Article 6QFW3 From Earl of Devon to Duke of Norfolk: the hereditary peers set to lose place in Lords

From Earl of Devon to Duke of Norfolk: the hereditary peers set to lose place in Lords

by
Eleni Courea Political correspondent
from World news | The Guardian on (#6QFW3)

Some of the 92 now about to lose their seats can trace their family's presence in the Lords back to the middle ages

The UK's 92 remaining hereditary peers are to lose their right to sit and vote in the House of Lords under proposals being put forward by the government. The change, which will probably take effect next year, has been billed as the biggest parliamentary reform in a quarter of a century.

It will round off changes begun by Tony Blair's government in 1999, which revoked a 700-year-old right for all peers to sit on and vote from the red benches. Blair excluded 667 hereditary peers from the upper chamber and allowed only 92 of them, elected from the whole group, to continue doing so pending further changes.

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