The party was founded in 2013 to bring attention to the need for voluntary assisted dyinglaw reform and to bring together advocates from the Dying with Dignity and Exit International movements. The immediate goal of the VEP was to make voluntary euthanasia a central issue at the September 2013 Federal election. In December 2019, the VEP's NSW branch voted overwhelmingly to become the NSW branch of the Reason Party, on the grounds that being a single issue political party was a liability, and the Reason party were established supporters of voluntary euthanasia. Reason party leader Fiona Patten also stated the merger made sense for Reason as they did not have a branch in NSW, where VEP was well established. However, the non-NSW states and the federal VEP remain active.
Executive committee
Professor Ranjan Ray, former President of the Western Australia Voluntary Euthanasia Society, was the first convenor of the Party, and was succeeded by Kerry Bromson in October 2014. Philip Nitschke, the founder of Exit International, was the Deputy Convenor until October 2016, followed by Kym Buckley, and Shayne Higson. The Party Secretaries have been Corey McCann, Sandi Steep, David Mahoney, Sue Inglis and Julie Hanley. The Party Treasurers have been Jane Stabb, Justin Templer and Sandi Steep.
Definitions
There is no universally agreed definition of "voluntary euthanasia". Terms like dying with dignity, physician-assisted dying, physician-assisted suicide and voluntary assisted dying are also used. The VEP regards voluntary euthanasia as involving a request by a terminally or incurably ill person for medical assistance to end his or her life painlessly and peacefully. A doctor may administer the medication or prescribe medication that the patient self-administers.
Election campaigns
The VEP participated in six Australian elections. They did not won any seats, though increased their percentage of votes at each re-contested election.
Federal
The VEP nominated seven candidates at the 2013 Australian federal election: six candidates for the Senate ; and a candidate for the House of Representatives seat of Solomon in the Northern Territory. Three of the candidates were terminally ill. The VEP received 21,854 first preference votes in the Senate, while the sole House of Representatives candidate received 597 votes. The VEP nominated seven candidates at the 2016 Australian federal election: six candidates for the Senate ; and a candidate for the House of Representatives seat of Menzies in Victoria. The VEP received 23,252 first preference votes in the Senate, while the sole House of Representatives candidate received 973 votes. The VEP did not run any candidates in the 2019 Australian federal election, rather they focused on canvasing the views of major candidates in key electorates.
The VEP stood sixteen candidates for the New South Wales Legislative Council in the 2015 New South Wales state election on 28 March 2015. The lead candidate was Shayne Higson. Higson began advocating for voluntary assisted dying legislation after her mother died from a brain tumour in 2012. The VEP received 40,710 votes. The VEP stood sixteen candidates for the New South Wales Legislative Council in the 2019 New South Wales state election on 23 March 2019. Shayne Higson resumed her role as lead candidate. The VEP received 46,971 votes. Higson finished in 26th place out of 364 candidates; seats were awarded to those who finished in the top 21 places.