Senator Donna Soucy, Esq. |
SB 490 was a gateway to assisted suicide, and the Senate just slammed it shut for now
On a 12-10 vote, the New Hampshire Senate has killed a bill that would have paved the way for assisted suicide. I did not see that result coming. Thank-yous are in order, including one I didn’t think I’d ever be writing.
Voting “inexpedient to legislate,” sending the bill into the trash heap: Senators Bob Giuda, James Gray, Harold French, Ruth Ward, Gary Daniels, Kevin Avard, John Reagan, Donna Soucy, Regina Birdsell, Chuck Morse, William Gannon, and Dan Innis. If any one of them had voted differently, today’s outcome would have been different.
Yes, that Donna Soucy. She was the lone Democrat to do the right thing on SB 490. She deserves thanks and respect for today’s vote.
And then there are the senators who wanted to keep the bill out of the trash heap: Jeff Woodburn, Jeb Bradley, David Watters, Martha Hennessey, Andy Sanborn, Jay Kahn, Bette Lasky, Dan Feltes, Kevin Cavanaugh, and Martha Fuller Clark. Bradley and Sanborn were the two Republicans favoring the bill, for those of you tracking such things.
Senators Sharon Carson and Lou D’Allesandro were absent.
Contact information for all senators is here.
The bill was supposedly about studying end of life choices. The sponsor tipped her hand when she introduced the bill in committee and went on to defend assisted suicide, while fervently denying that what she was advocating was suicide. Medical provision of lethal doses of drugs, yes, but not assisted suicide. She tried to sell that position today, but 12 senators weren’t buying it.
The 12-10 ITL result was a good day’s work. It’s also a clear warning. Assisted-suicide advocates are going to come back in one guise or another, even though this year’s bill is dead. Neutrality will only serve to support the assisted suicide advocates, who want the lethal prescription to be seen as medical treatment.
Maybe some legislators can be persuaded to change their position. Maybe some are adamant. You might want to look into that before the next election.
Celebrate the day’s work. Thank the people who voted ITL. Take a breath. Then be ready for the next round, whenever it comes.
To listen to a recording of the debate and vote, from the NH General Court web site, go to this link, for the 22 recording, click on Agenda tab, and scroll down to SB 490 at time stamp 11:09:27:
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