Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jul 15
Lords Committee Urges 80-Year Retirement Age and 20% Attendance Rule for 774-Member House
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jul 15

Lords Committee Urges 80-Year Retirement Age and 20% Attendance Rule for 774-Member House

3 articles · Updated · BBC.com · Jul 15

Summary

  • An upper-house reform committee recommended forcing House of Lords members to retire at 80 and removing peers who attend fewer than 20% of sitting days.
  • The plan would phase in the age cap to avoid a mass exit: the limit would start at 85 in July 2029 and fall by one year annually until reaching 80 in 2034.
  • Attendance rules would tighten sharply from the current minimum of one appearance per session to 20% of sitting days, averaged over two sessions, with emergencies and compassionate absences taken into account.
  • Labour pledged both changes in its 2024 manifesto and said it will consider the recommendations before issuing a formal response later this year.
  • The proposals target long-running concerns over the Lords' size—currently 774 members—with a briefing estimating 301 life peers will be over 80 by July 2029.

Insights

Will a mandatory retirement age for peers just open the door for more political patronage and cronyism?
Will a 20% attendance rule truly improve the Lords, or just create a new box-ticking exercise?