The Lords didn’t start as a quirky side-room of Parliament.
It started as power — and slowly turned into restraint.
That shift explains a lot of today’s confusion.
#LetsRethink #UKConstitution #HouseOfLords

https://hysnapsmusicandmentalhealth.wordpress.com/2026/03/14/lets-rethink-the-lords-logic-of-the-lords/?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=jetpack_social

Let’s Rethink The Lords: Logic of the Lords.

In the last post we landed somewhere fairly modest. The House of Lords isn’t there to run the country, it isn’t there to block democracy, and it isn’t just a retirement home. It reviews legislation…

Hysnaps Politics, Gaming, Music and Mental Health

https://observer.co.uk/news/columnists/article/the-lords-they-are-a-leaping-to-frustrate-ministers

This kind of conservatism makes the UK a hard country to love. It's not difficult to understand why so many Scots and a growing number of Welsh want to head for the exit.

>>...they have sought to dismember key elements of the employment legislation, one of the government’s flagship laws. For the third time in a row, the Lords supported a slew of Conservative-backed amendments to weaken workers’ rights. The opponents included dozens of hereditary peers, among them the 9th Duke of Wellington, descendant of the more famous one who battled Napoleon at Waterloo. <<

Not for the first time, I feel warm and wistful about Bonaparte.

#UKPolitics #UKConstitution #Parliament #Lords #Labour

The Lords they are a-leaping to frustrate ministers

Tory and hereditary peers are waging a brazen campaign in the upper house to stall key reforms such as assisted dying

The Observer

"Wouldn’t it be good,” suggested Ryder, “if someone had the overarching #nonpolitical role of identifying to #parliament and #government unfairness that ought to be redressed.”

(2) New #ruleoflaw centre? - by Joshua Rozenberg
https://rozenberg.substack.com/p/new-rule-of-law-centre

#LawFedi
#UKlaw
#ukconstitution
#UKJudiciary
#laweducation

New rule of law centre?

Former judge wants to reinstate lapsed academic post

A Lawyer Writes
Do the Tories just not understand the Constitution?

They think that whoever holds the office of Prime Minister has a right that he or she does not have.

TheCritique Archives

I would like to see a future Labour government shift power from Westminster to the UK's other nations and regions. Yet how this might be done remains a daunting question - or set of questions.

Getting sensible answers requires us to look back twenty years to the North East Devolution Referendum of 2004. What went wrong there? Was it, as this piece suggests, a matter of campaign tactics and communication ? Or was there something amiss with the devolution proposal in itself?

North East Devolution Referendum 2004: The First Modern Election - Young Fabians

https://www.youngfabians.org.uk/north_east_devolution_referendum_2004_the_first_modern_election

#UKPolitics #NorthEastDevolution #NorthEastDevolutionReferendum
#Devolution #UKConstitution #Labour

North East Devolution Referendum 2004: The First Modern Election

Young Fabians
@Silversnapples
That already applied to every other national institution that they've sold off to their chums over the years. The fact it wasn't theirs to sell didn't stop them. And no-one else did either. No #UKConstitution or Constitutional Court to protect the national wealth from crooks in govt.

The UK establishment live the fact that the British constitution founded on parliamentary sovereignty has remained unchanged for hundreds of years, but it simply isn't fit for purpose. #UK #ukconstitution

https://socialhumanities.home.blog/2023/11/04/why-having-a-centuries-old-constitution-is-nothing-to-shout-about/

Why Having a Centuries-old Constitution is Nothing to Shout About.

A review by Jonathan Sumption, the former UK Supreme Court judge, of the two-volume Cambridge Constitutional History of the United Kingdom (edited by Peter Kane and H. Kumarasingham) in the current…

Social Humanities

@PGBeattie The word "Kingdom" is a bit of a clue. (-:

You are a subject of the Crown-In-Parliament, a monarchy. Ironically people describe the government correctly every time that they say the name of the place.

The by/of/for the people stuff is 18th century republicanism. Guillotines and tea parties and whatnot. The U.K. never went around chopping the heads off aristocrats. Too busy having an empress, and the next century a popular Queen.

#UKConstitution

Useful book for anyone interested in religion and the UK constitution… #UKreligion #UKConstitution #churchofengland #ukpolitics