Mar 16, 2026

So long, hereditary peers – but the Lords is still full of absurd anachronisms | Polly Toynbee

Polly Toynbee

Two-thirds of voters want an elected second chamber. The government needs a radical legacy: it should use its rare majority for this

Goodbye (almost) to the hereditary peers, voted out on Tuesday night. But they didn’t go without a vicious tooth-and-nail fight. Labour should be making much more noise about how the Tories blackmailed and threatened to the very last to hold on to the hereditary peerage (almost all Tories), despite 66% of voters wanting a democratically elected second chamber.

Tories in the Lords, fully backed by Kemi Badenoch, did that despite the abolition pledged in Labour’s manifesto. They trashed the Salisbury convention, which expects the Lords to nod through anything in a government’s manifesto that has been approved in an election. But never mind conventions: the good chaps who are supposed to keep the unwritten constitution on its feet are no more. Instead of upholding convention, they vandalised it.

The absurdity of the final Lords debate may add to Samuel Johnson’s gaiety of nations. Enjoy Lord Hamilton’s searing honesty, when he said that a reason to keep the hereditaries was that once they were gone there would be “nothing other than political chancers, like me, and donors and members of the blob of one sort or another”.

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