Meeting of the Parliament 10 March 2026 [Draft]
I am happy to deal with that point. I actually disagree with it, because I believe that we must be frank about the fact that all the decisions and judgments that we are asking professionals to make in the course of the assisted death process will be subjective. There is no possibility of true objectivity. We could set some standards, expectations, values and conditions, but, ultimately, it will boil down to doctors and other medical professionals making judgments. Those judgments will be based on their experience and knowledge of the person, but they will be subjective judgments. All that we can do is to ask for qualifications in addition to those judgments.
Throughout the stage 2 process, much was made of international comparison. It is important to note what international comparison tells us about this.