The UK is ejecting hereditary nobles from Parliament after 700 years

Britain is ending the centuries-old tradition of hereditary aristocrats sitting in Parliament’s House of Lords. Late Tuesday the Lords dropped objections to a bill passed by the House of Commons that removes dozens of dukes, earls, and others who inherited seats in the unelected upper chamber. The chamber currently has more than 800 members. The vast majority are now “life peers” appointed by the government, but roughly 1 in 10 members are currently hereditary peers. A previous Labour government removed most hereditary peers in 1999 but left 92 in place. The rest will leave at the end of the current session of Parliament in the spring.

AP News

not only are hereditary peers stopping, the current set of them are leaving

hmmm i wonder what drove them to act so decisively

look, if the UK can change their 3/4 millennium old upper house because of epstein, then surely we can abolish the senate, expand the house, and put age limits on serving
@sierrashark not all of them, they bribed the tories by letting them give some of the hereditary peers life peerages instead: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gjxwre1ydo
Ministers offer Tories more peers to end hereditary bill standoff

It comes as the government tries to pass a bill to end hereditary peerages ahead of a spring deadline.

BBC News