Meeting of the Parliament 10 March 2026 [Draft]
I accept that my amendment 232 is drafted more broadly than others, and that it is not specific in the ways that Mr Doris outlines. My sense of the ethos and charism of those organisations tells me that they would compassionately signpost people, but whether we can legislate for that is an issue for wider debate than the one on the competing amendments that we are having today. That is my view, knowing the organisations as I do.
I am conscious of time. Rather than debating the issues either in a broad, academic context or in a vacuum, we must look at where there has been delivery of services for older people, those with disabilities, and those who are at the end of life or are particularly vulnerable. Those services have existed in Scotland for many years and the legislation would have an impact on them. It would affect the practical application of their services and whether they would be able to continue delivering them and, as many members have pointed out, might also affect whether they would be able to exist at all. It would be to the detriment of this country if we did not have that rich variety of care that allows people to choose a setting that is right for them, in line with their beliefs and with the ways in which they want to live the latter stages of their life and to have their death.