastating," he said.

The cost of holding a referendum in September would be estimated at £30,000, he added, calling it the "price of actually giving people the democratic choice".

Politicians are to continue considering the bill in the June sitting of Tynwald.

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