Right-To-Die Fight Hits National Stage


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WASHINGTON, DC - FEBRUARY 13: Delegate Eleanor Holms Norton (D-DC) talks with Chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) before a business meeting at the Rayburn House Office Building on Monday February 13, 2017 in Washington, DC. The "Death with Dignity Act" was discussed in the meeting. (Photo by Matt McClain/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

Opponents of aid-in-dying laws are claiming a small victory. They won the attention of Congress this week in their battle to stop a growing movement that allows terminally ill patients to get doctors’ prescriptions to end their lives.

The Republican-led effort on Capitol Hill to overturn the District of Columbia’s aid-in-dying law could fail by Friday. But advocates worry the campaign will catalyze a broader effort to fully ban the practice, which is legal in six states and being considered in 22 more.

“The D.C. legislation has catapulted the issue of medical aid in dying onto the federal agenda at a time when Congress has the power to enact a ban on this end-of-life care option nationwide — even criminalizing the practice in the six states where this option is currently authorized,” warned Jessica Grennan, national director of political affairs and advocacy for Compassion & Choices, which supports right-to-die laws.

“If that happens, it will set the end-of-life care movement back to the last century,” Grennan said.

No matter how the effort plays out, both sides agree that the debate on Capitol Hill, featuring a Republican moral protest, could be only a taste of what’s to come.

 

 

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