Proponents of an elected House of Lords point to the current system and claim that there is a clear absence of democratic legitimacy. However, Sir John Baker argues that this obscures the real imperative which is to preserve an upper chamber whose members can act independently, without being beholden to party loyalties or partisan scruples. For the government to impose elections by forcing through an ill-thought out programme would be unworthy and ultimately detrimental to the body politic in the UK
After the rapid implementation of phase one of House of Lords reform, plans for further change, or p...
In the long age of abortive Lords reforms, Theresa May has installed a new chapter by backing off fr...
The appointment of 30 new peers to our unreformed House of Lords was announced this week. In the 201...
What difference would reducing or eliminating the appointed number of members in the House of Lords ...
House of Lords reform was scuppered in 2011 when the Conservatives opted not to back the Liberal Dem...
Sonali Campion, Sean Kippin and the Democratic Audit team examine how the UK’s deeply controversial ...
We should welcome the government’s reforms to overhaul the House of Lords, writes Graham Allen MP, t...
As part of the 2017 Audit of UK Democracy, Sonali Campion, Sean Kippin and the DA team examine how t...
Titus Alexander argues that current proposals for reforming the House of Lords will not address the ...
Several schemes for reforming the House of Lords have been proposed since 1997, and each have made v...
Abstract The 1911 Parliament Act decreed that Lords reform was ‘an urgent question which brooks no d...
The details of the government’s new proposals for House of Lords reform are certain to generate much...
The government’s proposals to reform the House of Lords are only the latest in a long line of initia...
Just how strong is the Conservatives mandate? With only 24.7% of eligible voters opting to support t...
The events leading to the Strathclyde Review highlighted a fundamental problem with our democratic s...
After the rapid implementation of phase one of House of Lords reform, plans for further change, or p...
In the long age of abortive Lords reforms, Theresa May has installed a new chapter by backing off fr...
The appointment of 30 new peers to our unreformed House of Lords was announced this week. In the 201...
What difference would reducing or eliminating the appointed number of members in the House of Lords ...
House of Lords reform was scuppered in 2011 when the Conservatives opted not to back the Liberal Dem...
Sonali Campion, Sean Kippin and the Democratic Audit team examine how the UK’s deeply controversial ...
We should welcome the government’s reforms to overhaul the House of Lords, writes Graham Allen MP, t...
As part of the 2017 Audit of UK Democracy, Sonali Campion, Sean Kippin and the DA team examine how t...
Titus Alexander argues that current proposals for reforming the House of Lords will not address the ...
Several schemes for reforming the House of Lords have been proposed since 1997, and each have made v...
Abstract The 1911 Parliament Act decreed that Lords reform was ‘an urgent question which brooks no d...
The details of the government’s new proposals for House of Lords reform are certain to generate much...
The government’s proposals to reform the House of Lords are only the latest in a long line of initia...
Just how strong is the Conservatives mandate? With only 24.7% of eligible voters opting to support t...
The events leading to the Strathclyde Review highlighted a fundamental problem with our democratic s...
After the rapid implementation of phase one of House of Lords reform, plans for further change, or p...
In the long age of abortive Lords reforms, Theresa May has installed a new chapter by backing off fr...
The appointment of 30 new peers to our unreformed House of Lords was announced this week. In the 201...