The Daily Telegraph

A peer in No10

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sir – The last peer to be prime minister was the great Lord Salisbury, the fourth longest-serving in our history, who retired 120 years ago in 1902. It is often said that there will never be another. But there could be – sitting in the House of Commons.

Hereditary peers who were thrown out of the Lords by Tony Blair in 1999 are eligible for seats in the Commons. Since 2014, serving members of the House of Lords, including all those appointed for life, have been able to retire from it permanentl­y at any age. Those who depart remain peers; their titles cannot be relinquish­ed. Like the expelled hereditari­es, such peers can become members of the Commons.

Lord Frost clearly hopes to be an MP (report, May 4), and probably more than a backbenche­r. A lord in No 10 again is far from inconceiva­ble. The way is also open for the first baroness to become prime minister. Lord Salisbury would have been amazed. Lord Lexden (Con)

London SW1

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