I doubt your doubt. It seems in contradiction to your belief that any issues with the assited dying bill will be sorted, and yet this won't.
The situations are completely different. In the case of assisted dying this is currently a criminal offence which can result in people being jailed. That potential legal sanction is so severe that it effectively prevents people who might otherwise consider assisted dying from doing so.
In the case of this potential new law, I'm struggling to see what direct legal sanction on a 12 year old (for example) could be legally justified that would be greater than the current sanctions that schools are able to apply (and are backed up by legal protection for schools if they do apply them under the existing Education and Inspections Act 2006). This allows schools to discipline pupils for breaches to behavioural policy but also permits phones to be confiscated for considerable amounts of time. The school where I am a trustee (and where my kids go/went) has a policy that allows a phone to be confiscated for several weeks for a third offence.
The school has a 'not seen and not heard' policy throughout the school day - and it works, not least because kids know that if they contravene the policy not only will they be disciplined but their phone won't be available to them for a considerable amount of time.
All this is already available to schools within the current statutory guidance and other legislations and the new guidance only came in less than a year ago. So I'm not sure what additional impact a new law would have in practice. My concern, and that of many schools, is that the legal sanction will be on the school, not on the phone user, with the new law not actually helping the school to make their space phone-free.
Any about the other proposals? As I asked in my previous post but you edited out for some reason.
The consent age one is a bit strange. I'm well aware that consent, in legal terms is context specific, so presumably at some point legislators determined that kids at age 13 were sufficiently mature to consent on their own in this context, while they might not be for some other things.
Going back to schools - this is a nightmare. As you have one year group (year
, which included a mix of 12 and 13 year olds. So some can consent themselves, while others cannot. A change to the law wouldn't alter this in principle, it would merely shift from year 8 to year 11 the year groups where you have some, but not all pupils, who can consent.