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- This article is about the British House of Lords. For the historical Irish body, see Irish House of Lords.
The House of Lords is a component of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, which also includes the Sovereign and the House of
Commons. The House of Lords is an unelected body, consisting of 26 senior clerics of the Church of England (the "Lords Spiritual"), as well as 669 members of the Peerage (the "Lords Temporal"). Lords Spiritual serve as long as they continue to occupy their ecclesiastical
positions, but Lords Temporal serve for life. Members of the House of Lords are known as "Lords of Parliament".
The House of Lords originated in the 14th century and has been in almost
continuous existence since. It was abolished in 1649 by the revolutionary government that
came to power during the English Civil War, but was restored in
1660. The House of Lords (the "Upper
House") was once more powerful than the elected House of Commons (the "Lower
House"). Since the 19th century, however, the powers of the House of
Lords have been steadily declining; now, the Upper House is far weaker than its parliamentary counterpart. Under the Parliament Act 1911, most legislation passed by the House of Commons
can be delayed, but cannot be rejected, by the House of Lords. Reforms were enacted under the House of Lords Act 1999, which removed the automatic
hereditary right of many peers to sit in the Upper House. Additional reforms are contemplated by the current Labour Government,
but have not been passed into law.
In addition to performing legislative functions, the House of Lords also holds judicial powers: it constitutes the highest
court of appeal for most cases in the United Kingdom. The judicial functions of the House of Lords are not performed by the whole Chamber,
but rather by a group of members with legal experience, who are known as "Law Lords". The House of Lords is not the only court of last resort in the United Kingdom; in some cases, that role is fulfilled
by the Privy Council.
The full, formal style of the House of Lords is: The Right Honourable The Lords Spiritual and Temporal of the United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland in Parliament Assembled. The House of Lords, like the House of Commons, meets
in the Palace of Westminster.
History
Parliament developed from the council that advised the King during mediæval times. This royal council came to be composed of
ecclesiastics, noblemen, and representatives of the counties (afterwards, representatives of the boroughs as well). The first Parliament is often considered to be
the "Model Parliament" (held in 1295), which included archbishops, bishops, abbots, earls,
barons, and representatives of the shires and boroughs. The power of Parliament grew slowly, changing as the strength of the
monarchy grew or declined. For example, during much of the reign of Edward II (1307–1327), the nobility was supreme, the Crown weak, and the shire and borough representatives entirely powerless. In
1322, the authority of Parliament was for the first time recognised not simply by custom or
royal charter, but by an authoritative statute, passed by Parliament itself. Further developments occurred during the reign of
Edward II's successor, Edward III. Most importantly, it
was during this King's reign that Parliament clearly separated into two distinct chambers: the House of Commons (consisting of
the shire and borough representatives) and the House of Lords (consisting of the senior clergy and the nobility). The authority
of Parliament continued to grow, and, during the early fifteenth century, both Houses exercised powers to an extent not seen
before. The Lords were far more powerful than the Commons, due to the great influence of the aristocrats and prelates of the
realm.
The power of the nobility suffered a relapse due to the civil wars of the late fifteenth century, known as the Wars of the Roses. Much of the nobility was either decimated on the
battlefield or executed for participation in the war, and many aristocratic estates were lost to the Crown. Moreover, feudalism was dying, and the feudal armies controlled by the barons became obsolete.
Hence, the Crown easily re-established its absolute supremacy in the realm. The domination of the Sovereign continued to grow
during the reigns of the Tudor monarchs in the sixteenth century. The
Crown was at the height of its power during the reign of Henry VIII (which lasted from 1509 to 1547).
The House of Lords remained more powerful than the House of Commons, but the Lower House did continue to grow in influence,
reaching its zenith in relation to the House of Lords during the middle seventeenth century. Conflicts between the King and the
Parliament (for the most part, the House of Commons) ultimately led to the English Civil War during the 1640s. In 1649, after the defeat and execution of King
Charles I, a republic (the Commonwealth of
England) was declared, but the nation was truly a dictatorship under Oliver Cromwell. The House of Lords relapsed into a largely powerless body, with Cromwell and his
supporters in the Commons dominating the Government. On 19 March 1649, the House of
Lords was abolished by an Act of Parliament, which declared that "The Commons of England [find] by too long experience that the
House of Lords is useless and dangerous to the people of England." The House of Lords did not assemble again until the Convention Parliament met in 1660 and the monarchy was restored. It returned to its former position as the more powerful branch of
Parliament—a position it would occupy until the nineteenth century.
The nineteenth century was marked by several changes to the House of Lords. The House, once a body that included only about
fifty members, had been greatly enlarged by the liberality of George III and his successors in creating peerages. The individual influence of a Lord of
Parliament was thus diminished. Moreover, the power of the House as a whole experienced a decrease, whilst that of the House of
Commons grew. Particularly notable in the development of the Lower House's superiority was the Reform Bill Crisis of 1832. The electoral system of the House of Commons was not, at the time, democratic but
antediluvian: property qualifications greatly restricted the size of the electorate, and the boundaries of many of the
constituencies had not been changed for centuries. Entire cities such as Manchester were not represented by a single individual in the House of Commons, but the eleven voters of
Old Sarum retained their ancient right to elect two Members of Parliament. A
small borough was susceptible to bribery, and was often under the control of a patron, whose nominee was guaranteed to win an
election. Some aristocrats were patrons of numerous "pocket boroughs",
and therefore controlled a considerable part of the membership of the House of Commons.
When, in 1831, the House of Commons passed a Reform Bill to correct some of these
anomalies, the House of Lords rejected the proposal. The popular cause of reform, however, was not abandoned by the ministry,
despite a second rejection of the bill in the Lords in 1832. The Prime Minister, Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey, then advised the King to overwhelm the opposition to the
bill in the House of Lords by creating about eighty new pro-Reform peers. William IV originally baulked at the proposal, which effectively threatened the opposition
of the House of Lords, but at length relented. Before the new peers were created, however, the Lords who opposed the bill
admitted defeat, and abstained from the vote, allowing the passage of the bill. The crisis damaged the political influence of the
House of Lords, but did not altogether end it. Over the course of the century, however, the power of the Upper House experienced
further erosion, and the Commons gradually became the stronger branch of Parliament.
The status of the House of Lords returned to the forefront after the election of a Liberal Government in 1906. In 1908, the Government under Herbert Henry Asquith introduced a number of social welfare programmes, which, together with an expensive arms race with Germany, had forced the Government to seek more
funding in the form of tax increases. In 1909, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, David Lloyd George, introduced the "People's Budget", which proposed a
new tax targeting wealthy landowners. The unpopular measure, however, failed in the heavily Conservative House of Lords. Having
made the powers of the House of Lords a primary campaign issue, the Liberals were re-elected in January 1910. Asquith then proposed that the powers of the House of Lords be severely curtailed. Proceedings on the bill
were briefly interrupted by the death of King Edward VII, but were soon recommenced under the new monarch, George V. After fresh elections in December
1910, the Asquith Government secured the passage of a bill to curtail the powers of the House of Lords. The Prime Minister
proposed, and the King agreed, that the House of Lords could be flooded by the creation of five hundred new Liberal peers if it
failed to pass the bill. (This was the same device used earlier to force the Upper House to consent to the passage of the Reform
Act 1832.) The Parliament Act 1911 soon came into effect, destroying
the House of Lords' power to reject most bills. Money Bills (bills that dealt solely with matters related to revenue and public
expenditures, such as the Budget) could be delayed by the House of Lords for no more than one month, and most other bills for no
more than three parliamentary sessions or two calendar years. The Parliament Act 1911 was not meant to be a permanent solution;
rather, more comprehensive reforms were planned. Neither party, however, pursued the matter with much enthusiasm, and the House
of Lords remained primarily hereditary. In 1949, the Parliament Act was slightly modified,
so that the delaying power of the House of Lords with respect to most bills was reduced from three sessions or two years to two
sessions or one year.
In 1958, the predominantly hereditary nature of the House of Lords was changed by the
Life Peerages Act 1958, which authorised the creation
of life baronies, with no numerical limits. In 1968, the Labour Government of Harold Wilson attempted to reform the House of Lords by introducing a system
under which hereditary peers would be allowed to remain in the House and take part in debate, but would be unable to vote. This
plan, however, was defeated in the House of Commons by a combination of traditionalist Conservatives (such as Enoch Powell) and Labour members who advocated the outright abolition of the Upper
House (such as Michael Foot). When Michael Foot attained the leadership of
the Labour Party, abolition of the House of Lords became a part of the party's agenda; under Neil Kinnock, however, a reformed Upper House was instead proposed. In the meantime, the creation of
hereditary peerages (except for members of the Royal Family) has been entirely arrested, with the exception of three creations
during the administration of the Conservative Margaret Thatcher
in the 1980s.
The Labour Party's return to power in 1997 under Tony Blair finally heralded the reform of the House of Lords. The Blair Government introduced legislation to
remove all hereditary peers from the Upper House as the first step in Lords reform. As a part of a compromise, however, it agreed
to permit ninety-two hereditary peers to remain until the reforms are complete. The hereditary peers were removed under the
House of Lords Act 1999 (see below for its
provisions).
Since then however, reform has stalled. The Wakeham Commission proposed introducing a 20% elected element to the Lords, but this plan was widely
criticised. A Joint Committee was established in 2001 to resolve the
issue, but it reached no conclusion and instead gave Parliament seven options to choose from (fully appointed, twenty per cent
elected, forty per cent elected, fifty per cent elected, sixty per cent elected, eighty per cent elected, and fully elected). In
a confusing series of votes in February 2003 all of these options were defeated although
the eighty per cent elected option fell by just three votes. MPs favouring outright abolition voted against all the options. New
peers, therefore, are only created by appointment to the house.
The Labour Party now intends to introduce reform early in the next Parliament, although they are yet to state exactly what
system they will be proposing. It is understood they may be inclined to support Billy Bragg's Secondary Mandate system. The
Conservative Party favour an eighty per cent elected Second Chamber, while the Liberal Democrats are calling for a fully elected
Senate. Elect the Lords is
a new cross-party campaign initiative that has been set up to make the case for a predominantly elected Second Chamber in the run
up to the general election.
Lords Spiritual
Members of the House of Lords who sit by virtue of their ecclesiastical offices are known as Lords Spiritual. Formerly, the
Lords Spiritual comprised a majority in the House of Lords, including the Church of England's archbishops, diocesan bishops, abbots, and priors. After 1539, however, only the archbishops and bishops continued to
attend, for the Dissolution of the
Monasteries suppressed the positions of abbot and prior. In 1642, during the English
Civil War, the Lords Spiritual were excluded altogether, but they returned under the Clergy Act 1661. The number of Lords
Spiritual was further restricted by the Bishopric of Manchester Act 1847, and by later acts. Now, there can be no more than
twenty-six Lords Spiritual, always including the five most important ecclesiastics of the Church: the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Archbishop of York, the Bishop of London, the Bishop of Durham, and
the Bishop of Winchester. Membership of the House of Lords
also extends to the twenty-one next-most senior diocesan bishops of the Church of England.
The Church of Scotland is not represented by any Lords
Spiritual; being a Presbyterian institution, it has no archbishops or
bishops. The Church of Ireland did obtain representation in the
House of Lords after the union of Ireland and Great Britain in 1801. Of the Church of Ireland's ecclesiastics, four (one
archbishop and three bishops) were to sit at any one time, with the members rotating at the end of every parliamentary session
(which normally lasted approximately one year). The Church of Ireland, however, was disestablished in 1871, and ceased to be represented by Lords Spiritual. The same is true for the Church in Wales which was disestablished in 1920. The current Lords
Spiritual, therefore, only represent the Church of England.
Lords Temporal
Since the Dissolution of the Monasteries, the Lords Temporal has been the most numerous group in the House of Lords.
Originally, the Lords Temporal included several hereditary peers (that is, those whose peerages may be inherited), who ranked
variously as dukes, marquesses, earls, viscounts, barons, and lords of Parliament. Such hereditary
dignities are created by the Crown, in modern times on the advice of the Prime Minister of the day. Reforms enacted in 1999 (see
above) caused several hundred hereditary peers to lose their seats in the House of Lords. The House of Lords Act 1999 provides
that only ninety-two individuals may continue to sit in the Upper House by virtue of hereditary peerages. Two hereditary peers
remain in the House of Lords because they hold hereditary offices connected with Parliament: the Earl Marshal and the Lord Great Chamberlain. Of the remaining ninety hereditary peers in the House of Lords, fifteen are
elected by the whole House. Seventy-five hereditary peers are chosen by fellow hereditaries in the House of Lords, grouped by
party. The number of peers to be chosen by a party reflects the proportion of hereditary peers that belongs to that party (see
current composition below). When an elected hereditary peer dies, a by-election is
held, with a variant of the Alternative Vote system being used. If
the recently deceased hereditary peer was elected by the whole House, then so is his or her replacement; a hereditary peer
elected by a specific party is replaced by a vote of elected hereditary peers belonging to that party (whether elected as part of
that party group or by the whole house).
The Lords Temporal also include the Lords of Appeal in Ordinary, a group of individuals appointed to the House of Lords so
that they may exercise its judicial functions. Lords of Appeal in Ordinary, more commonly known as Law Lords, were first
appointed under the Appellate
Jurisdiction Act 1876. They are selected by the Prime Minister, but are formally appointed by the Sovereign. A Lord of Appeal
in Ordinary must retire at the age of seventy, or, if his or her term is extended by the Government, at the age of seventy-five;
after reaching such an age, the Law Lord cannot hear any further legal cases. The number of Lords of Appeal in Ordinary
(excluding those who are no longer able to hear cases due to age restrictions) is limited to twelve, but may be changed by
statutory instrument. Lords of Appeal in Ordinary
traditionally do not participate in political debates, so as to maintain judicial independence. Lords of Appeal in Ordinary hold
seats the House of Lords for life, remaining members even after reaching the retirement age of seventy or seventy-five. The
largest group of Lords Temporal, and indeed of the whole House, are life peers. Life peers with seats in the House of Lords rank
only as barons or baronesses, and are created under the Life Peerages Act 1958. Like all other peers, life peers are created by the Sovereign, who acts on
the advice of the Prime Minister. By convention, however, the Prime Minister allows leaders of other parties to select some life
peers so as to maintain a political balance in the House of Lords. Moreover, some non-party life peers (the number being
determined by the Prime Minister) are nominated by an independent House of Lords Appointments Commission. If an hereditary peer
also holds a life peerage, he or she remains a member of the House of Lords without a need for an election. In many historical
instances, some peers were not permitted to sit in the Upper House. When Scotland united with England to form Great Britain in
1707, it was provided that the Scottish hereditary peers would only be able to elect sixteen representative peers to sit in the
House of Lords; the term of a representative was to extend until the next general elections. A similar provision was enacted in
respect of Ireland when that kingdom merged with Great Britain in 1801; the Irish peers were allowed to elect twenty-eight
representatives, who were to retain office for life. Elections for Irish representatives ended in 1922, when most of Ireland
became an independent state; elections for Scottish representatives ended with the passage of the Peerage Act 1963, under which all Scottish peers obtained seats in the
Upper House.
Qualifications
Several different qualifications apply for membership of the House of Lords. Firstly, no person may sit in the House of Lords
if under the age of twenty-one. Furthermore, only citizens of the United Kingdom, of a British overseas territory, of a nation that belongs to the Commonwealth, or of the Republic of
Ireland may sit in the House of Lords. These restrictions were introduced by the British Nationality Act 1981, but were previously far more stringent: under the Act of Settlement 1701, only natural-born subjects were
qualified.
Additionally, some bankruptcy-related restrictions apply to members of the Upper House. A person may not sit in the House of
Lords if he or she is the subject of a Bankruptcy Restrictions Order (applicable in England and Wales only), or if he or she is
adjudged bankrupt (in Northern Ireland), or if his or her estate is sequestered (in Scotland). A final restriction bars an
individual convicted of high treason from sitting in the House of Lords
until completing his or her full term of imprisonment. An exception applies, however, if the individual convicted of high treason
receives a full pardon. Note that an individual serving a prison sentence for an offence other than high treason is not
automatically disqualified.
Finally, some qualifications apply only in the case of the Lords of Appeal in Ordinary. No person may be created a Lord of
Appeal in Ordinary unless he or she has either held "high judicial office" for two years, or has been a practising barrister for fifteen years. The term "high judicial office" encompasses membership of
the Court of Appeal of England
and Wales, of the Inner House of the Court of Session
(Scotland), or of the Court of Appeal in Northern Ireland.
Women were formerly ineligible to sit in the House of Lords, even if they held peerages in their own right. It was only in
1958 that women were admitted to the House of Lords; the Life Peerages Act passed in that
year granted seats to all life peeresses. Hereditary peeresses, however, continued to be excluded until the passage of the
Peerage Act 1963. Since the passage of the House of Lords Act 1999, hereditary peeresses remain eligible for election to the
Upper House. All women in the House of Lords are amongst the Lords Temporal; the Church of England does not presently permit the
consecration of female archbishops or bishops, though this issue is currently under consideration, with many observers expecting
female bishops in the near future.
The practice has also emerged of appointing the Chief Rabbi to the House,
currently this is Dr Jonathan Sacks.
Officers
Unlike the House of Commons, the House of Lords does not elect its own Speaker; rather, the ex officio presiding
officer is the Lord Chancellor (as of 2005, The Rt Hon. The Lord Falconer of Thoroton). The Lord Chancellor is not only
the Speaker of the House of Lords, but also a member of the Cabinet; his or her department, formerly the Lord Chancellor's
Department, is now called the Department for Constitutional Affairs. In addition, the Lord Chancellor is the head
of the judiciary of England and Wales, serving as the President of the Supreme Court of Judicature. Thus, the Lord Chancellor is a part of all three branches of
Government: the legislative, the executive, and the judicial. In June 2003, the Blair
Government announced its intention to abolish the post of Lord Chancellor, due to the office's mixed executive and judicial
responsibilities; a bill intended to achieve
this goal was introduced in 2004, but has not passed.
The Lord Chancellor may be replaced as presiding officer by one of his or her deputies. The Chairman of Committees, the
Principal Deputy Chairman of Committees, and several Deputy Chairmen of Committees are all deputies to the Lord Chancellor, and
are all appointed by the House of Lords itself. By custom, the Crown appoints each Chairman, Principal Deputy Chairman, or Deputy
Chairman to the additional office of Deputy Speaker of the House of Lords. There is no legal requirement that the Lord Chancellor
or a Deputy Speaker be a member of the House of Lords, though the same has long been customary.
Whilst presiding over the House of Lords, the Lord Chancellor wears a ceremonial black and gold robes. The Lord Chancellor or
Deputy Speaker sits on the Woolsack, a large red seat stuffed with wool, at the front of the Lords Chamber. When the House of Lords resolves itself into committee
(see below), the Chairman or a Deputy Chairman presides, not from the Woolsack, but from a chair at the Table of the House. The
presiding officer has little power compared to the Speaker of the House of Commons. He or she only acts as the mouthpiece of
the House, performing duties such as announcing the results of votes. The Lord Chancellor or Deputy Speaker cannot determine
which members may speak, or discipline members for violating the rules of the House; these measures may be taken only by the
House itself. Unlike the politically neutral Speaker of the House of Commons, the Lord Chancellor and Deputy Speakers remain
members of their respective parties, and may participate in debate.
Another officer of the body is the Leader of
the House of Lords, a peer selected by the Prime Minister. The Leader of the House is responsible for steering Government
bills through the House of Lords, and is a member of the Cabinet. The Leader also advises the House on proper procedure when
necessary, but such advice is merely informal, rather than official and binding. A Deputy Leader is also appointed by the Prime
Minister, and takes the place of an absent or unavailable Leader.
The Clerk of the Parliaments is the chief clerk and officer of the House of Lords (but is not a member of the House itself).
The Clerk, who is appointed by the Crown, advises the presiding officer on the rules of the House, signs orders and official
communications, endorses bills, and is the keeper of the official records of both Houses of Parliament. Moreover, the Clerk of
the Parliaments is responsible for arranging by-elections of hereditary peers when necessary. The deputies of the Clerk of the
Parliaments (the Clerk Assistant and the Reading Clerk) are appointed by the Lord Chancellor, subject to the House's
approval.
The Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod is also an officer of the House; he takes
his title from the symbol of his office, a black rod. Black Rod (as the Gentleman Usher is normally known) is responsible for
ceremonial arrangements, is in charge of the House's doorkeepers, and may (upon the order of the House) take action to end
disorder or disturbance in the Chamber. Black Rod also holds the office of Serjeant-at-Arms of the House of Lords, and in this
capacity attends upon the Lord Chancellor. The Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod's duties may be delegated to the Yeoman Usher of
the Black Rod or to the Assistant Sergeant-at-Arms.
Procedure
The House of Lords and the House of Commons assemble in the Palace of Westminster. The Lords Chamber is lavishly decorated, in
contrast with the more modestly furnished Commons Chamber. Benches in the Lords Chamber are coloured red; thus, the House of
Lords is sometimes referred to as the "Red Chamber". The Woolsack is at the front of the Chamber; supporters of the Government
sit on benches on the right of the Woolsack, whilst members of the Opposition sit on the left. Neutral members, known as Cross-benchers, sit on the benches immediately opposite the Woolsack.
The Lords Chamber is the site of many formal ceremonies, the most famous of which is the State Opening of Parliament, held at the beginning of
each new parliamentary session. During the State Opening, the Sovereign, seated on the Throne in the Lords Chamber and in the
presence of both Houses of Parliament, delivers a speech outlining the Government's agenda for the upcoming parliamentary
session.
In the House of Lords, members need not seek the recognition of the presiding officer before speaking, as is done in the House
of Commons. If two or more Lords simultaneously rise to speak, the House decides which one is to be heard by acclamation, or, if
necessary, by voting on a motion. Often, however, the Leader of the House will suggest an order, which is thereafter generally
followed. Speeches in the House of Lords are addressed to the House as a whole ("My Lords") rather than to the presiding officer
alone (as is the custom in the Lower House). Members may not refer to each other in the second person (as "you"), but rather use
third person forms such as "the noble Duke", "the noble Earl", "the noble Lord", "my noble friend", etc.
Each member may make no more than one speech on a motion, except that the mover of the motion may make one speech at the
beginning of the debate and another at the end. Speeches are not subject to any time limits in the House; however, the House may
put an end to a speech by approving a motion "that the noble Lord be no longer heard". It is also possible for the House to end
the debate entirely, by approving a motion "that the Question be now put". This procedure is known as Closure, and is extremely rare.
Once all speeches on a motion have concluded, or Closure invoked, the motion may be put to a vote. The House first votes by
voice vote; the Lord Chancellor or Deputy Speaker puts the question, and the
Lords respond either "Content" (in favour of the motion) or "Not-Content" (against the motion). The presiding officer then
announces the result of the voice vote, but if his assessment is challenged by any Lord, a recorded vote known as a division follows. Members of the House enter one of two lobbies (the
"Content" lobby or the "Not-Content" lobby) on either side of the Chamber, where their names are recorded by clerks. At each
lobby are two Tellers (themselves members of the House) who count the votes of the Lords. The Lord Chancellor or Deputy Speaker
may vote from the Woolsack. Once the division concludes, the Tellers provide the results thereof to the presiding officer, who
then announces them to the House. If there is an equality of votes, the motion is decided according to the following principles:
legislation may proceed in its present form, unless there is a majority in favour of amending or rejecting it; any other motions
are rejected, unless there is a majority in favour of approving it. The quorum of the
House of Lords is just three members for a general or procedural vote, and thirty members for a vote on legislation. If fewer
than three or thirty members (as appropriate) are present, the division is invalid.
Committees
The Parliament of the United Kingdom uses committees for a variety of purposes; one common use is for the review of bills.
Committees of both Houses consider bills in detail, and may make amendments. In the House of Lords, the committee most commonly
used for the consideration of bills is the Committee of the Whole House, which, as its name suggests, includes all members of the
House. The Committee meets in the Lords Chamber, and is presided over not by the Lord Chancellor, but by the Chairman of
Committees or a Deputy Chairman. Different procedural rules apply in the Committee of the Whole House than in normal sessions of
the Lords; in particular, members are allowed to make more than one speech each on a motion. Similar to the Committee of the
Whole House are the Grand Committees, bodies in which any member of the House may participate. A Grand Committee does not meet in
the Lords Chamber, but in a separate committee room. No divisions are held in Grand Committees, and any amendments to the bill
require the unanimous consent of the body. Hence, the Grand Committee procedure is used only for uncontroversial bills.
Bills may also be committed to Public Bill Committees, which consist of between twelve and sixteen members each. A Public Bill
Committee is specifically constituted for a particular bill. A bill may also be referred to a Special Public Bill Committee,
which, unlike the Public Bill Committee, has the power to hold hearings and collect evidence. These committees are used much less
frequently than the Committee of the Whole House and Grand Committees.
The House of Lords also has several Select Committees. The members of these committees are appointed by the House at the
beginning of each session, and continue to serve until the next parliamentary session begins. The House of Lords may appoint a
chairman for a committee; if it does not do so, the Chairman of Committees or a Deputy Chairman of Committees may preside
instead. Most Select Committees are permanent, but the House may also establish ad hoc committees, which cease to exist
upon the completion of a particular task (for instance, investigating the reform of the House of Lords). The primary function of
Select Committees is to scrutinise and investigate Government activities; to fulfil these aims, they are permitted to hold
hearings and collect evidence. Bills may be referred to Select Committees, but are more often sent to the Committee of the Whole
House and Grand Committees.
The committee system of the House of Lords also includes several Domestic Committees, which supervise or consider the House's
procedures and administration. One of the Domestic Committees is the Committee of Selection, which is responsible for assigning
members to many of the House's other committees.
Legislative functions
Most legislation may be introduced in either House, but, most commonly, is introduced in the House of Commons. For the stages
through which the legislation passes in the House of Lords, see Act
of Parliament.
The power of the Lords to reject a bill passed by the House of Commons is severely hampered by the Parliament Acts. Under
those Acts, certain types of bills may be presented for the Royal Assent without the consent of the House of Lords. The House of
Lords cannot delay a money bill (a bill that, in the view of the Speaker of the House of Commons, solely concerns national
taxation or public funds) for more than one month. Other public bills cannot be delayed by the House of Lords for more than two
parliamentary sessions, or one calendar year. These provisions, however, only apply to public bills that originate in the House
of Commons, and do not have the effect of extending a parliamentary term beyond five years.
By a custom that prevailed even before the Parliament Acts, the House of Lords is further restrained insofar as financial
bills are concerned. The House of Lords may neither originate a bill concerning taxation or Supply, nor amend a bill so as to insert a taxation or Supply-related provision. (The House of Commons, however,
often waives its privileges and allows the Upper House to make amendments with financial implications.) Moreover, the Upper House
may not amend any Supply Bill. The House of Lords formerly maintained the absolute power to reject a bill relating to revenue or
Supply, but this power was curtailed by the Parliament Acts, as aforementioned. Under a separate convention, known as the
Salisbury Convention, the House of Lords does not seek to
oppose legislation promised in the Government's election manifesto.
Hence, as the power of the House of Lords has been severely curtailed by statute and by practice, the House of Commons is
clearly the more powerful branch of Parliament.
Judicial functions
The judicial functions of the House of Lords originate from the ancient role of Parliament as a body that redresses petitions
demanding justice. The judicial functions of the House of Lords are exercised not by the whole House, but by a group of "Law
Lords". The bulk of the House's judicial business is conducted by the twelve Lords of Appeal in Ordinary, who are specifically
appointed for this purpose under the Appellate Jurisdiction Act. The judicial functions may also be exercised by Lords of Appeal
(other members of the House who happen to have held high judicial office). No Lord of Appeal in Ordinary or Lord of Appeal may
sit judicially beyond the age of seventy-five. The judicial business of the Lords is supervised by the Senior Lord of Appeal in
Ordinary and his or her deputy, the Second Senior Lord of Appeal in Ordinary.
The jurisdiction of the House of Lords extends, in civil and in criminal cases, to appeals from the courts of England and
Wales, and of Northern Ireland. From Scotland, appeals are possible only in civil cases; Scotland's High Court of Justiciary is the highest court in criminal
matters. The House of Lords is not the United Kingdom's only court of last resort; in some cases, the Privy Council performs such
a function. The jurisdiction of the Privy Council in the United Kingdom, however, is more narrow than that of the House of Lords;
it encompasses appeals from ecclesiastical courts, issues related to devolution, disputes under the House of Commons Disqualification Act 1975, and a few other minor matters.
Not all Law Lords sit to hear cases; rather, cases are heard by panels known as Appellate Committees, each of which normally
consists of five members (selected by the Senior Lord). An Appellate Committee hearing an important case may consist of even more
members. Though Appellate Committees meet in separate committee rooms, judgement is given in the Lords Chamber itself. No further
appeal lies from the House of Lords.
A distinct judicial function—one in which the whole House, rather than just the Law Lords, may participate—is that
of trying impeachments. Impeachments are brought by the House of Commons, and
are tried in the House of Lords; a conviction requires only a majority of the Lords voting. Impeachments, however, are
essentially obsolete; the last impeachment was that of Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville in 1806.
Similarly, the House of Lords was once the court that tried peers charged with high treason or felony. The House would be
presided over not by the Lord Chancellor, but by the Lord High
Steward, an official especially appointed for the occasion of the trial. If Parliament was not in session, then peers could
be tried in a separate court, known as the Lord High Steward's Court. Only peers, their wives, and their unremarried widows were
entitled to trials in the House of Lords or the Lord High Steward's Court; the Lords Spiritual, being commoners, were tried by
regular juries. In 1948, the right of peers and peeresses to be tried in such special
courts was abolished; now, they may be tried in the same courts as others.
As of 2005, there is a bill before Parliament (Constitutional Reform Bill) to create a separate
Supreme Court for the United Kingdom, to which the judicial function of the House of Lords, and some of the judicial functions of
the Judicial Committee of
the Privy Council, would be transfered. In addition, the office of Lord Chancellor would be reformed, to remove his ability
to act as both a government minister and a judge. This is motivated in part by concerns that the historical admixture of
legislative, judicial, and executive power, may not be in conformance with the requirements of the European Convention on Human Rights
(a judicial officer having legislative or executive power might not be considered to be sufficiently impartial to provide a fair
trial), and in any case are considered undesirable according to modern constitutional thought concerning the separation of
powers. The Government proposes that the new Supreme Court of the United Kingdom would be located in Middlesex Guildhall.
Current composition
The House of Lords, as of 1 March 2005:
|
Affiliation |
Life Peers |
Hereditary Peers |
Lords Spiritual |
Total |
| Elected by Party † |
Elected by Whole House |
Royal Office-holders |
| |
Conservative Party |
156 |
39 |
8 |
0 |
0 |
203 |
| |
Labour Party |
198 |
2 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
202 |
| |
Liberal Democrats |
64 |
3 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
69 |
| |
Cross-benchers |
151 |
28 |
2 |
2 |
0 |
183 |
| |
Other party/
Non-affiliated |
9 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
11 |
| |
Lords Spiritual |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
26 |
26 |
| |
Total |
578 |
74 |
14 |
2 |
26 |
694 |
Note: These figures exclude thirteen peers who are on leave of absence.
†The number of hereditary peers 'allocated' to each party, which is based on the proportion of hereditary peers that
belongs to that party, is:
- Conservative Party: 42 peers
- Labour Party: 2 peers
- Liberal Democrats: 3 peers
- Cross-benchers: 28 peers
Of the initial forty-two hereditary peers elected as Conservatives, one (The Lord
Brabazon of Tara) now sits as a Cross-bencher, having become the House of Lords' Chairman of Committees, and another
(The Lord Willoughby de Broke) now sits as a non-affiliated member. The
Conservative place vacated by the death of the 6th Baron Burnham on
January 1, 2005 was filled March 10th by
the election of the 7th Baron de Mauley [1] (http://www.parliament.uk/documents/upload/HofLPressNotice100305.pdf). On January 23, 2005 the death of the 4th Baron Aberdare created a vacancy filled by the election of the 2nd Viscount Eccles by the whole House on March 22. A Cross-Bench vacancy occurred on the death of Lady
Strange March 10, 2005.
References
- Carmichael, Paul, Brice Dickson, and Guy Peters. (1999). The House of Lords: Its Parliamentary and Judicial Role.
Oxford: Hart Publishing.
- Davies, Michael. (2003). Companion to the Standing
Orders and guide to the Proceedings of the House of Lords, 19th ed. London: HMSO. (http://www.parliament.the-stationery-office.co.uk/pa/ld/ldcomp/compso.htm)
- Farnborough, T. E. May, 1st Baron. (1896). Constitutional History of England since the Accession of George the Third,
11th ed. London: Longmans, Green and Co.
- Longford, Frank Pakenham, 7th Earl of. (1999). A History of the House of Lords. Gloucestershire: Sutton
Publishing.
- "Parliament" (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica, 11th ed. London: Cambridge University Press.
- Raphael, D. D., Donald Limon, and W. R. McKay. (2004). Erskine May: Parliamentary Practice, 23rd ed. London:
Butterworths Tolley.
- The United Kingdom
Parliament (http://www.parliament.uk/)
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