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The House of Lords

The House of Lords. By Baron Lazar, Esquire. Outline. Brief Background Current Structure & Functions Timeline of Reforms Current Reform Proposals Where are we now? Analysis Questions. Introductory thoughts…. The “best club in London”

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The House of Lords

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  1. The House of Lords By Baron Lazar, Esquire

  2. Outline • Brief Background • Current Structure & Functions • Timeline of Reforms • Current Reform Proposals • Where are we now? • Analysis Questions

  3. Introductory thoughts… • The “best club in London” • “The cure for admiring the House of Lords isto go and look at it.” Walter Bagehot, 1867 • “ The House of Lords, an illusion to which I have never been able to subscribe - responsibility without power, the prerogative of the eunuch throughout the ages.’’ – Tom Stoppard • Lords Reform goes to the heart of the debate about democracy: how do we decide the will of the people? • The House of Lords is an institution with a long and illustrious past, but a rather more uncertain future

  4. Unreformed Structure of the Lords • 755 members • Hereditary Peers – Title inherited (dying breed) • Life Peers – Appointed by the Queen on advice of PM. Usually due to distinguished service in politics or society. • Law Lords – Senior Judges (no longer) • Lords Spiritual – Senior bishops from the Church of England

  5. Other OppositionUKIP (3)Democratic Unionist Party (2)Plaid Cymru (2)Ulster Unionist Party (2)Green (1)Ind Lab (1)Ind L Dem (1)Lab Ind (1)L Dem Ind (1)OtherCrossbenchers (183)Non-affiliated(21) Lords Spiritual (25) HM Government     -Conservative Party (208)-Liberal Democrats (89)HM Most Loyal Opposition     -Labour Party (216)

  6. Functions of the Lords • Initiate Legislation, except money bills • Can delay legislation for up to a year (financial legislation for only a month) • Provide Expertise – Titles bestowed for achievement • Questioning - Regular Question Times for government ministers in the Lords • Scrutinize – a “second pair of eyes”. Lords makes around 2,000 amendments a year to legislation, nearly all of which are accepted • Debate controversial issues - death penalty, gay rights, etc. • Used to have Law Lords. Not since 2009. • No veto power

  7. Function: to slow or stymie ‘Elective Dictatorship’ • Term was coined by Lord Hailsham(aka Quintin Hogg, 1907-2011) in a public lecture. • Once in power an elected government is nearly always able to get its legislation passed by Parliament. • Westminster system means that a government will fall if defeated on a major vote of confidence. In consequence, party whips are able to ensure that the government’s legislative proposals are supported at every stage in the House of Commons. • PM and Cabinet effectively decide what will become law and Parliament nearly always rubber stamps the bills that come before it.

  8. Comparisons with Commons

  9. Timeline of Lords Reform • 1911: Parliament Act; the first major restrictions on the Lord’s power – Commons can pass money bills without Lords’ advice or consent. • 1949: Parliament Act; limits the delaying powers of Lords to 1 year • 1958: Women peers arrive • 1970s-80s: Labour party policy advocates abolition of Lords • 1992: Labour abandons abolition in favorof reform • 1999: Blair abolishes all but 92 hereditary peers • 2000: Wakeham Report recommends largely appointed chamber • 2001: White Paper • 2003: Queen’s speech advocated end to hereditary peers • 2007: White Paper • 2011: Lord Reform Bill published and debated

  10. The Wakeham Report • Lord Wakeham(Conservative MP in Hof C, retired as Lord in 1994, Director of Enron, now Chancellor of Brunel University) • Asked by Labour government to head Royal Commission to investigate possible reforms to Lords. • Report made public in January 2000. • 132 wide-ranging proposals. Its main recommendations were…

  11. The Wakeham Report, 2000 • Largely appointed House of 450-550members • independent commission to appoint members - removing PM patronage • Did not recommend an elected chamber • 15 year terms • 30% of members should be women • Fair representation of ethnic minorities • Broader religious representation • Small Number of regionally elected members

  12. 2001 White Paper • White Papers allow the Government an opportunity to gather feedback before it formally presents the policies as a Bill. • “A credible and effective second chamber is vital to the health of Britain's democracy... Our mission is to equip the British people with a Parliament and a constitution fit for the 21st century.” • Lords would remain subject to the pre-eminence of the Commons • Removal of 92 hereditary peers from Lords. • Greater representation of women and ethnic minorities. • 120 directly elected members to represent regions. • 120 independent members appointed by the Appointments Commission. • Large numbers of members appointed by political parties. • 2003, Lords and Commons debated the report. Results were…

  13. After this series of votes 

  14. 2007 White Paper • New White Paper following discussions of a cross-party working group convened by Jack Straw, Leader of Commons • Elected members +members appointed by a new Statutory Appointments Commission • Any elected element would be elected under a regional list system • All elections and appointments would take place on a 5-year cycle, with one third of the House admitted at each intake to a fixed 15-year non-renewable term • Prohibits Lords from seeking election to Commons before a minimum amount of time had elapsed after the expiry of their term as Lord • Gradual transition, with no life peers forced to retire, but with the possibility of a redundancy package should they choose to do so.

  15. Where are we now? • 2010 Lib-Dem Manifesto demanded a full elected Lords. • Conservative Manifesto demanded a mainly elected Lords. • 120 elected members • 30 appointed members • up to 21 bishops • Detailed proposals for Lords reform including a draft House of Lords Reform Bill were published on 17 May 2011. These include…

  16. Where are we now? • 300-member hybrid house, of which 80% are elected. • 20% would be appointed, and reserve space would be included for some Church of England bishops. • Single non-renewable term of 15 years. • Elections to the reformed Lords should take place at the same time as elections to the Commons. • Elected Members should be elected using proportional representation. • Independent Members will be appointed by the Queen after being suggested by the Prime Minister acting on advice of an Appointments Commission. • The current powers of the House of Lords would not change and the Commons shall retain its status as the primary House of Parliament.

  17. Analysis Questions • What does the British electorate think? • Overall, people support the House of Lords being replaced by an elected chamber: • 44% would prefer an mostly elected chamber • 32% a mixed elected and appointed chamber • 11% a chamber that was mostly appointed • Asked specifically about the proposal to make the Lords 80% elected: • 31% said this did not go far enough and the Lords should be entirely elected • 34% that the balance was about right • 10% that there should be a smaller elected element • 11% that there should be no elected element  • 52% of people said that while it was good idea, it should not be a priority at the moment given Britain’s other problems. 20% said the Lords works reasonably well and should be left alone. • Asked if there should be a referendum on the future of the Lords 55% of people said yes, 26% no …and how much should this matter?

  18. Analysis Questions • Does this tradition warrant preservation? If it ain’t broke… • If both Houses are wholly or largely elected, does Commons lose it’s primacy? • Balance of Power? • Gridlock of two elected Houses? • Shouldn’t expertise and achievement count for something in politics? • How big should the Lords be? 150? 300? 450? Does it matter?

  19. Analysis Questions • How should elected members be elected? PR? FPP SMDP? Party List? • What role should partisanship play in new Lords? • Does Lords have a natural and immutable Conservative bias? • Lords repeatedly voted against Labour Gov - defeated 97 times in 2001 • Why not just abolish the second House? Unicameral legislatures can work just fine (half of the world’s states are unicameral, as are all the devolved governments in the UK).

  20. Analysis Questions • What is most democratic and what weight should the implications on democracy bear? • "Electing the second chamber is not self-evidently the democratic option – by dividing accountability it can undermine the capacity of the people to hold government to account (since policies may emerge for which it is not directly responsible) and can sweep away the very benefits that the present system delivers.? --Lord Norton – March 2012 • “We in the House of Lords are never in touch with public opinion. That makes us a civilised body.” -- Oscar Wilde, A Woman of No Importance

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