The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Bringing the House down

Elections renew and refresh our politician­s but what SNP: Lords belongs in history’s dustbin

- By Mark Aitken POLITICAL EDITOR

The House of Lords is an “archaic disgrace” and should have been “swept into the dustbin of history a long time ago”, an SNP report concludes.

The party’s analysis claims peers claiming £323 a day taxfree, plus travel, to take part in parliament­ary proceeding­s can go years without uttering a word in debates.

Scotland’s 83 peers claimed £ 2.3 million in 2019- 20 but, according to the SNP, they are unrepresen­tative of the country’s political views, gender balance, and different social background­s and age groups. According to the par ty’s research, 69% of Scottish peers are aged 65 or over and only 17% are women. The 20-page report also says that 55% of Scottish peers attended a private school, compared to less than 6% of the population. The Conservati­ves make up 10% of Scottish MPS but account for 45% of Scottish peers.

Labour has one MP but 32% of Scotland’s peers are affiliated to the party. The Lib Dems hold 7% of Scotland’s seats in the House of Commons but account for 11% of the country’s peers.

The report, authored by SNP MP Tommy Sheppard, also says that despite 81% of Scottish MPS supporting Scottish independen­ce, there are no pro- Yes voices in the House of Lords.

The Edinburgh East MP says in the report’s conclusion: “As an institutio­n, we believe it to be an archaic disgrace, serving a chamber of cronies, and we believe it should have been swept into the dustbin of history a long time ago.

“The House of Lords is an affront to democracy. The depth and breadth of its deliberate­ly unrepresen­tative character is stark. It extends

to political affiliatio­n, political views, gender, age and social background.”

The SNP has long called for the abolition of the upper house of the UK Parliament and has never nominated anyone for the Lords.

The report says: “The principled position of the SNP not to take seats in the House of Lords may be used as an attempt to explain the denial of a pro-independen­ce voice.

“However, this does not provide an adequate explanatio­n for the absence of nonparty but pro- independen­ce peers, peers who would reflect the substantia­l and growing support for independen­ce amongst the Scottish people.”

Si n c e becoming Pr i m e Minister in July 2019, Boris Johnson has appointed 79 peers including his own brother Jo, former Scottish Conser vative leader Ruth Davidson and former cricketer and Brexit campaigner Ian Botham.

Jo h n s o n also brushed aside objections from the House of Lords Appointmen­ts Commission to the nomination of Peter Cruddas, who donated £ 3.5m to the Conser vatives. Cruddas resigned as the party’s cotreasure­r in 2012 after offering undercover reporters access to then-prime Minister David Cameron in return for £250,000 in donations.

Lord Lexden, deputy speaker of the Lords, said in December that Johnson’s “shamelessn­ess” had created the worst honours scandal in 100 years.

The Lords currently has about 800 sitting members, making it the second- biggest legislativ­e body in the world.

Professor Meg Russell, director of the constituti­on unit at University College London, said: “Abolition is an extreme position that not many people share. Wholesale reforms tend to split opinion and the government is never motivated to do them.

“But there are some urgent needs for reform, and the biggest problem is the size of the place is getting bigger and bigger and the Prime Minister can make as many appointmen­ts as he wants with virtually no oversight at all.

“There is a growing sense that there is a tendency by this prime minister and some previous prime ministers to deliberate­ly make it bigger in order that it looks less defensible because that strengthen­s the government against parliament.

“It is a paradox that the government controls the makeup of one chamber of parliament but that it can use that to strengthen its own position and by strengthen­ing its own position it damages the legitimacy of the place, which also strengthen­s its position because government­s don’t love to be asked questions in parliament. They would prefer to have an easy life and so they like putting their own supporters in the Lords. If that damages its reputation, that doesn’t necessaril­y upset the government, which is a really big problem.

“Personally, I would take small steps because they’re the ones that tend to happen. The first would be to put pretty stringent limits on the prime minister’s appointmen­t power. You could also require there to be fairer representa­tion of different parts of the UK, a fairer balance of men and women, and across different profession­al background­s.

“You could have clear rules on the share of seats between the parties so that they are proportion­al to how people vote, rather than just being controlled by the Prime Minister.”

Russell said of the SNP’S position: “It is a bit of a shame that they don’t nominate. If they want some pro- independen­ce voices in there, the easiest way to achieve that would be to change their policy of not accepting nomination­s. The Greens get some nomination­s now and the Northern Irish parties that seek to take seats at Westminste­r have representa­tion.

“It is this self-denying ordinance that largely accounts for the lack of pro- independen­ce voices. Clearly there is an important voice in British politics missing from the Lords, but it is difficult for a prime minister to find proindepen­dence voices who are not from the SNP.”

Willie Sullivan, Electoral Reform Society Scotland senior director, said: “These figures highlight the pressing need for reform. Westminste­r looks desperatel­y out of touch and outdated, and the unelected second chamber plays a big role in this.

“We need a democratic second chamber bringing together voices from across the nations and regions of the UK. There is an opportunit­y to drag politics into the 21st Century, and begin to tackle the dire political inequality we see across Britain and create a union that people really want to be a part of.”

The House of Lords said: “The House of Lords is a busy and effective chamber, improving legislatio­n and holding the government to account. Its members debate hundreds of changes to improve legislatio­n every year, table thousands of written questions on vital policy issues, and make up influentia­l Select Committees whose reports play a key role in public life. Members take their role very seriously, shaping and voting on laws that affect all of us.”

 ??  ?? House of Lords peers in red robes gather for the state opening of the UK Parliament
House of Lords peers in red robes gather for the state opening of the UK Parliament
 ??  ?? Tommy Sheppard
Tommy Sheppard
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