One positive lesson from Tuesday night is that assisted suicide should be
struck from the progressive agenda.
Question 2 on the ballot asked whether a doctor should be allowed to
prescribe a lethal drug to end the life of a terminally ill person. This is
already legal in Oregon and Washington on the West Coast. If assisted suicide
had gained a beachhead on the East Coast, it would have been taken up quickly
throughout New England.
But voters rejected it by 51 percent to 49 percent.
The narrow margin does not convey the success of the No campaign. As late as
mid-September,
a Suffolk
University poll found that 64 percent of voters favoured legalising assisted
suicide. The cause seemed lost.
What turned voters around? Four factors seem to have been at work.
First, disability activists were strongly opposed. They feared that
legalised assisted suicide would put pressure on them to take an early exit. A
powerful article in the
Boston
Phoenix pointed out that people who live with permanent disabilities weren’t
in favour of it:
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| John Kelly |
“why would a person with a disability ask for a suicide pill? My ex
[boyfriend] never would. Disabled from birth, Mike has been fighting for his
rights since he was in grade school. He’s a badass with 60 tattoos, and he’s not
ready to die any time soon.
“But for the late-disabled, it’s different. People diagnosed with a
progressive disease — MS, ALS, and other such dire acronyms — still carry the
same prejudices they’ve held all their able-bodied lives. Often, they don’t know
anyone living a full, enjoyable life with disabilities, don’t know such lives
are possible. So if a doctor offers them an exit, they’re all too likely to take
it.”
“We changed the nature of the campaign,” said John Kelly, director of Second
Thoughts, a disability activist group. “This is the first assisted suicide
campaign in which the disability rights perspective has reached so many people.”
Their vigorous arguments persuaded voters that physical incapacity or
incontinence
do not rob people of their dignity.
Second, opponents of assisted suicide could not be tarred as
theocrats seeking to impose their values on a post-Christian electorate. The
Catholic Church strongly opposed Question 2, but stayed in the background.
Second Thoughts, for instance, also backed Question 3 – about whether to
legalise the use of marijuana for medical purposes. It passed.
Third, the medical establishment was strongly opposed – as it is
nearly everywhere. Who knows better the hazards of allowing the healing
profession to end lives?

Two of the
leading
supporters were Marcia Angell, a former editor of the New England Journal of
Medicine, and Dan Brock, a professor of medical ethics, both of Harvard Medical
School. However,
the
official position of the Massachusetts Medical Society, the publisher of the
NEJM, was strongly opposed. It contended that the proposed safeguards against
abuse were inadequate and that predicting whether a patient will die within six
months is difficult. It cited Lynda M. Young, a past president: “Allowing
physicians
to participate in assisted suicide would cause more harm than good. Physician
assisted suicide is fundamentally incompatible with the physician’s role as
healer.”
Finally, in the final weeks of the campaign, prominent progressives
were emphatic in their opposition. In a New York Times op-ed,
Dr
Ezekiel J. Emanuel, an architect of the Obama Administration’s
healthcare
policy, described the “four myths” of assisted suicide: that it is
all about controlling pain, that it is driven by advanced technology, that it
will improve quality of life and that it guarantees an easy exit. He described
assisted suicide as fundamentally skewed against the poor:
“Whom does legalizing assisted suicide really benefit? Well-off,
well-educated people, typically suffering from cancer, who are used to
controlling everything in their lives — the top 0.2 percent. And who are the
people most likely to be abused if assisted suicide is legalized? The poor,
poorly educated, dying patients who pose a burden to their
relatives.”
E.J.
Dionne, a liberal stalwart who writes for the Washington Post, asked how
assisted suicide “would interact with the need to curb costs in our medical
system”.
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| Victoria Reggie Kennedy |
In Massachusetts the Kennedy family is more revered than the Windsor family
is in the UK. The late Senator Ted Kennedy was a liberal icon. So the stern
opposition of his widow probably swayed many voters. Dismissing the slogan of
“dying with dignity”, Victoria Reggie Kennedy
wrote
in a local newspaper: “for every complex problem, there’s a simple easy
answer. And it’s wrong.”
“Question 2 is supposed to apply to those with a life expectancy of six
months or less. But even doctors admit that’s unknowable. When my husband was
first diagnosed with cancer, he was told that he had only two to four months to
live, that he’d never go back to the U.S. Senate, that he should get his affairs
in order, kiss his wife, love his family and get ready to die. But that
prognosis was wrong. Teddy lived 15 more productive months.”
Supporters of assisted suicide will not give up. But the three most powerful
arguments in their arsenal are autonomy, compassion and the belief that it is
trendy and progressive. The experience in Massachusetts shows that none of these
are true.