exchemist
Valued Senior Member
The bishops don't get a seat in the Lords for "going along with shenanigans". What gave you that idea?"Cronies"
Wouldn’t that also apply to faith leaders (any faith)?
A faith organisation using its allotted lords 'seat or seats' as a 'reward' for going along with shenanigans within a faith’s own organisation?
The House of Lords is an appointed chamber, not an elected one and I, like many people, think that is exactly as it should be. It seems to me an excellent principle to have a revising chamber (i.e. one that can neither create nor veto legislation but can scrutinise and advise on it) drawn from people who have particular experience or expertise to contribute, or who represent important social communities that may not gain a voice through elected members of Parliament. Elected members of the House of Commons always have one eye on how they need to appear in order to get re-elected. This makes them short-term and often rather cynical in outlook, which is a bad recipe for good lawmaking. The appalling Rwanda bill, currently being strongly criticised by the Lords, is a recent case in point.
The appointment process of the House of Lords however does badly need reform, because recent (elected) governments have corrupted the existing appointment process scandalously. There are proposals, which I would support, to deprive the Prime Minister of the power to nominate peers and to put nominations entirely in the hands of an independent committee. Before anyone complains about how that committee might be made up, I would remind them of the way judges are appointed in the UK. Unlike the terrible system in the US, they are not political appointments - and that is very much to the benefit of the justice system. So such things can be done.
As for bishops, I see no reason why there should not be bishops in the House of Lords, though I would like to see more representatives of other faiths among the Lords Spiritual. Religion is important to many sectors of society and religious views should I think be recognised when it comes to giving advice to the government. The Chief Rabbi has sometimes been a Lord (e.g. Jonathan Sacks, a very erudite and cultured man who died a few years ago) , but this is not a permanent right, nor are there by right representatives of other important faith communities. I gather a couple of Catholic cardinal archbishops have been offered a seat in recent decades but declined, as the Catholic church discourages prelates from accepting appointments that are too close to secular power. I myself would very much like to see a senior, moderate Muslim imam appointed. It would give Muslims a voice, show them some respect and symbolically integrate them into the fabric of British life.
So I'm all for a properly independently appointed House of Lords. What should stop, and stop entirely, is the disgusting practice of awarding peerages to financial donors to political parties, or political cronies with no apparent merit in terms of expertise or experience. Exhibit A here would be Baroness Owen , a 3o yr old political apparatchik of no consequence, appointed by Boris Johnson apparently for no better reason than she is a blonde (whom he may possibly have shagged). Johnson - an elected politician, remember - delighted in poking fun at, debasing and undermining every institution in the country. He probably just thought it would cock a snook at the system and would funny to do, with his entitled Old Etonian's contempt for everything around him.
I think we need to hear less about how supposedly vital it is for every member of the legislature to be elected, or else it is "undemocratic". We have also had attacks on the judiciary from this government and its supporters in the press, on the grounds the judges are not "democratically" elected. This is highly disingenuous. A sound constitution rests on several pillars, one of which is an elected chamber responsible for proposing and passing into law new legislation. The other pillars should be a check on that, to avoid what Lord Hailsham used to call an "elective dictatorship".
Last edited: