Thursday, 16 February 2012

What to do with the House of Lords?


The United Kingdom's unique system of Government finds itself located in the center of London, in a little place called Westminster. So famous is our system of government, is now referred to as the "Westminster Model" when used by other countries. Dickens writes in Our Mutual Friend that "We Englishmen...are very proud of our constitution...it was bestowed upon us by providence. No other country is as lucky as us". While intended to be satirical in nature, on the contrary are now true in what they echo, i propose.

The epicenter of political activity occurs in the House of Parliament, which is perhaps the most famous legislative arena in the world (i say Legislative because the most famous Political Arena would be the White House, but i find that more administrative than a law creator that is Parliament.) It provides the make up of our bicameral legislature, that is we live our lives as a result of the decisions made in two chambers: the House of Commons and the House of Lords.

The House of Commons is an elected body, and is where the Prime Minister will be held accountable by the 648 MPs that sit in the Commons(The PM and Speaker of course excluded from the 650 seats in the Commons). Indeed, the Commons is favored as a political body because how it is elected, and hence in touch with the electorate when they hold MPs to account every 5 years at General Election. Decisions are constructed/made on the basis of a Party Manifesto which they were voted into government with, or as a reactionary measure. It is the epicenter of Party Politics, which as a result is the arena in which are Governed.

The House of Lords on the other hand, while just as important in the make up of our system, plays a supporting role. The Lords cannot create law. Parliament makes law, and very rarely the Commons on its own will make law, but this is very rare and tends only to relate to Bills which effect the Lords itself (hence it is not considered by the Lords).

The House of Lords is made up of 92 hereditary peers and just under 700 life peers (as well as 26 Lords Spiritual). They are all appointed to their posts, by means of either party nomination, independent Appointments Commission, or by virtue of Birth (Hereditary). Life Peers which make up the majority of the Lords Composition are said to be experts, hence their admission to the Lords.

The House of Lords however lives in a curious state of flux. All party's seem to agree that it should be replaced by a system of elected members, much like the United State's upper House, the US Senate. This is a bad idea, and here's why.

In order to best discuss my beliefs on the Lords, i'm going to break it down now into areas which need to be addressed.

  • Legitimacy - One of the most frequent of all criticisms of the Lords is its "legitimacy." I'd recommend taking a moment and considering what this means. In terms of what people think/want it to mean, it would be better referred to as being "democratically legitimate". As an unelected body the decisions it makes arguably should bear no importance because it is an unelected legislative chamber. As aforementioned, it does not "make law", instead uses its expertise (since the introduction of life peers) to amend, comment and debate on the Bills which originate from the Commons. The Lords may introduce a Bill, but it cannot "make law" on its own, it must go through the Commons in order to gain Royal Ascent, which in theory would give democratic legitimacy to any Bill that was introduced by the Lords. By extension, the Civil Service plays a key role in policy development, but they are unelected/anonymous in their role, does that make the Civil Service illegitimate?
  • Its Function - This follows on nicely from the last point. While not democratically legitimate, it IS legitimate in its output. Some, including myself, argue that its output legitimacy is justification for keeping the Lords as it is. Because the Lords have no constituency duties, this allows for much more time to get things done. As a result, debates can last longer and cover more ground. Further, because Lords have more time, they can sit on the relevant Select Committee (according to their area of expertise). The work of Lords Select Committees is indispensable in the process of Law making. In the last full length session to have data published (2008-2009 [2009-2010 shortened by general election]) the Lords tabled over three thousand amendments to Bills as a result of their Select Committees. The Scrutiny of Bills is a vital part of our democracy, and the Lords' role in it is wholly important.
  • Composition - Again, moving nicely on to its composition. As of the House of Lords Act 1999, the Lords now sits with only 92 hereditary peers. Formally, the Lords only sat by virtue of a birth right. Now, the vast majority are Life Peers, given their status as a Lord for Life on the basis of their achievement. Lord Rees for example, sits on the Science and Technology Select Committee by virtue of his expertise in the field of Astronomy and Astrophysics, having won prizes in his field and taught at Oxbridge. The idea is that if anyone has a justification to comment on Bills and suggest amendments, its the experts in the Lords rather than the Party Politicians in the Commons. Given the Lords is now made up of many Cross-Benchers, there is no longer an overall majority in the Upper House. This means that Governmnets passage through Parliament now has a hurdle in the way, called the Lords. In other words, in order for a Bill to get through the Lords, it must appeal to more than just its minority members to get through. (It is also important to note, that on issues of manifesto policy [the manifesto being the basis of which a Government is eleced] the Lords do not reject the bill. This is called the Sailsbury convention).
  • Weak Powers - realistically, the Lords cannot do much in terms of Governing. Ats biggest job is scrutiny, rather than initiation of Bills. They cannot reject manifesto Bills, hence their power really only lies in the rejection of any reactionary Bills it considers or in their delaying of a Bill. Bills (most of the time) will be struck down if they are not passed by the end of the session, hence if they delay a bill it might not pass. This is really their best hand in competing with the Commons.
In reforming/replacing the Lords, the is speculation that some form of Elected Senate is the best idea if we are to have continued use of a bicameral system. However, principle questions such as "what role would it play?", "would it rival the commons?" and "On what basis to people stand for election?". The "rivalry" question is the most important, where would it fit within our constitutional framework? If it continues to the be the "upper house" and gains democratically legitimate status, surely its powers (already weak) would have to be lowered even more considerably in order to confirm its status as a subordinate. Otherwise, Bills would bounce back and forth, with potential for a Power Struggle within Westminster?

I propose therefore that we keep the Lords as it is. We continue to allow the Lords to play the supporting role it has, and continues its vital scrutiny work. In a recent Seminar (with Lord Norton) we asked the question would you retain/reform/replace/remove the House of Lords. The same question was asked across three different 12 person groups. All but 1 voted for retain.

I welcome comments/questions on the matter, and again i ask the question: Retain, Reform, Replace or Remove?

10 comments:

  1. Surely as long as our political system claims to be democratic, we oughtn't have anyone unelected playing a role in legislation, no matter how small. While we may have "only 92 hereditary peers", that seems like too many. In fact just one person legislating by virtue of who their parents are would be too many. You also didn't mention the role that the Prime Minister plays in "recommending" life peers; David Cameron appointed more peers in one year than any post-war PM. There is definitely a problem when a Prime Minister can cram the Lords full of sympathetic friends and colleagues of his choice. He can even stick them in his cabinet, where they can play a role in policy-making which is far from passive. Look at Baroness Warsi. Excellent post by the way.

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    1. I say only 92 because they make up less than 10% of the Lords, which in the grand scheme of things isnt that many. It is worth mentioning that the 92 hereditary peers at the moment will not be passing on their peerage to their children. So in effect they themselves are life peers, then when they die a new "hereditary peer" (i.e. an upper class man/woman) will be appointed. It also worth mentioning that it has been commented that the 92 Hereditary peers exist so that further reform can take place (It was thought that if they got rid of them all at once the Lords would just remain a is and Parliament would be content with its own work).

      The Prime Minister will have created many life peers in order to address the balance of Party affiliated peers in the Lords. While it is accepted no party should have a majority, it is expected that they should have more Peers than any of the other party's so as to reflect the wishes of the electorate. Prior to the House of Lords Act 1999 there was no widespread appointing of peers because they are all hereditary. This is the first change in government since 1999 hence why its been record breaking, because its the first time a Government has redressed the balance in the Lords since 90% of the Lords became appointed. I hope that makes sense, i dont think i typed it well.

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    2. But again, 10% of the Lords being there, in the legislature, because they were born into it, is too many. As for there being more Peers from the PM's party to "reflect the wishes of the electorate", why not then make them elected? If election results are to play a part in the make-up of the Lords, let them do so properly, rather than in a way which can be abused by the Prime Minister.

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    3. I like the Lords. Granting discretion to politicians is bound to lead to excessive government spending and budget deficits with consequent high rates of inflation that act to transfer resources from the private to the public sector. This is not an attack on particular groups of politicians and bureaucrats but stems from the application of economic principles of maximization and self-interest to the democratic process. All governments are held to be myopic since rational politicians are concerned only with obtaining and retaining power. Thus, they choose policies that may be popular in the short-run, even if they have undesirable long-run consequences for the economy. It follows that governments should be constrained to follow rules that take into account the longer-term needs of the economy. Which requires a set of officials who are not elected and hence have no short term agenda

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    4. That's a good point, but I think the current proposal is for elected Lords to serve 15 year terms, so they'd think in much longer terms than MPs.

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    5. until it gets to the couple of years before they're up for re election

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    6. Yeah proposals for change in the Lords include 15 year terms, with a third of each of the Lords up for Election every five years.

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    7. Think for a moment as well, about if the Lords became elected, who would stand?

      Lords at present do not take a salary (expenses only) and as a result they hole other positions as a source of Income.

      If they became elected surely they would then have to become a full-time Lord so to speak. Which raises a number of issues:

      - Is the cost of 500+ Lords (reform i do believe also includes reduction in number of the Lords) justified?
      - Would "experts" who's scrutiny work is invaluable actually stand? I can't imagine top Surgeons standing to be elected as a Full-Time Lord. This would then in effect just create a Second House with Party Politicians, not a House for keeping the government in check, but a house for further Party Political attacks as the Commons is too frequently seen.

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    8. Full-time Lords sounds like a great idea, rather than the current state of affairs whereby the average attendance is something like 50%.

      If they no longer had second occupations then there would be less risk of special interest connections.

      "Experts" apparently only make up 11% of the Lords. Their input can be channeled through the committees system.

      Party Political attacks are systematic of the adversarial nature of British politics, and I agree that this should be curbed. But it seems clear that a system in which members of the legislature can be selected by the man in charge is democratically defective.

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  2. And Si, they won't be up for re-election, the proposal is for single terms of 15 years.

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