The original
intention was that the chamber was there to represent a particular class
interest, and to have at least equal power with the chamber representing the
rest of society. Indeed, at the outset,
it was the more powerful of the two houses – it isn’t referred to as the ‘upper’
house for nothing. Over a period, that
power has been whittled away, piece by piece, as the elected chamber asserted
its authority, and placed ever more restrictions on what the unelected lords
could do.
It now has a
role as a revising chamber not because anyone ever sat down and thought about
whether we really need a second chamber or what its role should be, but simply because
revising and delaying are the only powers which haven’t yet been stripped from
it. I’m far from convinced that any
rational process for designing a parliamentary system would ever produce
anything remotely resembling the House of Lords, nor assign to it the curious
vestige of powers which it exercises.
The problem
with all proposals for reform is that they never start from first principles;
the innate conservatism of the UK state means that they all start from what is
and try to propose different combinations of roles, responsibilities and
methods of selection. The very existence
of the second chamber is rarely challenged.
It should
be. The most rational way of dealing
with the House of Lords is to strip it of all its remaining powers. Plenty of countries manage with unicameral
parliaments, and there’s absolutely no reason why the UK couldn’t do the same.
1 comment:
Agree entirely (I think)!
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