A walk through the whole topic. What the Lords actually does, the five functions it performs, more than a century of reform from 1911 to the 2024 Hereditary Peers Bill, the case for an elected chamber, the case against, and the comparative question behind every essay - revise the existing chamber, or replace it?
The House of Lords is the oldest part of the modern UK constitution and the most reformed. Over the past hundred and twenty years its veto power has been removed, its hereditary majority abolished, and most recently its remaining hereditary peers stripped from the chamber by the Labour government in 2024. And yet for all that change the chamber remains entirely unelected. The exam question on the topic is not whether reform has happened - clearly it has - but whether the Lords as it stands in 2026 still does a useful constitutional job, and whether the remaining critique (an unelected legislative chamber in a modern democracy) outweighs the case for the existing model. This walk-through takes the topic in order: composition, functions, the reform timeline, and the central debate.
Composition, peer types, and the language the exam expects.
The House of Lords is the second chamber of the UK Parliament. Following the 2024 Hereditary Peers Bill, it has approximately 720 members. They fall into three groups: life peers, who form the great majority and are appointed for life under the Life Peerages Act 1958; Lords Spiritual, twenty-six bishops of the Church of England; and a small remainder of hereditary peers in the process of being phased out under the 2024 Bill.
Politically, peers sit in three benches. Government peers sit on one side; opposition peers on the other; crossbenchers in the middle - peers with no party affiliation, typically appointed for expertise. Crossbenchers number roughly 180 and are the swing vote on close divisions. No party has had a majority in the Lords since the 1999 House of Lords Act.
The Lords cannot, in normal circumstances, block legislation indefinitely. The Parliament Acts 1911 and 1949 reduced its power over Commons-passed legislation to delay of one year. The Salisbury Convention (1945) holds that the Lords will not block any government bill that delivers a manifesto commitment of the winning party. The two together mean the Lords is now a revising chamber, not a rival to the Commons.
What the chamber does in practice. Scroll - each function lights as you go.
The Lords does five distinct constitutional jobs. Each one shapes whether the chamber is genuinely useful or genuinely surplus. The diagram beside you holds all five.
The Lords scrutinises legislation, revises bills, delays controversial measures, brings expert opinion, and debates broad issues of national concern. The diagram beside you sets them out. Each is a function the Commons either does worse or doesn't do at all - the case for the existing chamber rests on these five tasks.
The central modern function. The Lords examines every Commons bill line by line, identifies drafting errors, and proposes amendments. Most amendments are accepted by ministers; some force material change. The 2024 Rwanda Bill ping-pong saw the Lords amend the bill repeatedly on judicial-review safeguards; the Commons reinstated the original; the Lords eventually accepted. The Lords cannot block, but it can make ministers think twice and force visible parliamentary debate.
Lords select committees produce some of Parliament's most respected work. The Constitution Committee, the Economic Affairs Committee and the Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee generate reports that shape policy debates. Peers' freedom from electoral and whip pressure - and their expertise - is widely seen as producing more thorough scrutiny than the Commons can manage on the same bills. Question Time in the Lords is shorter and less theatrical than PMQs but often produces more substantive answers.
Under the Parliament Acts the Lords can delay a Commons bill for up to a year. Used sparingly but pointedly: the Lords forced concessions on the 2003 Sexual Offences Bill, the 2005 Identity Cards Act, and most recently the English Devolution Bill (2025-26) ping-pong. The Lords cannot ultimately stop a determined government, but the delay can force public debate, attract media attention, and sometimes make ministers retreat.
The unelected nature of the Lords is its biggest critique and, defenders argue, its biggest asset. The chamber contains former senior judges, scientists, doctors, military commanders, former diplomats, vice-chancellors, business leaders. Lord Sumption (former Supreme Court Justice), Lord Browne (former BP CEO), Baroness Hollins (medical researcher) typify the crossbench expertise no elected chamber would produce. An elected Lords would not contain these people.
Lords debates are longer and less constrained than Commons debates. The chamber takes time on issues the Commons cannot - assisted dying, the long-term consequences of AI, climate finance. These debates produce no votes but they shape national discussion, generate reports, and feed into legislation later. The strongest defenders of the current chamber argue this deliberative function is what makes the Lords worth keeping.
The Lords does five jobs the Commons does not do as well. The question every Lords-reform essay tests is whether those five functions justify keeping an unelected chamber, or whether democratic legitimacy outweighs them. The next two parts answer that question from each side.
1911 to 2024. Six successful reforms, three attempts that failed. Scroll the timeline.
Lords reform is one of the longest-running stories in UK constitutional history. The timeline beside you traces the successful Acts (1911, 1949, 1958, 1999, 2024), the failed attempts (Wakeham 2000, Clegg 2012), and the Salisbury Convention that has shaped the chamber's behaviour since 1945. The 2024 Hereditary Peers Bill is the most recent chapter.
Each major reform addressed a different question - veto power, hereditary membership, life-peer appointment, hereditary phase-out. Some failed (Wakeham 2000, Clegg 2012). The 2024 Hereditary Peers Bill is the most recent. Scroll through the milestones in order.
The first major reform. Following Lords obstruction of the 1909 People's Budget, the Parliament Act 1911 removed the Lords' veto over money bills and reduced its veto over other legislation to a two-year delay. This is the foundational moment of the modern Lords: the constitutional principle that the elected chamber has primacy was established here.
The Parliament Act 1949 reduced the Lords' delay power from two years to one. Used since: the Lords can delay a Commons bill for up to twelve months from its second reading, but cannot block it indefinitely. This is the current legal position.
Not a statute but a powerful constitutional convention. Following the 1945 Labour landslide, Viscount Cranborne (Lord Salisbury), leader of the Conservative peers in the still-dominantly-Conservative Lords, accepted that the chamber should not block government bills implementing manifesto commitments. The Salisbury Convention has been honoured ever since and remains the central political constraint on Lords behaviour.
The Life Peerages Act 1958 introduced peers appointed for life, who do not pass their seat to descendants. Created the modern chamber: appointment, not inheritance, became the dominant route in. Before 1958 the Lords was overwhelmingly hereditary; after 1958 it began to fill with appointees chosen for expertise or political service. By 1999 life peers outnumbered hereditary peers.
The House of Lords Act 1999, passed by Blair's first Labour government, removed all but 92 of the hereditary peers. The compromise (92 retained) was the political price for getting the bulk of the reform through. Reduced Lords membership from around 1,200 to 670; ended the dominance of inherited title in the modern chamber. The most significant reform since 1911.
A Royal Commission set up by Blair to recommend the next phase of reform. Wakeham (2000) recommended a partly-elected, mostly-appointed chamber. The government tabled options for Commons votes in 2003 - and every single option was rejected. Wakeham is the standard example of how Lords reform stalls when no single proposal commands majority support.
The Coalition's 2012 House of Lords Reform Bill, championed by Nick Clegg, proposed an 80% elected, 20% appointed chamber. Withdrawn after Conservative backbench rebellion. Wakeham and Clegg together demonstrate that elected-Lords proposals fail at the parliamentary level - the political coalition for genuine reform doesn't reliably exist.
Labour returned to government in July 2024 with a manifesto commitment to remove the remaining hereditary peers. The Hereditary Peers Bill 2024 implements that commitment, phasing out the 88 hereditary peers who had remained since the 1999 compromise. The Bill is the most recent step in the long phase-out that began in 1911.
Six successful Acts, two failed proposals, one convention. No single reform has transformed the chamber; cumulatively they have. The Lords of 2026 has no hereditary majority (in phase-out), no veto power, no parliamentary blocking power, no dominant party - and remains entirely unelected. The contemporary question is whether that combination is now sustainable.
The central debate. Scroll the case on each side.
The exam-defining question on this topic is whether the existing appointed Lords should be replaced with an elected (or part-elected) chamber. The diagram beside you sets the case on each side. Each argument has its named example and its counter.
The argument for and against an elected Lords has run for over a century. Each side has named arguments and named cases. The diagram beside you sets them out. Scroll the case for first, then the case against.
The strongest argument for elected Lords. In a representative democracy, every law-maker should answer to voters. The current Lords contains hereditary peers (until 2024), 26 bishops representing only the Church of England, and life peers appointed by Prime Ministers as a form of patronage. The Electoral Reform Society calls the chamber a "medieval anomaly". Public polling consistently shows majority support for an elected second chamber - around 60% over the post-2010 period.
Life peers are appointed by Prime Ministers (formally on the Crown's behalf). Every PM since 1997 has stocked the Lords with party donors, allies and former MPs. Cash for honours (2006-7) and the contemporary criticism of peerage appointments to political donors point to a systemic problem with the appointment route. An elected chamber would end PM patronage as the way in. The 2024 Hereditary Peers Bill addresses inherited privilege; the patronage problem remains.
The UK is now one of only a handful of democracies with a wholly unelected second chamber - alongside Canada, where the Senate is appointed, and a small number of others. Australia (Senate), the United States (Senate), Germany (Bundesrat) and most European democracies have elected or indirectly-elected second chambers. The international evidence suggests an unelected chamber is the historical exception, not the modern norm.
The most powerful counter-argument. An elected Lords would be filled with politicians - probably career politicians on closed-list PR or constituency seats. The chamber would lose its crossbench tradition, its expert peers, its freedom from whip pressure. Wakeham (2000) and Clegg (2012) both struggled with the question of what a useful second chamber that mirrors the Commons would actually do. If both chambers are elected, the case for two becomes weaker, not stronger.
The current Lords contains expertise no elected chamber would produce. Sumption, Browne, Hollins and the 180-strong crossbench would not survive an electoral process. The committee work that defenders cite as the Lords' best output - Constitution, Economic Affairs, Secondary Legislation - depends on members chosen for expertise, not popular vote. Defenders argue this is exactly what makes the existing chamber worth keeping.
The Parliament Acts and the Salisbury Convention rest on the political fact that the Commons is elected and the Lords is not. An elected Lords would have a democratic mandate to challenge Commons primacy on policy areas where it disagreed. Australia and the US show what this looks like - regular conflict between chambers, gridlock, dual claims to legitimacy. The constitutional architecture of the UK depends on Commons primacy; an elected Lords would unsettle it.
The democratic case for an elected Lords is real and consistent. The functional case for the existing chamber is also real. Wakeham and Clegg both failed because no proposal commanded majority support - which is itself evidence that the political coalition for reform doesn't exist. A strong essay commits to a side (most often: appointed but with reformed appointment, ending PM patronage, retaining crossbench expertise) and uses the named cases to support it.
The questions this topic produces and the three-theme comparative structure.
Paper 2 examines this topic primarily as a 30-mark essay.
Trap: wholly - test the absolute. Three comparative themes: democratic legitimacy against expertise and crossbench function; international norm against Commons primacy; reformed appointment against direct election. Argue a more reformed appointed chamber, not a wholly elected one - it preserves the functional case while addressing the legitimacy critique.
Trap: "more effective" forces a comparison. Three themes: Lords select committee work (Constitution, Economic Affairs) against Commons select committee tradition; Lords' freedom from whip pressure against Commons democratic mandate; expertise against accountability. Argue Lords more effective on technical scrutiny; Commons retains political weight.
Trap: "more incremental than transformative" - test both halves. Three themes: each major Act (1911, 1958, 1999, 2024) against its individual reach; cumulative effect against single-step transformation; failed attempts (Wakeham, Clegg) against the chamber's actual changes. Argue: each step incremental; cumulative effect transformative.
Trap: "better than any" forces engagement with specific alternatives. Three themes: existing crossbench expertise against elected representation; appointment patronage against PR election; revising-chamber function against the threat to Commons primacy. Defend the existing chamber's functional record while conceding the legitimacy critique.
Three directly comparative themes.
Other comparative themes you could substitute: hybrid (Wakeham 80/20) against pure election (Clegg 100); abolition against reform (the unicameral option); 1999 reform against 2024 reform (incremental progress); UK against Australia, US, Germany on inter-chamber dynamics.
You have walked the topic. Now check your recall and structure your answers.
The vocabulary the examiner expects you to define and use.
House of Lords - the second chamber of the UK Parliament; approximately 720 members in 2026; entirely unelected.
Life peer - a peer appointed for life under the Life Peerages Act 1958; cannot pass the title to descendants; the dominant peer type since 1999.
Hereditary peer - a peer whose title was inherited; 88 remained after the 1999 House of Lords Act; phased out by the 2024 Hereditary Peers Bill.
Lords Spiritual - the 26 Church of England bishops who sit ex officio in the Lords; unique to the UK among modern democracies.
Crossbencher - a peer with no party affiliation, typically appointed for expertise; around 180 in 2026; the swing vote on close divisions.
Parliament Act 1911 - removed the Lords' veto over money bills and reduced its veto over other legislation to a two-year delay.
Parliament Act 1949 - reduced the Lords' delay power from two years to one - the current legal position.
Salisbury Convention (1945) - the constitutional convention that the Lords will not block any government bill implementing a manifesto commitment of the winning party.
Life Peerages Act 1958 - introduced peers appointed for life; created the modern chamber.
House of Lords Act 1999 - removed all but 92 of the hereditary peers; the most significant reform since 1911.
Wakeham Commission (2000) - a Royal Commission that recommended a partly-elected, mostly-appointed chamber; every option rejected by the Commons in 2003.
Clegg reform plan (2012) - the Coalition's proposal for an 80% elected chamber; withdrawn after Conservative backbench rebellion.
Hereditary Peers Bill (2024) - the Labour government's Bill phasing out the remaining 88 hereditary peers.
Revising chamber - the modern description of the Lords' core role: scrutinising and amending Commons legislation rather than blocking it.
Cash for honours - the 2006-7 controversy over peerage appointments to political donors; emblematic of the patronage critique.