The Mental Health Bill completed its passage through the House of Lords last week with peers defeating the government on six key areas of the legislation (see Six Key changes made to the bill by peers).
Now the focus moves to the Commons, where health minister Rosie Winterton has vowed to overturn the amendments, claiming peers had "seriously weakened" the government's plans to protect patients and the public.
Although the opposition parties said they would back the peers' changes it may prove difficult to garner enough rebel Labour MPs to block the government.
Mental Health Alliance chair Andy Bell said he hoped enough Labour MPs would see it as an "issue of conscience not party politics".
Shadow health minister Tim Loughton said: "The battle is hotting up and we will be going full pelt to make sure the amendments from the lords prevail."
The government is expected to offer several compromises in the Commons, such as including principles protecting people's rights in the bill's code of practice and improving access to advocates for detained patients.
Winterton's criticisms of the Lords amendments drew a sharp response from Liberal Democrat peer Lord Carlile, who chaired the scrutiny committee that reviewed the 2004 draft Mental Health Bill.
He said: "If she had listened to the debates, she would have heard evidence from cross-party peers, with wide-ranging professional expertise, that nothing in the bill will lead to the prevention of a single murder."
Six key changes made to the bill by peers (back)
● Compulsory community treatment would be restricted to patients who would otherwise be in and out of hospital, rather than anyone who had been sectioned.
● Detained children would be placed in age-appropriate accommodation.
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