New Mexico lawmakers advance assisted suicide bill
SANTA FE, New Mexico — A bill that would legalize medically assisted suicide for terminally ill patients in New Mexico passed its first hurdle this past week and is backed by the state's governor.
In a Democratic-led party-line vote, the Elizabeth Whitfield End-Of-Life Act passed the House Health and Human Services Committee 7-4. The bill is named for a former state district judge who testified in favor of physician-assisted suicide in 2017 and died of cancer in 2018.
It would allow terminally ill patients the right to administer a life-ending drug to themselves or request to be prescribed one, typically after a 48-hour waiting period.
The bill now heads to the House Judiciary Committee for an additional vote, and a parallel bill is running through the Democratic-controlled Senate.
Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham is likely to support the bill if approved by the state Legislature, spokesman Tripp Stelnicki said.
“As an advocate for most of her adult life for seniors and their independence ... that’s something that she has tended to support,” he said of the governor.
A version of the bill was introduced in the 2019 legislative session but failed to get a vote in the House.
Oregon became the first state with a right-to-die law in 1998. In 2019, Maine became the eighth.