Clegg announces plans to reduce and revamp House of Lords

LONDON – The huge and centuries-old House of Lords will be cut in size and replaced by a wholly or mainly elected second chamber…

LONDON – The huge and centuries-old House of Lords will be cut in size and replaced by a wholly or mainly elected second chamber under plans announced by deputy British prime minister Nick Clegg yesterday.

First elections to the new body could take place as early as 2015, with around 300 members serving 15-year terms, down from around 800 members now, Mr Clegg said.

He hoped the proposals would enjoy broad support and avoid the fate of previous failed attempts to reform the unelected House. “While we know what we want to achieve, we are open-minded about how we get there. Clearly, our fixed goal is greater democratic legitimacy for but we will be pragmatic in order to achieve it,” he said.

Mr Clegg is still smarting from the national rebuff he suffered in a national referendum this month when the public overwhelmingly rejected his plans on voting reform.

READ MORE

Reform of the Lords is a long-standing goal of Mr Clegg’s Liberal Democrats, junior partners in the ruling coalition.

Efforts to change the Lords have proceeded at a glacial pace since 1911, when the chamber lost its ability to veto legislation agreed by elected MPs in the House of Commons.

The last major reform came in 1999, when most of the peers who had inherited their places were swept away, leaving a rump of 90 hereditary members.

The current 790 members of the House of Lords gained their seats because of their aristocratic birth or because they are Church of England bishops. Some are nominated by political parties and others are recommended by an appointments committee.

Under the government’s proposals, 80 per cent of the new chamber’s members would be elected and 20 per cent appointed, although the plans also list an option for a wholly elected body.

Church of England bishops would continue to be members, but their numbers would be cut to 12 from 26.

Opponents of the proposals say the House of Lords, as a largely appointed chamber, brings an expertise and diversity that would be lost in an elected and more politicised body. Some MPs are concerned an elected upper chamber would claim more rights to amend and reject legislation from the House of Commons. – (Reuters)