When was the last time 56 new peers were appointed in one day?
Friday's list of new peers is extraordinary, both for its size and make-up.
When was the last time 56 new peers were appointed in one day? Sixteen Conservatives, nine Liberal Democrat, 29 Labour, one DUP and one Independent.
This at a time when the government is committed to cutting the cost of politics, and reducing the size of the Commons by 10%. So 65 democratically elected MPs are being replaced by 56 unelected, appointed peers.
And whatever happened to the promise in the coalition agreement to appoint new peers to bring the upper house more in line with votes at the last election? Today's list, with almost twice as many new Labour peers as Conservatives, (29 to 16), totally goes against that.
I was mocked when I suggested in this blog that the pledge in the original coalition agreement would require almost 200 new peerages.
With today's appointments it would now require well over 200 peers for the chamber to reflect the 2010 result, and that's on top of today's 56 new appointments.
Comment number 1.
At 28th May 2010, dennisjunior1 wrote:Michael:
My congrats to the newest Peers that were appointed...And, that's an amazing # of them in one day.
(d)
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Comment number 2.
At 28th May 2010, CAWSW wrote:Michael,
HOUSE OF LORDS
I was once fortunate to include the late Rt. Hon. Lord Aberdare KBE as
one of my personal referees. I used to visit him often in the House,
and we would often discuss electoral and House of Lords reform.
My concern here is that yet another election, with yet another voting
system will be introduced, causing further confusing and apathy.
The House of Lords should be reflective of modern-day Britain, but
should not place any restrictions on hereditary peers standing for
election, either as a Member of the House of Lords, or, still using
their title, as a Member of the House of Commons.
If we are to maintain a bicameral parliament then any reform needs to
address the following points:
• There should be no more elected Members of the House of Lords
than there are in the House of Commons;
• If we are to have an elected, or partially elected, second
chamber, then which House has supremacy?
• Any changes will need to either remove the Lords Spiritual,
all of whom are from the established church, or include the leaders of
all other multi-faiths (as recognised by the census). This would mean
the inclusion of the disestablished churches, as well as other faiths,
or non-faiths, such as the Humanists;
• If one stands for election to the House of Lords, does one on
election become a Lord? Is this then a title for life, or just for the
duration of Parliament? And can we really expect people like Lord Alan
Sugar wanting to stand for elections?
My suggestion is quite radical, and as a traditionalist who would much
rather have kept the pre-New Labour reforms that, unceremoniously,
de-robed the hereditary peers, I find it surprising that I make it!
Abolish the House of Lords! This would not stop anyone with a
hereditary or life peerage standing for election to either the House of
Commons or the second Chamber – the prefix Lord or Lady becoming a
title like Sir or Dame, rather than bestowing an automatic right to
being a parliamentarian.
MPs would remain as the main House, and those elected to the second
chamber would become Members of the Second Chamber (MSC), with amending
powers only. Such a radical move would also eliminate the likes of
unelected Lords Mandelson and Adonis not being answerable to the House
of Commons.
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Comment number 3.
At 28th May 2010, berpots wrote:How can John Prescott search his conscience and accept a peerage! It is a disgusting insult to us all, when he has been so dismissive of "us & them" politics? , and so (previouisly proud of his "working class" roots. So much for all that!!!
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Comment number 4.
At 28th May 2010, stevie wrote:you appoint all these peers to safeguard your position as it looks like stormy weather ahead so make sure you have the 55 per cent in order, make sure it's a fixed parliament and crowd the Lords with all your mates...fantastic...cannot fail..exactly the way Hitler and Musso did it!
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Comment number 5.
At 28th May 2010, MrRoderickLouis wrote:A REFORMED, BUT NOT ELECTED HOUSE OF LORDS COULD SERVE THE UK's CITIZENRY CAPABLY
For comparison, the United States, with a 310 million population (roughly 5 times the UK's 60 Million population) has a 'Senate'- that country's equivalent to the UK's House of Lords- has only 100 elected, voting members.
The UK's Lords has close to 8 times that many, at almost 760 un-elected, voting members....
A House of Lords consisting of even numbers of 'sitting' (IE 'active') hereditary and life peer members- perhaps 75 of each + no more than a dozen each of 'sitting', but ex-officio, Law & Bishops Lords for a total of about 225 including the Lords' speaker surely could function more capably than the present enormous, lacking-in-transparent-function smodel...
The many hundreds upon hundreds of life peer and hereditary Lords in the UK could take turns being impartially rotated into and out of the House of Lords to serve 10-year or longer (paid) terms as 'sitting' (IE 'active') Lords... while retaining their titles when non-sitting (IE, 'inactive' and un-paid) Lords...
All national UK political parties ought to commit to supporting legislation mandating the facilitation of an extensively advertised & promoted "national dialogue on UK governance"... to be facilitated/overseen by an impartial body...
A priority-objective of any "national dialog on UK governance" could be a written constitution that defined explicitly- in a 'UK Charter of Rights & Freedoms'- not only the rights of ALL UK citizens/residents & the obligations & duties of the UK's various levels of government, but also the UK's political structures- such as local councils, authorities and the Commons' & Lords' sizes, powers, method of election/appointment/etc- & what limits, if any, there are to any of the UK's component parts (IE N Ireland, Wales, Scotland) from declaring unilateral "independence"....
__________________
Roderick V. Louis,
Vancouver, BC, Canada
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Comment number 6.
At 28th May 2010, MaxWax wrote:Maybe numbers are not important if they are going to abolish them in the next few years?
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Comment number 7.
At 30th May 2010, Smeagol wrote:This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the house rules. Explain.
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Comment number 8.
At 30th May 2010, stevie wrote:fridays NN is mostly a dissapointment...trying to shuffle in too many items in 28 minutes and end up giving not enough attention to any of them better to give the whole thing over to Newsnight review which is what you reall hanker for yourselves....
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Comment number 9.
At 31st May 2010, stevie wrote:prescott has to do what Pauline wants...what a travesty when a man who is against something all his life like the Lords, a bastion of privilige and systematic of the rich over the poor he chooses to follow all the other champagne socialsts and ensure that things will never ever change in this country...
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Comment number 10.
At 1st Jun 2010, Matt wrote:A HOUSE OF LORDS REFORM PROPOSAL
The chief aim of my proposals is to make a transition to a different form of second chamber, on the threefold principle that:
a) Such a transition needs to be a reasonably painless, evolutionary process.
b) Such a transition needs to produce a more effective, 'slim-line' revising chamber.
c) Such a transition needs to produce a chamber which contains a more interesting and varied mix of members.
Taking these three principles together, we need to take steps which will, so to speak, throw out the bath-water, but not the baby ... and, to stretch the analogy a little, create space for some fresh water, too:
Step One:
Retain current arrangements for Hereditaries and Bishops. Automatically grant a life-peerage to all members of the supreme court ; who become entitled to sit in the Lords (as ‘Law Lords’) upon their retirement from the court.
Step Two:
A Bill placing a limit on the total number of peers there can be (whether sitting in the Lords or not), at any one time. I suggest 1750 people.
Step Three:
The Life Peers to select 25% of their numbers to sit in the Lords (the remaining 'pool' of Life Peers could, like the pool of Hereditaries, be voted back into the chamber, upon the death of a sitting Life Peer).
Step Four:
100 New Category Peers, selected entirely at random, maybe by a form of national lottery, phased in 20 per year. Replaced one at a time, on the death of one of their number.
Democracy is good, but so also is a link with our history as a nation (which the already much-depleted 'Lords Spiritual' help to provide). Our main focus should be on the house continuing to do what it does best, and strengthening and improving upon those things. There is no public clamour now for the complete removal of the Hereditaries. It is the number of Life Peers which is becoming unwieldy. Meanwhile, the introduction of Random 'Jury' Peers would be a simple and direct way of engaging the general public in parliamentary business.
It would be good to get a bit more 'randomism' in public life. What a delightful thing it would be, and what a boost to public interest in politics, if, say, the local bin-man was suddenly ennobled, under my system. Certainly, the presence of these 'Jury Peers' would go a long way to making the 'feel' of the second chamber much less elitist.
For clarity, a Lords 'Lottery Winner' would have so many days (I'm open to suggestions on how many) to accept, in writing, the offer of a seat. Obviously, those who were going to find it too disruptive to their lives would most likely not bother to respond, which would be taken as declining the offer ~ with the offer passed on to the next on the list.
New entrants of this sort could well be over-awed to begin with, but I think they would soon get into the swing of things ... and before long, they would find themselves mentoring the next batch of entrants.
The possibility of dangerous/criminal/extreme types getting in there should be covered by clear proceedural rules in the house, and the law of the land, as and when any problems arise. I wouldn't want there to be any pre-vetting as such, because the virtue of the random intake is it's potential to bring forward some real free thinkers. This free thinking is enshrined by life-long occupation of the seat.
The opt-out that I mentioned earlier assumes that those who take their seats will want to participate. However, it does not ask anyone in advance about whether they would want to get involved, due to the old adage of 'those who seek power shouldn't be given it'. Thus random allocation comes as more of a pleasant surprise.
A sufficient (though not extravagant) salary would also need to be agreed upon, so that poorer people are not immediately put off ... but this again is a detail to be discussed. My hope is that the 'Jury Peers' would come into their own, over time, as guardians of the constitution, of basic liberties, and of common standards of decency ... They would begin as absolute beginners, and end their lives as national treasures.
Some idle musings now on what the approximate 'shape' (using slightly out-dated wikipedia figures!) of The Lords would be, following my slimming down of the number of Life Peers ~
Conservative: 83 (35 Life, 48 Hereditary)
Cross: 71 (38 L, 33 H)
Labour: 54 (52 L, 2 H)
Lib Dems: 22 (17 L, 5 H)
UKIP: 2 (1 L, 1 H)
Significantly, the current (2010) Coalition Government gets a much better 'showing' here ~ but by a process of reduction, rather than addition.
Total: 232 (117 for majority vote, currently Cons plus Lib Dems = 105; which means support also needed from 12 cross-benchers).
Party Percentages:
Conservative: 35.8%
Cross: 30.6%
Labour: 23.3%
Lib Dems: 9.5%
UKIP: 0.9%
[Comparison To Commons:]
[Conservative: 46.9%]
[Labour: 39.7%]
[Lib Dems: 8.8%]
[Others: 4.6 %]
First Intake Of Random ('Jury') Peers: 20
Bishops: 25
Law Lords: 22
Total added on: 69
Total Life Peers: 143
Total Hereditary Peers: 91 (1 replacement pending)
Total House: 301
% Life Peers: 47.5 %
% Hereditary: 30.2 %
% First Intake Jury: 6.6 %
% Bishops: 8.3 %
% Law: 7.3 %
In Sweden, a 'Council on Legislation' considers:
1. the manner in which the draft law relates to the fundamental laws (i.e. Sweden's written and entrenched Constitution) and the legal system in general;
2. the manner in which the different provisions of the draft law relate to one another;
3. the manner in which the draft law relates to the requirements of the rule of law;
4. whether the draft law is so framed that the resulting act of law may be expected to satisfy the stated purposes of the proposed law;
5. what problems are likely to arise in applying the act of law.
I think all of those considerations could be usefully discussed by the Law Lords (and other peers with a legal background).
I think it unlikely that the Law Lords would want to do much voting in the divisions ~ this could be something for a Lords committee to keep an eye on.
I would also like to see a gradual movement towards one written constitution; which could incorporate those five key points.
Upon the completion of a written constitution, I would want any future alterations to that constitution to require the consent of both houses (maybe at a higher threshold than 50% plus 1).
On a final side point, it might be healthy to introduce a check-and-balance to the hereditary monarchy, by requiring the next in line to the throne to secure the approval of both houses, before becoming Head Of State. In the (highly unlikely) event of this approval not being granted, the next person along in line to the throne would go forward in the same way.
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