Plantagenet Palliser - after 100 years, will Lords reform arrive?
Law and Rights

Plantagenet Palliser - after 100 years, will Lords reform arrive?


See the draft Bill together with Explanatory Notes.

It was the author Anthony Trollope (1815-1882) who invented the fictitious character Plantagenet Palliser who became Duke of Omnium and, even though he had to sit in the House of Lords, Prime Minister of a coalition government.  Palliser sought in vain to decimalise the currency but this reform eluded him.  It is now a century ago since the Parliament Act 1911 limited the powers of the House of Lords and stated in the Preamble:

"Whereas it is expedient that provision should be made for regulating the relations between the two Houses of Parliament:  And whereas it is intended to substitute for the House of Lords as it at present exists a Second Chamber constituted on a popular instead of hereditary basis, but such substitution cannot be immediately brought into operation:   ...."

A century later, the kind of reform indicated in 1911 has proved to be extremely elusive though, like Palliser, it has not necessarily been for the want of trying.  There was the Bryce Conference of 1917-18; the Parliament Act 1949 further limited the Lords' power, life peerages came with the Life Peerage Act 1958 (and enlivened the Lords), the Peerage Act 1963 permitted disclaimer of peerages; and the House of Lords Act 1999 removed some 654 out of 746 hereditary peers.  Then came the Wakeham report of 2000 followed by a Joint Committee on House of Lords Reform report of 2002 and various White Papers - notably that of 2007 - and now the coalition government's proposals.  Proposals for reform up to year 2000 are helpfully summarised here.

Rodney Brazier - (Professor of Constitutional Law, University of Manchester) - in his book "Constitutional Reform - Reshaping the British Political System" (OUP 3rd Ed)  refers to the "Second-Chamber Paradox" (chapter 5).  It is in this book that the analogy with Plantagenet Palliser appears.  Brazier argues that, on the one hand, our Parliament is enhanced by the presence of some people from outside the world of politics who bring their individual experience and expertise to bear.  Further, the House tends to look at legislation with "something approaching an impartial rigour" and the House is therefore a counterweight to the elective dictatorship.  On the other hand, a House without elected members is "anomalous and unrepresentative." 

The Coalition Government's proposals:

The coalition has presented a Draft Bill which will undergo pre-legislative scrutiny by a Joint Committee of both Houses.  The name "House of Lords" is retained for the time being - thus avoiding getting bogged down in argument over the name.  The key proposals are:
The Bill does not seek to alter the actual powers of the HL and the Parliament Acts 1911-49 arrangements would remain in place so that, if necessary, the Commons could enforce its will.  

STV is the government's preference for elections to the reformed HL and the White Paper contains detail on how this would operate.  The actual multi-member areas for elections will be determined at first by an independent committee of experts but the Electoral Commission will be required to review the areas after every third election - thus there could be 20 years between changes.  The Saint-Laguë formula will be used in the reviews.

The Draft Bill:  

This comprises 9 Parts - 68 clauses - and there are 9 Schedules.   Clause 1 sets out how the transition will occur under the government's preferred option.  When transition is complete the House would comprise 240 elected members, 60 appointed members, up to 12 Lords Spiritual and any Ministerial members. Clause 34(7) is particularly interesting in that it will give the Prime Minister power to determine the number of Ministerial members.  There appears to be no restriction on the maximum number.  Clause 2 is also interesting in that it makes it clear that nothing is intended to affect the status of the House of Lords as one of the two Houses of Parliament and nothing "affects the primacy of the House of Commons."  This seems to be the first time that the "primacy of the Commons" is stated in statute.

Explanatory Notes are included along with the White Paper and the draft Bill.


Will these proposals succeed?

For possible obstacles to reform see - Eight Obstacles on the road to Lords reform.    Also see - BBC 17th May. and The Guardian 18th May. 

Yet again, we are witnessing politicians all too eager to bring about constitutional reform which is probably more based on immediate political interests, such as perpetuating the coalition, rather than being based on what is best for the nation.  The House of Lords has carried out its task as a "revising Chamber" extremely effectively and has opposed government plans on many occasions.  This function is of vital importance and must not be neutered or swept away. 

Even after a wait of 100 years reform will, like the ideas of Plantagenet Palliser, probably prove to be as elusive as ever.




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