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Life peer

In the United Kingdom, life peers are appointed members of the peerage whose titles cannot be inherited, in contrast to hereditary peers. In modern times, life peerages, always created at the rank of baron, are created under the Life Peerages Act 1958 and entitle the holders to seats in the House of Lords, presuming they meet qualifications such as age and citizenship. The legitimate children of a life peer are entitled to style themselves with the prefix "The Honourable", although they cannot inherit the peerage itself.

Before 1887

The Crown, as fount of honour, creates peerages of two types, being hereditary or for life. In the early days of the peerage, the Sovereign had the right to summon individuals to one Parliament without being bound to summon them again. Over time,[when?] it was established that once summoned, a peer would have to be summoned for the remainder of their life, and later, that the peer's heirs and successors would also be summoned, thereby firmly entrenching the hereditary principle.

Nevertheless, life peerages lingered. From the reign of James I to that of George II (between 1603 and 1760), 18 life peerages were created for women. Women, however, were excluded from sitting in the House of Lords, so it was unclear whether or not a life peerage would entitle a man to do the same. For over four centuries—if one excludes those who sat in Cromwell's House of Lords (or Other House) during the Interregnum—no man had claimed a seat in the Lords by virtue of a life peerage. In 1856, it was thought necessary to add a peer learned in law to the House of Lords (which was the final court of appeal), without allowing the peer's heirs to sit in the House and swell its numbers. Sir James Parke, a Baron (judge) of the Exchequer, was created Baron Wensleydale for life, but the House of Lords concluded that the peerage did not entitle him to sit in the House of Lords. Lord Wensleydale was therefore appointed a hereditary peer. (In the event, he had no sons, so his peerage did not pass to an heir.) (See also Wensleydale Peerage Case (1856).)

The Government introduced a bill to authorise the creation of two life peerages carrying seats in the House of Lords for judges who had held office for at least five years. The House of Lords passed it, but the bill was lost in the House of Commons. In 1869, a more comprehensive life peerages bill was brought forward by the Earl Russell. At any one time, 28 life peerages could be in existence; no more than four were to be created in any one year. Life peers were to be chosen from senior judges, civil servants, senior officers of the British Army or Royal Navy, members of the House of Commons who had served for at least ten years, scientists, writers, artists, peers of Scotland, and peers of Ireland. (Peers of Scotland and Ireland did not all have seats in the House of Lords, instead electing a number of representative peers.) The bill was rejected by the House of Lords at its third reading.

Finally, the Appellate Jurisdiction Act 1887 allowed senior judges to sit in the House of Lords as life peers, known as Lords of Appeal in Ordinary.[1] Those appointees who were not already members of the House of Lords were created life peers by the Appellate Jurisdiction Act 1876 (for their titles, see the list of law life peerages). Initially it was intended that peers created in this way would only sit in the House of Lords while serving their term as judges, but in 1887 (on the retirement of Lord Blackburn) the Appellate Jurisdiction Act 1887 provided that former judges would retain their seats for life. This ended with the creation of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom in 2009.

Life Peerages Act 1958

The Life Peerages Act sanctions the regular granting of life peerages, but the power to appoint Lords of Appeal in Ordinary under the Appellate Jurisdiction Act was not derogated. The Act placed no limits on the number of peerages that the Sovereign may award, as was done by the Appellate Jurisdiction Act. A peer created under the Life Peerages Act has the right to sit in the House of Lords, provided that they are at least 21 years of age, are not suffering punishment upon conviction for treason, and are a citizen of the United Kingdom, or of a member of the Commonwealth of Nations,[2] and are a resident in the UK for tax purposes.[3]

Life baronies under the Life Peerages Act are created by the Sovereign but, in practice, are only granted when proposed by the Prime Minister.

Life peers created under the Life Peerages Act do not, unless they also hold ministerial positions, receive salaries. They are, however, entitled to an allowance of £300 for travel and accommodation for each day on which the peer "signs in" to the House, though the peer does not have to take part in the business of the House.

"Working peers"

From time to time, lists of "working peers" are published.[4] They do not form a formal class, but represent the various political parties and are expected to regularly attend the House of Lords. Most new appointments of life peers fall into this category.

Normally, the Prime Minister chooses only peers from their own party, but permits the leaders of opposition parties to recommend peers from their parties. The Prime Minister may determine the number of peers each party may propose; they may also choose to amend these recommendations, but by convention does not do so.

"People's peers"

Peers may be created on a non-partisan basis. Formerly, nominations on merit alone were made by the Prime Minister, but this function was partially transferred to a new, non-statutory House of Lords Appointments Commission in 2000. Individuals recommended for the peerage by the Commission go on to become what have been described by some in the British media as "people's peers".[5] The Commission also scrutinises party recommendations for working peerages to ensure propriety. The Prime Minister may determine the number of peers the Commission may propose, and also may amend the recommendations. Again, by convention, no amendment is made to the recommendations of the Commission.

Honours

Individuals may be created peers in various honours lists as rewards for achievement; these peers are not expected to attend the House of Lords regularly, but are at liberty to do so if they please. The New Year Honours List, the King's Birthday Honours List (to mark the Sovereign's official birthday, the second Saturday in June), the Dissolution Honours List (to mark the dissolution of Parliament) and the Resignation Honours List (to mark the end of a Prime Minister's tenure) are all used to announce life peerage creations.

Public offices

Creations may be made for individuals on retirement from important public offices, such as Prime Minister, Speaker of the House of Commons or Archbishop of Canterbury or York.

Sir Alec Douglas-Home, who had renounced his hereditary title of the 14th Earl of Home on becoming Prime Minister, was the first former occupant of the office to receive a life barony. Harold Wilson, James Callaghan and Margaret Thatcher all took life peerages following their retirement from the House of Commons. Edward Heath[citation needed] and John Major[6] chose not to become peers. Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, David Cameron and Theresa May have yet to receive a peerage.

Harold Macmillan declined a peerage on leaving office, but over 20 years after retiring he accepted a second offer of the customary hereditary earldom for retiring Prime Ministers, as Earl of Stockton (1984); this was the last earldom to be offered outside the Royal Family. While David Lloyd George also waited a similar period for his earldom, most offers have been made and accepted shortly after retirement such as the Earls of Oxford and Asquith, Baldwin, Attlee and Avon.

Many Cabinet members, including Chancellors of the Exchequer, Foreign Secretaries, Home Secretaries and Defence Secretaries, retiring since 1958 have generally been created life peers. William Whitelaw was created a hereditary viscount on the recommendation of Margaret Thatcher. Viscount Whitelaw died without male issue.

Life peerages have generally been granted to Speakers of the House of Commons upon retirement since 1971, who sit as crossbenchers. (Previously, retiring Speakers had by custom received a hereditary peerage between 1780 and 1970, usually a viscountcy.) George Thomas was the only Speaker after 1971 who still received a hereditary peerage instead of a life peerage, being created Viscount Tonypandy, but he died without male issue. The convention was broken in 2020 when retiring Speaker John Bercow was not granted a life peerage, the first denial of a peerage to a former Speaker in over 200 years.[7] At the time, Bercow was under investigation by the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards regarding allegations of bullying, with the government claiming that Bercow would fail a "propriety test" conducted for all nominees. Unusually, Bercow was nominated for a peerage by then-Leader of the Opposition and Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.

The Prime Minister continues to recommend a small number of former public office-holders for peerages. This generally includes Chiefs of Defence Staff, Secretaries of the Cabinet, and Heads of the Diplomatic Service. Every Archbishop of Canterbury who has retired since 1958 has been created a life peer, as have most recent Archbishops of York on retirement. A small number of other bishops—such as David Sheppard of Liverpool and Richard Harries of Oxford—were ennobled on retiring. The Lord Chamberlain is traditionally a member of the House of Lords and so is ennobled on appointment (if not already a peer), while most retiring Private Secretaries to the Queen and Governors of the Bank of England have also become peers.

High judicial officers have sometimes been created life peers upon taking office. All Lord Chief Justices of England and Wales have, since 1958, been created life peers under the Life Peerages Act, with the exception of Lord Woolf, who was already a Lord of Appeal in Ordinary before becoming Lord Chief Justice. Similarly, Lord Reed was created a life peer in 2019 when he was appointed President of the Supreme Court,[8] all of his predecessors in that role having already been created life peers as former Lords of Appeal in Ordinary.

Life peerages may in certain cases be awarded to hereditary peers. After the House of Lords Act 1999 passed, several hereditary peers of the first creation, who had not inherited their titles but would still be excluded from the House of Lords by the Act, were created life peers: Toby Low, 1st Baron Aldington; Frederick James Erroll, 1st Baron Erroll of Hale; Frank Pakenham, 7th Earl of Longford and 1st Baron Pakenham; and Antony Armstrong-Jones, 1st Earl of Snowdon. None of the peers of the first creation who were members of the Royal Family was granted a life peerage, as they had all declined. Life peerages were also granted to former Leaders of the House of Lords, including John Julian Ganzoni, 2nd Baron Belstead; Peter Carington, 6th Baron Carrington; Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 7th Marquess of Salisbury (better known as Viscount Cranborne and Lord Cecil of Essendon, having attended the Lords by virtue of a writ of acceleration); George Jellicoe, 2nd Earl Jellicoe; Malcolm Shepherd, 2nd Baron Shepherd; and David Hennessy, 3rd Baron Windlesham.

As part of the celebrations to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the Life Peerages Act, Gareth Williams, Baron Williams of Mostyn was voted by the members of the House of Lords at the time as the outstanding life peer since the creation of the life peerage.[9]

Number of life peers

Peers created under the Life Peerages Act 1958[10]
Prime Minister Party Tenure Peers Per year
Harold Macmillan Conservative 1957–1963 46 7.7
Alec Douglas-Home Conservative 1963–1964 16 16.0
Harold Wilson Labour 1964–1970 122 20.3**
Edward Heath Conservative 1970–1974 58 14.5
Harold Wilson Labour 1974–1976 80 40.0**
James Callaghan Labour 1976–1979 58 19.3
Margaret Thatcher Conservative 1979–1990 201 18.2
John Major Conservative 1990–1997 160 26.7
Tony Blair Labour 1997–2007 357 35.7
Gordon Brown Labour 2007–2010 34 11.3
David Cameron Conservative 2010–2016 243 40.5
Theresa May Conservative 2016–2019 43 14.3
Boris Johnson Conservative 2019–2022 106 30.7
Liz Truss Conservative 2022-2022 3 24.3
Rishi Sunak Conservative 2022 0 0
Total 1,504 23.5
* Macmillan's average calculated for the 5 years under the Act.
** Wilson's combined average is 25.4 life peerages per year.

Life peerages conferred on hereditary peers (from 1999 onwards) are not included in the numbers.

As of June 2022, there are 654 life peers eligible to vote in the House of Lords.[11] This includes 212 Conservative, 164 Labour, 80 Liberal Democrat and 150 crossbench peers. There are also 10 others representing 4 other parties, 34 non-affiliated, 3 peers labelling themselves as "Independent" but close to a party, and the Lord Speaker.[11] In addition, there are about 70 life peers who have retired from the House of Lords since 2010, as well as several who are otherwise ineligible to vote or removed for non-attendance.[12]

The Appellate Jurisdiction Act originally provided for the appointment of two Lords of Appeal in Ordinary, who would continue to serve while holding judicial office, though in 1887, they were permitted to continue to sit in the House of Lords for life, under the style and dignity of baron. The number of Lords of Appeal in Ordinary was increased from time to time – to three in 1882, to four in 1891, to six in 1913, to seven in 1919, to nine in 1947, to 11 in 1968 and to 12 in 1994. These provisions were repealed by the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 which created the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom. That Act also provided that holders of judicial offices, including Justice of the Supreme Court, who are for that reason disqualified from the House of Commons or the Northern Ireland Assembly, are now also disqualified from taking up their seats in the House of Lords if they are peers (as the former Law Lords all were).[13]

The rate of creation of life peerages under the Life Peerages Act has been fluctuating, with a high rate being most common right after a new party is elected to government. Consequently, David Cameron and Tony Blair have created life peerages at high rates, at 40.5 and 35.7 peerages per year respectively.

Conservative Prime Ministers have created on average 21 life peers per year in office, Labour Prime Ministers an average of 27 per year. In absolute terms, the Conservatives (in 40 years) have created slightly more (853 out of 1504, as of June 2022) life peerages than Labour (651 in 24 years); in addition, the vast majority (61) of the 68 non-royal hereditary peerages created since 1958 were created under Conservative Prime Ministers (especially Macmillan). Only three non-royal hereditary peerages have been created since 1965 (all under Thatcher), and none since 1984.[14]

In 1999, there were 172 Conservative and 160 Labour life peers in the House of Lords, and by 4 January 2010, there were 141 Conservative and 207 Labour life peers in the House of Lords. The hereditary element of the House of Lords, however, was much less balanced. In 1999, for example, immediately before most hereditary peers[15] were removed by the House of Lords Act, there were 350 Conservative hereditary peers, compared with 19 Labour peers and 23 Liberal Democrat peers.

Disclaiming

The Peerage Act 1963 allows the holder of an hereditary peerage to disclaim their title for life. There is no such provision for life peers. The Coalition Government's draft proposal for Lords reform in 2011 "provides that a person who holds a life peerage may at any time disclaim that peerage by writing to the Lord Chancellor. The person [and their spouse and children] will be divested of all rights and interests attaching to [that] peerage."[16] This proposal did not become law. In 2014 under the House of Lords Reform Act it became possible for peers to resign from the House of Lords (without disclaiming the peerage).

Titles and forms of address

Most life peers take a title based on their surname, either alone (e.g. Baron Hattersley) or in combination with a placename (known as a territorial designation) to differentiate them from others of the same surname (e.g. Baroness Kennedy of The Shaws). Surnames need not be used at all if desired.[17] Ian Paisley, for example, opted for the title Lord Bannside, and John Gummer chose the title Lord Deben. There are also occasions when someone's surname is not appropriate as a title, such as Michael Lord (now Lord Framlingham) and Michael Bishop (now Lord Glendonbrook).[18]

The formal style for a life peer is as follows (John Smith and Mary Smith refer to any name; London to any territorial designation):

Life peers are often mistakenly called 'Lord' or 'Lady' before their names (e.g. "Lord Andrew Lloyd-Webber") following their ennoblement, but this is incorrect since the correct form should be one of those shown above.[20] Only the daughters of earls, marquesses and dukes, and the younger sons of marquesses and dukes are properly referred to by the courtesy title of Lord or Lady Firstname Lastname, e.g. "Lord Louis Mountbatten", who was referred to as such as the younger son of The Marquess of Milford Haven before his enoblement as the Viscount (later Earl) Mountbatten of Burma.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Her Majesty's Passport Office use the form of "The Baroness (of) X" for a baroness in her own right, and the form of "The Lady (of) X" for a baron's wife.[19]

References

  1. ^ McKechnie, William Sharp, 1909: The reform of the House of Lords; with a criticism of the Report of the Select Committee of 2nd December, 1908, p.13
  2. ^ Companion to the Standing Orders and Guide to the Proceedings of the House of Lords (25th ed.). House of Lords. p. 1–3. Retrieved 8 April 2022.
  3. ^ "Constitutional Reform and Governance Act 2010". legislation.gov.uk. The National Archives. 8 April 2010. Retrieved 8 April 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  4. ^ "Latest peerages announced - GOV.UK".
  5. ^ BBC (25 April 2002). "'People's peers' under scrutiny". Caltech. London. Retrieved 19 November 2006.
  6. ^ "Major to turn down peerage". BBC News. 8 October 2000. Retrieved 16 August 2013.
  7. ^ "John Bercow will not get peerage despite Corbyn nomination". TheGuardian.com. 30 May 2020.
  8. ^ "Crown Office". www.thegazette.co.uk. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  9. ^ "Former Lords leader honoured with award". Yahoo/Epolitix. Retrieved 20 July 2008.[dead link]
  10. ^ Beamish, David. "United Kingdom peerage creations 1801 to 2021". www.peerages.info. Retrieved 7 June 2021., as of 7 June 2021
  11. ^ a b "Lords by party, type of peerage and gender". UK Parliament.
  12. ^ "Retired members of the House of Lords". UK Parliament.
  13. ^ "Constitutional Reform Act 2005: Section 137", legislation.gov.uk, The National Archives, 2005 c. 4 (s. 137)
  14. ^ Beamish, David. "United Kingdom peerage creations 1801 to 2021". www.peerages.info. Retrieved 24 June 2022.
  15. ^ "Home Page".
  16. ^ House of Lords Reform Draft Bill (Clause 62)
  17. ^ "Banks changes name for Lords life". BBC News. 23 June 2005. Retrieved 19 July 2022. News article from the BBC remarking on the custom, on the occasion of Tony Banks taking the title Baron Stratford instead of the more conventional Baron Banks
  18. ^ The Norton View — My Lord and Bishop (Accessed 22 May 2015)
  19. ^ Titles: Guidance for Her Majesty’s Passport Office operational staff on how to add and record titles and observations on a passport -official wevbsite of the Government of the United Kingdom
  20. ^ Burke's Peerage

References

  • Boothroyd, D. (2004), Life Peerages created under the Life Peerages Act 1958
  • Cox, N (1997), , New Zealand Universities Law Review, 17 (4): 379–401, archived from the original on 22 October 2009
  • Farnborough, T. E. May, 1st Baron (1896), Constitutional History of England since the Accession of George the Third (11th ed.), London: Longmans, Green and Co
  • Life Peerages Act 1958. (6 & 7 Elizabeth 2 c. 21), London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office, November 2017
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911), "Lords of Appeal in Ordinary" , Encyclopædia Britannica, vol. 17 (11th ed.), Cambridge University Press
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911), "Peerage" , Encyclopædia Britannica, vol. 21 (11th ed.), Cambridge University Press, pp. 45–55
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911), "Parliament: Life Peerages" , Encyclopædia Britannica, vol. 20 (11th ed.), Cambridge University Press

life, peer, united, kingdom, life, peers, appointed, members, peerage, whose, titles, cannot, inherited, contrast, hereditary, peers, modern, times, life, peerages, always, created, rank, baron, created, under, life, peerages, 1958, entitle, holders, seats, ho. In the United Kingdom life peers are appointed members of the peerage whose titles cannot be inherited in contrast to hereditary peers In modern times life peerages always created at the rank of baron are created under the Life Peerages Act 1958 and entitle the holders to seats in the House of Lords presuming they meet qualifications such as age and citizenship The legitimate children of a life peer are entitled to style themselves with the prefix The Honourable although they cannot inherit the peerage itself Contents 1 Before 1887 2 Life Peerages Act 1958 2 1 Working peers 2 2 People s peers 2 3 Honours 2 4 Public offices 3 Number of life peers 4 Disclaiming 5 Titles and forms of address 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 ReferencesBefore 1887 EditSee also Pre 1876 life peerages and Cromwell s Other House The Crown as fount of honour creates peerages of two types being hereditary or for life In the early days of the peerage the Sovereign had the right to summon individuals to one Parliament without being bound to summon them again Over time when it was established that once summoned a peer would have to be summoned for the remainder of their life and later that the peer s heirs and successors would also be summoned thereby firmly entrenching the hereditary principle Nevertheless life peerages lingered From the reign of James I to that of George II between 1603 and 1760 18 life peerages were created for women Women however were excluded from sitting in the House of Lords so it was unclear whether or not a life peerage would entitle a man to do the same For over four centuries if one excludes those who sat in Cromwell s House of Lords or Other House during the Interregnum no man had claimed a seat in the Lords by virtue of a life peerage In 1856 it was thought necessary to add a peer learned in law to the House of Lords which was the final court of appeal without allowing the peer s heirs to sit in the House and swell its numbers Sir James Parke a Baron judge of the Exchequer was created Baron Wensleydale for life but the House of Lords concluded that the peerage did not entitle him to sit in the House of Lords Lord Wensleydale was therefore appointed a hereditary peer In the event he had no sons so his peerage did not pass to an heir See also Wensleydale Peerage Case 1856 The Government introduced a bill to authorise the creation of two life peerages carrying seats in the House of Lords for judges who had held office for at least five years The House of Lords passed it but the bill was lost in the House of Commons In 1869 a more comprehensive life peerages bill was brought forward by the Earl Russell At any one time 28 life peerages could be in existence no more than four were to be created in any one year Life peers were to be chosen from senior judges civil servants senior officers of the British Army or Royal Navy members of the House of Commons who had served for at least ten years scientists writers artists peers of Scotland and peers of Ireland Peers of Scotland and Ireland did not all have seats in the House of Lords instead electing a number of representative peers The bill was rejected by the House of Lords at its third reading Finally the Appellate Jurisdiction Act 1887 allowed senior judges to sit in the House of Lords as life peers known as Lords of Appeal in Ordinary 1 Those appointees who were not already members of the House of Lords were created life peers by the Appellate Jurisdiction Act 1876 for their titles see the list of law life peerages Initially it was intended that peers created in this way would only sit in the House of Lords while serving their term as judges but in 1887 on the retirement of Lord Blackburn the Appellate Jurisdiction Act 1887 provided that former judges would retain their seats for life This ended with the creation of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom in 2009 Life Peerages Act 1958 EditThe Life Peerages Act sanctions the regular granting of life peerages but the power to appoint Lords of Appeal in Ordinary under the Appellate Jurisdiction Act was not derogated The Act placed no limits on the number of peerages that the Sovereign may award as was done by the Appellate Jurisdiction Act A peer created under the Life Peerages Act has the right to sit in the House of Lords provided that they are at least 21 years of age are not suffering punishment upon conviction for treason and are a citizen of the United Kingdom or of a member of the Commonwealth of Nations 2 and are a resident in the UK for tax purposes 3 Life baronies under the Life Peerages Act are created by the Sovereign but in practice are only granted when proposed by the Prime Minister Life peers created under the Life Peerages Act do not unless they also hold ministerial positions receive salaries They are however entitled to an allowance of 300 for travel and accommodation for each day on which the peer signs in to the House though the peer does not have to take part in the business of the House Working peers Edit From time to time lists of working peers are published 4 They do not form a formal class but represent the various political parties and are expected to regularly attend the House of Lords Most new appointments of life peers fall into this category Normally the Prime Minister chooses only peers from their own party but permits the leaders of opposition parties to recommend peers from their parties The Prime Minister may determine the number of peers each party may propose they may also choose to amend these recommendations but by convention does not do so People s peers Edit Peers may be created on a non partisan basis Formerly nominations on merit alone were made by the Prime Minister but this function was partially transferred to a new non statutory House of Lords Appointments Commission in 2000 Individuals recommended for the peerage by the Commission go on to become what have been described by some in the British media as people s peers 5 The Commission also scrutinises party recommendations for working peerages to ensure propriety The Prime Minister may determine the number of peers the Commission may propose and also may amend the recommendations Again by convention no amendment is made to the recommendations of the Commission Honours Edit Individuals may be created peers in various honours lists as rewards for achievement these peers are not expected to attend the House of Lords regularly but are at liberty to do so if they please The New Year Honours List the King s Birthday Honours List to mark the Sovereign s official birthday the second Saturday in June the Dissolution Honours List to mark the dissolution of Parliament and the Resignation Honours List to mark the end of a Prime Minister s tenure are all used to announce life peerage creations Public offices Edit Creations may be made for individuals on retirement from important public offices such as Prime Minister Speaker of the House of Commons or Archbishop of Canterbury or York Sir Alec Douglas Home who had renounced his hereditary title of the 14th Earl of Home on becoming Prime Minister was the first former occupant of the office to receive a life barony Harold Wilson James Callaghan and Margaret Thatcher all took life peerages following their retirement from the House of Commons Edward Heath citation needed and John Major 6 chose not to become peers Tony Blair Gordon Brown David Cameron and Theresa May have yet to receive a peerage Harold Macmillan declined a peerage on leaving office but over 20 years after retiring he accepted a second offer of the customary hereditary earldom for retiring Prime Ministers as Earl of Stockton 1984 this was the last earldom to be offered outside the Royal Family While David Lloyd George also waited a similar period for his earldom most offers have been made and accepted shortly after retirement such as the Earls of Oxford and Asquith Baldwin Attlee and Avon Many Cabinet members including Chancellors of the Exchequer Foreign Secretaries Home Secretaries and Defence Secretaries retiring since 1958 have generally been created life peers William Whitelaw was created a hereditary viscount on the recommendation of Margaret Thatcher Viscount Whitelaw died without male issue Life peerages have generally been granted to Speakers of the House of Commons upon retirement since 1971 who sit as crossbenchers Previously retiring Speakers had by custom received a hereditary peerage between 1780 and 1970 usually a viscountcy George Thomas was the only Speaker after 1971 who still received a hereditary peerage instead of a life peerage being created Viscount Tonypandy but he died without male issue The convention was broken in 2020 when retiring Speaker John Bercow was not granted a life peerage the first denial of a peerage to a former Speaker in over 200 years 7 At the time Bercow was under investigation by the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards regarding allegations of bullying with the government claiming that Bercow would fail a propriety test conducted for all nominees Unusually Bercow was nominated for a peerage by then Leader of the Opposition and Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn The Prime Minister continues to recommend a small number of former public office holders for peerages This generally includes Chiefs of Defence Staff Secretaries of the Cabinet and Heads of the Diplomatic Service Every Archbishop of Canterbury who has retired since 1958 has been created a life peer as have most recent Archbishops of York on retirement A small number of other bishops such as David Sheppard of Liverpool and Richard Harries of Oxford were ennobled on retiring The Lord Chamberlain is traditionally a member of the House of Lords and so is ennobled on appointment if not already a peer while most retiring Private Secretaries to the Queen and Governors of the Bank of England have also become peers High judicial officers have sometimes been created life peers upon taking office All Lord Chief Justices of England and Wales have since 1958 been created life peers under the Life Peerages Act with the exception of Lord Woolf who was already a Lord of Appeal in Ordinary before becoming Lord Chief Justice Similarly Lord Reed was created a life peer in 2019 when he was appointed President of the Supreme Court 8 all of his predecessors in that role having already been created life peers as former Lords of Appeal in Ordinary Life peerages may in certain cases be awarded to hereditary peers After the House of Lords Act 1999 passed several hereditary peers of the first creation who had not inherited their titles but would still be excluded from the House of Lords by the Act were created life peers Toby Low 1st Baron Aldington Frederick James Erroll 1st Baron Erroll of Hale Frank Pakenham 7th Earl of Longford and 1st Baron Pakenham and Antony Armstrong Jones 1st Earl of Snowdon None of the peers of the first creation who were members of the Royal Family was granted a life peerage as they had all declined Life peerages were also granted to former Leaders of the House of Lords including John Julian Ganzoni 2nd Baron Belstead Peter Carington 6th Baron Carrington Robert Gascoyne Cecil 7th Marquess of Salisbury better known as Viscount Cranborne and Lord Cecil of Essendon having attended the Lords by virtue of a writ of acceleration George Jellicoe 2nd Earl Jellicoe Malcolm Shepherd 2nd Baron Shepherd and David Hennessy 3rd Baron Windlesham As part of the celebrations to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the Life Peerages Act Gareth Williams Baron Williams of Mostyn was voted by the members of the House of Lords at the time as the outstanding life peer since the creation of the life peerage 9 Number of life peers EditPeers created under the Life Peerages Act 1958 10 Prime Minister Party Tenure Peers Per yearHarold Macmillan Conservative 1957 1963 46 7 7Alec Douglas Home Conservative 1963 1964 16 16 0Harold Wilson Labour 1964 1970 122 20 3 Edward Heath Conservative 1970 1974 58 14 5Harold Wilson Labour 1974 1976 80 40 0 James Callaghan Labour 1976 1979 58 19 3Margaret Thatcher Conservative 1979 1990 201 18 2John Major Conservative 1990 1997 160 26 7Tony Blair Labour 1997 2007 357 35 7Gordon Brown Labour 2007 2010 34 11 3David Cameron Conservative 2010 2016 243 40 5Theresa May Conservative 2016 2019 43 14 3Boris Johnson Conservative 2019 2022 106 30 7Liz Truss Conservative 2022 2022 3 24 3Rishi Sunak Conservative 2022 0 0Total 1 504 23 5 Macmillan s average calculated for the 5 years under the Act Wilson s combined average is 25 4 life peerages per year Life peerages conferred on hereditary peers from 1999 onwards are not included in the numbers As of June 2022 update there are 654 life peers eligible to vote in the House of Lords 11 This includes 212 Conservative 164 Labour 80 Liberal Democrat and 150 crossbench peers There are also 10 others representing 4 other parties 34 non affiliated 3 peers labelling themselves as Independent but close to a party and the Lord Speaker 11 In addition there are about 70 life peers who have retired from the House of Lords since 2010 as well as several who are otherwise ineligible to vote or removed for non attendance 12 The Appellate Jurisdiction Act originally provided for the appointment of two Lords of Appeal in Ordinary who would continue to serve while holding judicial office though in 1887 they were permitted to continue to sit in the House of Lords for life under the style and dignity of baron The number of Lords of Appeal in Ordinary was increased from time to time to three in 1882 to four in 1891 to six in 1913 to seven in 1919 to nine in 1947 to 11 in 1968 and to 12 in 1994 These provisions were repealed by the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 which created the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom That Act also provided that holders of judicial offices including Justice of the Supreme Court who are for that reason disqualified from the House of Commons or the Northern Ireland Assembly are now also disqualified from taking up their seats in the House of Lords if they are peers as the former Law Lords all were 13 The rate of creation of life peerages under the Life Peerages Act has been fluctuating with a high rate being most common right after a new party is elected to government Consequently David Cameron and Tony Blair have created life peerages at high rates at 40 5 and 35 7 peerages per year respectively Conservative Prime Ministers have created on average 21 life peers per year in office Labour Prime Ministers an average of 27 per year In absolute terms the Conservatives in 40 years have created slightly more 853 out of 1504 as of June 2022 life peerages than Labour 651 in 24 years in addition the vast majority 61 of the 68 non royal hereditary peerages created since 1958 were created under Conservative Prime Ministers especially Macmillan Only three non royal hereditary peerages have been created since 1965 all under Thatcher and none since 1984 14 In 1999 there were 172 Conservative and 160 Labour life peers in the House of Lords and by 4 January 2010 there were 141 Conservative and 207 Labour life peers in the House of Lords The hereditary element of the House of Lords however was much less balanced In 1999 for example immediately before most hereditary peers 15 were removed by the House of Lords Act there were 350 Conservative hereditary peers compared with 19 Labour peers and 23 Liberal Democrat peers Disclaiming EditThe Peerage Act 1963 allows the holder of an hereditary peerage to disclaim their title for life There is no such provision for life peers The Coalition Government s draft proposal for Lords reform in 2011 provides that a person who holds a life peerage may at any time disclaim that peerage by writing to the Lord Chancellor The person and their spouse and children will be divested of all rights and interests attaching to that peerage 16 This proposal did not become law In 2014 under the House of Lords Reform Act it became possible for peers to resign from the House of Lords without disclaiming the peerage Titles and forms of address EditMain article Forms of address in the United Kingdom Nobility Most life peers take a title based on their surname either alone e g Baron Hattersley or in combination with a placename known as a territorial designation to differentiate them from others of the same surname e g Baroness Kennedy of The Shaws Surnames need not be used at all if desired 17 Ian Paisley for example opted for the title Lord Bannside and John Gummer chose the title Lord Deben There are also occasions when someone s surname is not appropriate as a title such as Michael Lord now Lord Framlingham and Michael Bishop now Lord Glendonbrook 18 The formal style for a life peer is as follows John Smith and Mary Smith refer to any name London to any territorial designation In the case of a life baron The Rt Hon The Lord Smith of London e g The Rt Hon The Lord Owen or The Rt Hon John Lord Smith of London e g The Rt Hon David Lord Steel of Aikwood In the case of a life baroness The Rt Hon The Baroness Smith of London e g The Rt Hon The Baroness Thatcher or The Rt Hon Mary Baroness Smith of London e g The Rt Hon Betty Baroness Boothroyd a Life peers are often mistakenly called Lord or Lady before their names e g Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber following their ennoblement but this is incorrect since the correct form should be one of those shown above 20 Only the daughters of earls marquesses and dukes and the younger sons of marquesses and dukes are properly referred to by the courtesy title of Lord or Lady Firstname Lastname e g Lord Louis Mountbatten who was referred to as such as the younger son of The Marquess of Milford Haven before his enoblement as the Viscount later Earl Mountbatten of Burma See also EditPeerages in the United Kingdom Peerage of the United Kingdom List of life peerages 1958 1979 1979 1997 1997 2010 2010 present List of law life peerages Roll of the Peerage Cash for Honours Crossbencher List of related life peersNotes Edit Her Majesty s Passport Office use the form of The Baroness of X for a baroness in her own right and the form of The Lady of X for a baron s wife 19 References EditThis article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations November 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message McKechnie William Sharp 1909 The reform of the House of Lords with a criticism of the Report of the Select Committee of 2nd December 1908 p 13 Companion to the Standing Orders and Guide to the Proceedings of the House of Lords 25th ed House of Lords p 1 3 Retrieved 8 April 2022 Constitutional Reform and Governance Act 2010 legislation gov uk The National Archives 8 April 2010 Retrieved 8 April 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Latest peerages announced GOV UK BBC 25 April 2002 People s peers under scrutiny Caltech London Retrieved 19 November 2006 Major to turn down peerage BBC News 8 October 2000 Retrieved 16 August 2013 John Bercow will not get peerage despite Corbyn nomination TheGuardian com 30 May 2020 Crown Office www thegazette co uk Retrieved 5 October 2020 Former Lords leader honoured with award Yahoo Epolitix Retrieved 20 July 2008 dead link Beamish David United Kingdom peerage creations 1801 to 2021 www peerages info Retrieved 7 June 2021 as of 7 June 2021 a b Lords by party type of peerage and gender UK Parliament Retired members of the House of Lords UK Parliament Constitutional Reform Act 2005 Section 137 legislation gov uk The National Archives 2005 c 4 s 137 Beamish David United Kingdom peerage creations 1801 to 2021 www peerages info Retrieved 24 June 2022 Home Page House of Lords Reform Draft Bill Clause 62 Banks changes name for Lords life BBC News 23 June 2005 Retrieved 19 July 2022 News article from the BBC remarking on the custom on the occasion of Tony Banks taking the title Baron Stratford instead of the more conventional Baron Banks The Norton View My Lord and Bishop Accessed 22 May 2015 Titles Guidance for Her Majesty s Passport Office operational staff on how to add and record titles and observations on a passport official wevbsite of the Government of the United Kingdom Burke s PeerageReferences EditBoothroyd D 2004 Life Peerages created under the Life Peerages Act 1958 Cox N 1997 The British Peerage The Legal Standing of the Peerage and Baronetage in the overseas realms of the Crown with particular reference to New Zealand New Zealand Universities Law Review 17 4 379 401 archived from the original on 22 October 2009 Farnborough T E May 1st Baron 1896 Constitutional History of England since the Accession of George the Third 11th ed London Longmans Green and Co Life Peerages Act 1958 6 amp 7 Elizabeth 2 c 21 London Her Majesty s Stationery Office November 2017 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Lords of Appeal in Ordinary Encyclopaedia Britannica vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Peerage Encyclopaedia Britannica vol 21 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 45 55 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Parliament Life Peerages Encyclopaedia Britannica vol 20 11th ed Cambridge University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Life peer amp oldid 1130668146, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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