Some big names ended up as allies impossible todayPublished at 16:46 British Summer Time

Sam Francis
Political reporter

-The draft law of sick adults eventually (the end of life) has allocated parliament. Unusual, the separation is not along the party lines, but with confidence – pushing some impossible allies through the same voting lobby.

All this week Downing Street had been very tight today if Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer would support the bill.

When the time came, his name appeared among those who voted, along with his predecessor in 10 Downing Street, Rishi Sunak. Chancellor Rachel Reeves also joined its opposite number – the Chancellor of the Mel Stride Shadow.

Other high figures voted in favor included home secretary Yvette Cooper, Defense Secretary John Healey and Energy Secretary Ed Miliband.

The media title,

Look: How the Assisted Death Debate played

The Conservative Party leader we have Badeno voted against Bill, along with most of her party and senior work figures as Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner.

The two government ministers responsible for the departments that would implement the new policy, the Secretary of Health Wes Street and the Secretary of Justice Shabanana Mahmod also voted against him.

Lib Dem Sir Ed Davey, who voted against the bill in second reading, was missing because of abroad. His deputy, Daisy Cooper, voted for the bill – along with much of her party.

Voting shared the UK reform in the middle, with Nigel Farage’s vote against the bill, but his predecessor Richard Tice voted in favor.

The four Green Party MPs voted for the bill.