House of Lords

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This article was last updated in February 2012.




The House of Lords is the second chamber of the Parliament of the United Kingdom[1]. Its principal functions are to initiate, scrutinise and amend legislation. It has no general power of veto, but it attaches importance to its ability to return proposed legislation to the House of Commons, the lower chamber of Parliament, for further consideration.[2]

History

The History of the House of Lords

Members and staff

The current membership of the House of Lords[3][4] consists of

  • about 670 "life peers", who had been appointed by current and previous administrations, including eminent professionals and members of previous governments;
  • 26 "lords spiritual", who are current bishops and archbishops of the Church of England: and,
  • 92 "hereditary peers", who had been elected from the membership of the previous House of Lords[5]. (The exclusion of hereditary peers is among the legislative proposals for the reform of the House of Lords[6] that are currently under consideration.)

The Leader of the House of Lords[7] organises government business in the House of Lords, and the Lord Speaker[8] is effectively its president. Besides presiding over debates, the Lord Speaker chairs the House Committee, which supervises the House of Lords administration[9]. The Clerk of the Parliaments is the head of the House of Lords administration and is supported by an office providing corporate planning and related services. Committee Office Clerks organise inquiries, draft reports and sometimes travel with their committees.

The conduct of business

Government and opposition Peers sit on rows of benches facing each other in the magnificent House of Lords Chamber, on benches that are less closely spaced than those in the Commons chamber. Between them at one end is the Throne, and facing it at the other end are benches for the use of "cross-benchers", who are Peers with no party affiliation. Debates are chaired by the Lord Speaker, seated on the "woolsack"[10] in front of the Throne. The procedures used in debates are similar to those governing the conduct of business in the House of Commons, but the conduct of debates in the House of Lords is noticeably different. Business is conducted on a much more consensual basis, with no formal government control over the timetable. As in the House of Commons, the time allocated to each item is agreed in advance by government and opposition whips, but in the House of Lords the agreement is interpreted flexibly and may be altered in the course of a debate. Bills are given detailed scrutiny, often by Peers who have expertise or experience in the matters that they deal with[11]. Debates tend to involve lively exchanges, rather than the unrelated successions of prepared statements that tend to characterise Commons debates. Two select committees of the House of Lords provide Parliament with reports on the implications of domestic and European legislative proposals. The Lords Constitution Committee[12] investigates the constitutional implications of Public Bills (as well as conducting enquiries into constitutional issues), and the European Union Committee[13] with its seven sub-committees, reports on legislative proposals that are under consideration by the European Union.

Powers

All House of Commons Bills must be sent for consideration by the House of Lords before they can be given Royal Assent and become Acts of Parliament. However, the powers of the House of Lords to deal with them are limited by a combination of law and convention. Under the Parliament Acts[14], money Bills become law one month after being sent to the House of Lords, and cannot be amended there, and other Commons Bills can only be held up for about a year, although the House of Commons can reintroduce them in the following session and pass them without the consent of the House of Lords. Under the Salisbury Convention[15], the House of Lords does not oppose the second or third reading of a Bill that fulfills a promise made in the governing party's election manifesto.

Proposals for reform

References