The Independent

Absentee Lords could lose their seats as part of cull

- TOM PECK

Members of the House of Lords who rarely turn up could lose their seats, under new proposals to reduce the number of peers along with the number of MPs. Conservati­ve peer Lord Cormack, who co-founded the Campaign for an Effective Second Chamber (CESC), said peers with a 25 per cent attendance record or less could forfeit their positions.

There are currently 810 peers, already significan­tly more than the 650 MPs, but there are plans for that number to be reduced to 600 before the general election scheduled for 2020. Lord Cormack believes eventually the Lords should be smaller in size than the Commons. In an article for The House magazine, Lord Cormack wrote: “We would certainly have to exclude those who barely attend. No one can be an effective member of any institutio­n without putting in at least a 25 per cent attendance.”

Research by The Independen­t found that 117 peers did not speak in the chamber in the last session of

Parliament, but many of those are likely to have worked on select committees and contribute­d to parliament­ary reports. Peers are entitled to a £300 a day allowance, with no need to provide receipts, for days on which they attend the chamber. Last year, 49 peers claimed the allowance despite never contributi­ng to a debate in the chamber.

Tory peer Lord Norton, who set up the CESC with Lord Cormack, this week told The Sun: “We are conscious that we must reduce numbers. We look bloated to the public, and we will soon also be unable to fulfil our functions with the resources we have. Once we get general agreement that the house is too large, we will then move on to implementi­ng how to reduce it. We could initiate that with a private members bill in the Lords once we know the government is agreed with our formula.”

Lord Fowler, the new Speaker in the Lords, also recently told The House magazine: “I don’t think that we can justify a situation where you have over 800 peers at the same time as you’re bringing down the Commons to 600 MPs.”

 ?? (Getty) ?? A total of 117 peers have not spoken in the chamber all year, but their days could be numbered
(Getty) A total of 117 peers have not spoken in the chamber all year, but their days could be numbered

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