While MPs are back on recess for party conferences, the House of Lords is still sitting till the end of today.
Currently, they are debating the controversial Assisted Dying Bill.
Last week, former prime minister Theres May called it an "assisted suicide bill" and said it "effectively says suicide is OK".
Speaking today, Labour peer Glenys Thornton said: "I was saddened last week by the noble Lady Baroness May speaking about this being a suicide bill.
"People have written to me in the last week, very distressed, and they say, 'we are not suicidal, we want to live, but we are dying, and we do not have the choice or ability to change that'.
"Assisted dying is not suicide."
Like others, she told her colleagues their job is to "scrutinise [the bill] further and improve it, if we need to do so".
Outside parliament, protesters once again gathered.
They have been a common sight in Westminster whenever the legislation is discussed.
Having passed initial Commons scrutiny, the bill will be debated and amended in the Lords before returning to MPs to consider.