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Senior opponents of assisted dying bill urge Lords not to deliberately block it

Letter says there is danger of Lords losing legitimacy as more than 1,000 amendments tabled, delaying any vote

Senior opponents of assisted dying legislation have called on peers not to hold up the progress of the bill through parliament, warning there was a serious danger of the Lords losing democratic legitimacy.

Many supporters now admit the bill is in serious danger of running out of time in the Lords before the end of the parliamentary session, meaning it will fail to pass, because of the slow pace of considering more than 1,000 amendments means the bill will probably run out of time for a vote.

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Β© Photograph: House of Lords/UK Parliament/PA

Β© Photograph: House of Lords/UK Parliament/PA

Β© Photograph: House of Lords/UK Parliament/PA

Downing Street vows to force employment rights bill through Lords

No more concessions, says minister after legislation was thwarted in upper house despite manifesto climbdown

The government has vowed that there will be no more concessions on the employment rights bill and that it will force the Lords to vote on it again next week, after Conservative and cross-bench peers blocked it on Wednesday night.

Ministers and trade unions expressed fury that the bill was voted down again in the House of Lords by peers protesting against the lifting of the compensation cap for unfair dismissal, calling it β€œcynical wrecking tactics that risk a constitutional crisis”.

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Β© Photograph: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

Β© Photograph: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

Β© Photograph: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

Badenoch criticises Farage over refusal to apologise for alleged racist remarks

Tory leader says head of Reform should β€˜put on his big boy pants’ and apologise over allegations from ex-schoolmates

Kemi Badenoch has questioned why Nigel Farage has not apologised for alleged racist and antisemitic comments while at school, saying the weight of the evidence of more than 20 former schoolmates is significant.

In her strongest comments yet on the issue, the Conservative leader said she was struck that Farage had not admitted any fault or apologised, saying it would have been her first instinct as a politician.

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Β© Photograph: Andrew MacColl/Shutterstock

Β© Photograph: Andrew MacColl/Shutterstock

Β© Photograph: Andrew MacColl/Shutterstock

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