Campaigners making final cases as MPs prepare for final reading in Commons

The Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill is due to have its next parliamentary vote on Friday

Kim Leadbeater said she is confident the assisted dying bill will pass on Friday

The Bill is back in the Commons for a debate and major vote which would see it either pass to the House of Lords or fall

Opponents of the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill also believe they may have the numbers to see it off the proposed decriminalisation in England and Wales.

A rushed parliamentary process has produced a framework riddled with flaws

After much debate, the bill to legalise suicide for terminally ill adults faces its critical House of Commons vote on Friday. John Rentoul looks at what might happen

Kim Leadbeater’s bill passed with a majority of 55 at the second reading, but David Maddox explains why there is still a good chance it could be voted down

Vote on knife-edge as backbenchers switch sides and urge colleagues to reject it

Campaigners making final cases as MPs prepare for final reading in Commons

MPs will vote this afternoon on whether to legalise assisted dying in a potentially historic moment for the country.

Kim Leadbeater’s bill passed with a majority of 55 at the second reading, but David Maddox explains why there is still a chance it could be voted down

The Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill will either clear the House of Commons and move to the Lords, or fail completely

It is not yet known whether the prime minister will take part today for Kim Leadbeater’s bill as he deals with the Middle East crisis

LIVE UPDATES: Follow MailOnline's live coverage as MPs vote on whether assisted dying will become law in England and Wales at the bill's third and final reading in Parliament.

The Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill will either clear the House of Commons and move to the Lords, or fail completely

Have your say: The assisted dying bill, facing a knife-edge vote after key safeguards were dropped, has reignited a deeply divisive debate over dignity, safety, and the limits of…

While supporters of assisted dying have won an important victory today, David Maddox explains why their battle to get it into law is not finished yet

Kim Leadbeater’s Bill has now passed all its stages in the Commons and will go to the Lords where it is likely to meet more scrutiny

Terminally ill people with less than six months to live will have right to choose procedure after approval from doctors and panel

The prime minister was spotted in the chamber just before the division on Kim Leadbeater’s bill, which passed by 23 votes