Scotland’s Parliament is deciding whether to legalize assisted dying for terminally ill adults, in a vote that could make it a first in the U.K. Lawmakers will get a free vote, so the result is hard to predict. The bill would let adults with six months or less to live request help to end their lives. Two doctors would have to confirm terminal illness and mental capacity. Sponsor Liam McArthur urged lawmakers to support the bill on compassionate grounds. Opponents say disabled, elderly, ill and depressed people could be pressured to end their lives. A similar bill that would legalize assisted dying in England and Wales is currently bogged down in the British Parliament in London.