Most of Britain's Parliament is not elected... Meet THE LORDS

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  • čas přidán 17. 05. 2024
  • In the ancient House of Lords, you can inherit a seat from your family.
    (Subscribe: bit.ly/C4_News_Subscribe)
    As the UK debates Brexit, many politicians want to break from the EU in order to restore British democracy. But how democratic are we really?
    We investigate the House of Lords, where hundreds of people have power over UK laws - without ever being elected by the public.
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Komentáře • 4,2K

  • @aaron62688
    @aaron62688 Před 2 lety +6579

    As an American I can say that having two houses both elected doesnt solve a damned thing.

    • @caligulalonghbottom2629
      @caligulalonghbottom2629 Před 2 lety +284

      Our highest court isn't even elected...lol and that impacts everything perpetually. I would dare imagine that most Lords are conservatives though regardless of not having a political party although many lords are innately eccentric and liberal so its really a luck of the draw in that regard.

    • @grimftl
      @grimftl Před 2 lety

      The Senate wasn't elected until 1914. Even now, it's a permanently gerrymandered election.

    • @teflonsinatra9002
      @teflonsinatra9002 Před 2 lety

      The problem is america is Bipartism

    • @casuallystalled
      @casuallystalled Před 2 lety +102

      it doesn't because our two party system has become so divided and all of them are just looking towards the next election

    • @ArticWolfv
      @ArticWolfv Před 2 lety

      for proof see the life term members of congress

  • @zakbrewin1709
    @zakbrewin1709 Před 2 lety +4627

    I respect that old dude, he's like " yeah it's stupid but you would do it too"

    • @FirebirdPrince
      @FirebirdPrince Před 2 lety +557

      Right? Free power is hard to pass up. Even if you're a good person you're probably thinking that you can contribute positively

    • @visigoth3696
      @visigoth3696 Před 2 lety +217

      Only a liar would say they wouldn’t want it.

    • @rileysmall4317
      @rileysmall4317 Před 2 lety +68

      @@visigoth3696 a liar or a simple minded person.

    • @swagatochatterjee7104
      @swagatochatterjee7104 Před 2 lety

      No trust me you won't do it. Only old power hungry racist megalomaniac would do it

    • @erushi5503
      @erushi5503 Před 2 lety +16

      @@visigoth3696 i wouldnt want it, too much attention, and responsibility
      Id rather stay in military
      And it's easier to act on things as normal person, if your a monarch you cant just say stuf or do stuff but being someone from common lineage you can volunteer to help others
      Ive seen my fair share of stupidity of those in power, so yeah, call me simple minded but id rather be in a place where i can actively help those around me
      Ahahaha

  • @tiffanyi5645
    @tiffanyi5645 Před rokem +1945

    As an American the House of Lords sounds nuts, but looking at the state of our own politics, Im just gonna sit this one out 😂😂

  • @Nozdormu1982
    @Nozdormu1982 Před rokem +604

    Honestly. The big problem with elected officials is the fact that most of the stuff they do is short term to please the people that voted for them or to make a mark on society. Therefore having a group of people that are not affected by this, but are part of the process isn't as bad as people may think.

    • @Nico-wg5jo
      @Nico-wg5jo Před 11 měsíci +30

      I agree with that point. But why not get rid of those peers who have inherited their post? This is the only problem I see here, the function of the house of lords is unproplematic in my opinion.

    • @gnommg
      @gnommg Před 6 měsíci +26

      I get that argument but then why not make it representatives of certain groups in society. How about some unemployed people, some teachers, some union representatives, some retail workers, some nurses etc. About 60%of society are underrepresented. Maybe we would address some really pressing issues then.

    • @enriqueperezarce5485
      @enriqueperezarce5485 Před 6 měsíci +5

      @@gnommgYou get elected into the lords the most common way by achievements big enough. Sorry bud but we can’t have everything in life. Having all walks of life would make the agenda muddled and confusing

    • @oscarandria
      @oscarandria Před 5 měsíci

      Yes. Arguably it should be a civil service position, appointed by meritocracy and other factors. Indeed, it would be beneficial to have a few MPs who can hold unpartisan views, and not be so focused on the short term.@@Nico-wg5jo

    • @LuizSouzaDeMelo
      @LuizSouzaDeMelo Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@enriqueperezarce5485
      Born inst a good reason

  • @Ben-zb8pq
    @Ben-zb8pq Před 2 lety +3616

    I was hoping to hear more a discussion on the House Of Lords role and how it impacts our lives, as opposed to just ‘it can be a hereditary role and some people have spent £200 on a chauffeur’

    • @dynamo1796
      @dynamo1796 Před 2 lety +507

      Also to say "most of the parliament is not elected" is just trying to be inflammatory. Its 750 Lords to 650 MPs. The Lords don't have much power to make or stop laws, they simply exist as a higher house to hold the democratic process to account and to insure a tyrannical majority party in the House of Commons doesn't make laws contrary to the core constitutional rights of the UK. The Lords don't spend their days just coming up with new laws on their own initiative - they safeguard the UK's most vital and core ideals.

    • @croweater6814
      @croweater6814 Před 2 lety +151

      Compare a Lords pay to a standard politicians from the commons, and you will care even less how much money they spend.
      They get sweet F all in comparison.
      A lord will get £66,000 if the attend ever session they only get payed on the days they attend, an back bench MP gets £82,000 even if they don't attend session. (Most hereditory Lords couldn't be bothered to attend) only bothering to attend for the most important Bills, however politically appointed Lords go to every session.

    • @lostonearth7856
      @lostonearth7856 Před 2 lety

      The House of Lords really shouldn't do much other than being a rubber stamp group that can only block a bill twice and give recommendations that can be completely ignored by the house of commons.
      If I am remembering correctly, the only bills they can block from the House of Commons is any plans to delay any elections by parties trying to move away from democracy using the democartic system.

    • @akhilsharma20
      @akhilsharma20 Před 2 lety +176

      When someone is not afraid of being replaced in 5 years, they can have the power to lookout for their country, take decisions that may not benefit soon. I think this is the picture this clip missed.

    • @croweater6814
      @croweater6814 Před 2 lety +51

      @@akhilsharma20 In ddition if those elites are sustained by the nation being independent and strong they should always vote in favour of the nation. If however the nation is weak and their positions are threatened they will invariably vote to protect themselves and align themselves with whatever power best does that even if it is foreign.

  • @anmolt3840051
    @anmolt3840051 Před 2 lety +483

    The earl of Limerick submitting a limerick is such a power move ... I'm honestly rather impressed

    • @mcbabwe4977
      @mcbabwe4977 Před rokem +46

      That’s a chap with a sense of humor

    • @jameskingston3058
      @jameskingston3058 Před rokem +9

      Funny yes.As an Irishman,I ask why an English peer could have a seat in the English parliament when Limerick is a city in a foreign country,the Irish republic.There is no earl of Calais even though this French city was under English rule for centuries.

    • @pippipster6767
      @pippipster6767 Před rokem +32

      When I first saw it I blinked.
      Although it was impressively succinct.
      I thought it was a gimmick.
      Not from the Earl of Limerick.
      And now I quite like it I think.

    • @barrymoore4470
      @barrymoore4470 Před rokem +1

      @@jameskingston3058 In contrast to peers of Scotland, no person holding titles only in the peerage of Ireland has ever been allowed a seat in the UK House of Lords (unless he were specially selected as a representative peer, beginning in 1800, by his fellows in the Irish nobility). However, should a peer of Ireland also hold a title in the peerages of England, Great Britain, or the United Kingdom (and beginning in 1963, the peerage of Scotland), then that peer was entitled to a seat in the House of Lords, until the 1999 reform revoked the automatic right of anyone to be seated as a Lord by virtue of any hereditary title. Hereditary peers remain eligible for the House if duly appointed by correct parliamentary procedure, and hereditary peers holding life peerages are guaranteed to be seated in the House (pending any retirement from that advisory body). As the Earl of Limerick also bears a title in the peerage of the United Kingdom, that of Baron Foxford, he is eligible to be appointed to a seat in the House of Lords, hence the application that is briefly discussed in the clip.

    • @jameskingston3058
      @jameskingston3058 Před rokem +1

      Many thanks for your explanation

  • @gabrielacastillo2930
    @gabrielacastillo2930 Před rokem +234

    I am from Venezuela, a country where politics is pretty much a chaos. I wish we had some people reviewing the public policies and laws regardless of their political identity.

    • @bizarreisthenewblack
      @bizarreisthenewblack Před 10 měsíci +8

      the exclusively bourgeoisie?

    • @jonathanwright8025
      @jonathanwright8025 Před 10 měsíci +5

      @@bizarreisthenewblack Its an argument for a second house to review things - the benefits of bicameralism over unicameralism.

    • @px6636
      @px6636 Před 5 měsíci

      I was thinking exactly the same thing ( I am also Venezuela )

    • @maximilianrobespierre8365
      @maximilianrobespierre8365 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@bizarreisthenewblackhahaha good one

    • @JulietCrowson
      @JulietCrowson Před 2 měsíci

      Except they don't review the la s, they simply rubber stamp badly written, written in self-interest by lawyers for the benefit of rich lawyers - their friends/neighbours/colleagues mostly. None of them have a shred of integrity...most are pretty dim in the head imo

  • @davidk6264
    @davidk6264 Před rokem +353

    Even the elected officials need an endorsement from the party before they can campaign for a seat.

    • @ince55ant
      @ince55ant Před rokem +34

      the whole system is designed to be undemocratic. or rather the creators' concept of democracy intentionally excludes the vast majority of people

    • @vinopit
      @vinopit Před rokem +2

      And the people still beloeve democracy exists

    • @frjcde9392
      @frjcde9392 Před rokem

      @@ince55ant Yup, it’s the illusion of democracy. Then again, democracy has always been easily manipulated and corrupted. It’s why many of the founding fathers despised a democracy and went with a constitutional republic.

    • @tylerkochman1007
      @tylerkochman1007 Před rokem

      You can run independent. But the only independents that seem to get elected are former party members that was booted by their local party council but successfully ran as an independent

    • @MikeAG333
      @MikeAG333 Před rokem

      There is no such thing as "elected officials".

  • @pisell1875
    @pisell1875 Před 2 lety +2202

    Firstly, the House of Lords really doesn't have the power to stop a law, they mainly act as an advisory board to the House of Commons. They can delay laws, but not the ones in the winning party's manifesto... So really, they don't have that much power as this video made it look like.
    However, what the House of Lords does very well is "balancing" against the problems that may occur with democratic systems. One of the biggest problems of every democracy is that the MPs are usually experts in politics, but aren't really experts in much else. They're not economists, lawyers, businessmen, sociologists or urban planners, they are usually just experts in making people vote for them, they're simply salesmen. Yet, they make the most important decisions that need the most advanced level of general knowledge.
    So do we really want another house of ignorant salespeople who mainly just think about getting voted? The idea of the House of Lords is to balance the democratic aspect, having its pros and cons, with a council of experts, not of elected salesmen, but people with senior experience in various fields.
    Now, I agree that your dad being a Baron doesn't really make you an expert. So rather than making the House of Lords elected, they should include more members appointed for their skills, the top people in each career, like they did with Andrew Lloyd Webber. That would make much more sense.

    • @danielkrcmar5395
      @danielkrcmar5395 Před 2 lety +266

      Historically, being a Baron would have made you an expert, you'd have had a higher quality education, be in charge of land and large amounts of wealth and business. Most likely would have seen military service and have experience commanding a sizable force or a fort. They'd have likely had a role in a colonial administration.
      Hereditary Lords were raised form birth for the role.

    • @osianevans-sharma2899
      @osianevans-sharma2899 Před 2 lety +26

      ha I was with you and then BAM Andrew Lloyd Webber lol

    • @mabimabi212
      @mabimabi212 Před 2 lety +27

      Wow. That geniunely sounds like the best solution* for politicians being closer to celebrities than well-informed, generally educated and respectable people.
      There's only 2 problems I see with this. First, the House of Lords (In this scenario) might become an even larger conservative party - in terms of sticking to what they know works, and not really caring about anything that might improve that. Secondly, the House of Commons can still just not care for the House of Lords, as they are a purely advisory institution (maybe giving them some power might help?). Nevertheless, being wholely an advisory body, their input would be really important.

    • @pippipster6767
      @pippipster6767 Před 2 lety +4

      Well done, simply an argument for a totalitarian fascist state.

    • @danielkrcmar5395
      @danielkrcmar5395 Před 2 lety +63

      @@pippipster6767 I don't think you understand the definition of fascism...

  • @maurodelarbre4969
    @maurodelarbre4969 Před 2 lety +1677

    Say all u want against the house off lords, the guy makes a point when he says that lords don't have to worry about elections. Politic these days are more like an advertising competition than running the country.

    • @rafifputrataqidarmawan4044
      @rafifputrataqidarmawan4044 Před 2 lety +66

      It depends on the person really, elected officials and lords are all human, some are good, some are bad. Depends really.

    • @caligulalonghbottom2629
      @caligulalonghbottom2629 Před 2 lety

      @@rafifputrataqidarmawan4044 I mean lets not pretend we havent heard of unelected life positions, the US has judges for life which impacts everyone perpetually.

    • @rafifputrataqidarmawan4044
      @rafifputrataqidarmawan4044 Před 2 lety +4

      @@caligulalonghbottom2629 True

    • @Krytern
      @Krytern Před 2 lety

      The fact they don't have to worry about elections means they can more easily be corrupt because they won't be voted out.

    • @000Dragon50000
      @000Dragon50000 Před 2 lety +8

      Electing people rather than voting directly on policies will be like that, although it's difficult because not everyone is aware of the facts enough to vote directly on that,

  • @JPKloess
    @JPKloess Před rokem +154

    I love that this video is so aggressively against the house of Lords, but all it makes me do is want to root for them.

    • @tombranch2261
      @tombranch2261 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Why is that exactly?

    • @andrewwarren8474
      @andrewwarren8474 Před 4 měsíci +1

      It’s funny because the charges against the baroness were so silly when she actually broke it down that, while we can all agree the House of Lords is a bad concept, it made the video come off as a cheap political hit job.

    • @williamcarter3933
      @williamcarter3933 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I think that's called Stockhome Syndrome

    • @JPKloess
      @JPKloess Před 3 měsíci

      @@williamcarter3933 I'm an American 😅

    • @williamcarter3933
      @williamcarter3933 Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@JPKloess ah well that solves that level of thought then

  • @Zozi_og
    @Zozi_og Před rokem +82

    The cut at 8:40 is classical example of media manipulation.
    While he is asking the question, they jumpcut to some other footage where she looks "scared" by the said question and jump back to original cut when she starts talking.
    Look at the top left of her head and notice the hair.

    • @Philcoulson918
      @Philcoulson918 Před rokem +4

      You are Right, this is insane

    • @JJ-ze6vb
      @JJ-ze6vb Před rokem

      It’s called „editing“. All editing is manipulation, since, by definition, it edits parts out.
      Calm down.

    • @Zozi_og
      @Zozi_og Před rokem +12

      @@JJ-ze6vb I presume that majority of people understand what the definition of "editing" is.
      But clearly you missed the point i was trying to make.

    • @JJ-ze6vb
      @JJ-ze6vb Před rokem

      @@Zozi_og I hope you find something that will calm you down

    • @Ursi_
      @Ursi_ Před rokem +6

      @@JJ-ze6vb you’re avoiding the point, and everyone here is calm lol

  • @lm7970
    @lm7970 Před 2 lety +1048

    Failed to mention that the House of Commons which is wholly elected can reject any motion that the House of Lords proposes. The House of Lords is simply advisory and has no power.

    • @ArkadiBolschek
      @ArkadiBolschek Před 2 lety +89

      So what you're saying is, Britain could perfectly discard it and adopt a unicameral system, like many other countries in the world?

    • @fil_britbunnyboi872
      @fil_britbunnyboi872 Před 2 lety +117

      The Lords can veto laws passed by the Commons. Ill say that's real power

    • @ArkadiBolschek
      @ArkadiBolschek Před 2 lety +91

      @@fil_britbunnyboi872 I don't *think* they can actually veto laws. AFAIK They can reject them and send them back to the House of Commons, but there's a limit to how many times they can do it.

    • @diglory89
      @diglory89 Před 2 lety +22

      What about the tax payer money? It wouldn’t be an argument for an advisory position. It’s obviously more than that

    • @danjcollier
      @danjcollier Před 2 lety +67

      @@fil_britbunnyboi872
      The Lords can’t veto laws, they can make amendments, which the Commons can accept or reject. If neither House can agree, the commons has the final say.

  • @dh2profit
    @dh2profit Před 2 lety +270

    Remarkable job of confusing the viewer about the comparative power, or lack thereof, of the House of Lords.

    • @jamesjack67
      @jamesjack67 Před 2 lety +1

      this video is shite honestly, definitely not made from an objective standpoint

    • @dobrasilaomundo.8086
      @dobrasilaomundo.8086 Před rokem

      This bozo thinks he is a journalist, but in reality he is an activist, you can tell by the way of his mannerism.

    • @MattFoss848
      @MattFoss848 Před rokem +7

      Agreed, incredibly bias.

  • @ashtray1647
    @ashtray1647 Před rokem +169

    The fact that they arnt elected actually makes them more morally sound than regular members of parliament. The house of lords is an important regulantory body for the government that is now almost impossible to replace. In principle it doesn't make sense but in real life I am am glad it still exists.

    • @EbenFuller
      @EbenFuller Před 4 měsíci +3

      Amen!

    • @yamyam2987
      @yamyam2987 Před 4 měsíci

      Hear hear

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 Před 3 měsíci

      Then North Korea is an extremely morally sound country.

  • @rapturas
    @rapturas Před rokem +81

    The whole issue is accountability. Doesn't matter how someone came into power, if they're unaccountable for anything that they do, then they're dangerous. Everyone knows that power corrupts.

    • @Kubizan
      @Kubizan Před 4 měsíci +6

      Can you give me an example of how House of Lords behaved in a dangerous manner?

    • @Tattletale97
      @Tattletale97 Před 4 měsíci +5

      Power don't corrupt, Power simply reveal their true selves.

    • @ando3087
      @ando3087 Před 4 měsíci

      Oh yes you can clearly tell the Earl of Selby is an evil power hungry aristocrat just waiting to take away your rights.

    • @ForF6cksAke
      @ForF6cksAke Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@Tattletale97 What are you a poet... People doesn't have true color they have character and it may differ depending on the environment they've grew up.
      There's no people walking around with a stable color inside and that's a racist😂😂

    • @Tattletale97
      @Tattletale97 Před 3 měsíci

      @@ForF6cksAke What are you talking about? I didn't mention "colour", I utilise the word "True selves".

  • @lukegames7979
    @lukegames7979 Před 2 lety +781

    The House Of Lords Act (1999) made it so that only 92 hereditary Peers were allowed to remain in the Lords on a temporary basis until "second stage" proposals were agreed. Therefore out of the 788 sitting members only 92 inherited their place. Other sitting members of The House Of Lords are specialists in their field so that they can give their expert opinion on bills (draft laws) that have been brought forward by The House Of Commons.

    • @danielkrcmar5395
      @danielkrcmar5395 Před 2 lety +44

      That act was a catastrophe and should be abolished. The HoL needs to return to how it was in the 1910s.

    • @jacksavage9104
      @jacksavage9104 Před 2 lety +37

      @@danielkrcmar5395 what

    • @TheExcessus
      @TheExcessus Před 2 lety +23

      yeah, BoJos chums are "specialists"... hahaha

    • @bb1at
      @bb1at Před 2 lety +34

      Many life peers were just simply chums with the PM of that time. Think there needs to be a reform in the Life Peerages Act 1958 as many of these 'experts' becoming a life peer is just blatant nepotism.

    • @croweater6814
      @croweater6814 Před 2 lety +19

      @@danielkrcmar5395 agreed, the Lords should be just that Lords. People who have a an excellent motivation in preserving the system because they benefit greatly from it.
      The house of Lords came about by convention because it just works, tacking "democracy" onto it only breaks it. Experts and political appointees are not Lords and are no better than the MPs that put them there.

  • @hastrom
    @hastrom Před 5 lety +784

    As I have understood they don´t come up with laws or have the ability to stop something that the commons have voted on. They review the text and propose changes and/or send the bill back to the commons. They can delay something but not stop. Feels like people might watch this and going away with the belief they have more power than they actually have. It should be changed but it's not like it's a democratic disaster atm.

    • @monkeymox2544
      @monkeymox2544 Před 5 lety +62

      They can introduce legislation, but yes the commons always has the final say. Personally I like having an appointed upper chamber - I don't think the hereditaries or bishops should be in there (or rather, they shouldn't automatically get seats, although I have no problem with people who happen to be hereditary peers or bishops if they earn it, but its nice to have people involved in the parliamentary process who aren't obsessed with PR, many of whom actually have some expertise in fields other than politics.

    • @skindred1888
      @skindred1888 Před 3 lety +2

      @@monkeymox2544 pr...or the public...or who cares what the public think of their decisions....being accountable comes with almost every job in the world apart from the lord's.

    • @alanhat5252
      @alanhat5252 Před 2 lety +25

      @@skindred1888 the Lords are accountable, it's just that they tend to behave responsibly so we don't see the censure

    • @alanhat5252
      @alanhat5252 Před 2 lety +14

      @@monkeymox2544 the hereditaries & bishops _don't_ automatically get seats, 92 seats are _available_ for hereditaries & I think 26 _available_ for bishops. The hereditaries are _elected_ from a pool of 810 Peers of the Realm & bishops from however many thousands of the Church of England & if enough aren't elected the seats aren't filled (I don't think it's happened for long but it's theoretically possible). They're all there on merit.

    • @monkeymox2544
      @monkeymox2544 Před 2 lety +17

      @@alanhat5252 Yes I understand that the hereditaries are elected from a pool, I just don't think they should be. Bloodline shouldn't come into it at all, in the slightest. And to say they're there on merit is a bit of a stretch - they're elected by the other hereditary peers! If we're going to have an unelected chamber it should completely be appointed, with no seats reserved for hereditary peers at all. Again, I've no problem with people who have titles being in the house, as long as they get there by the same method as the other members.

  • @supermossboy1226
    @supermossboy1226 Před rokem +20

    My word, the condescension in the baroness' tone is rich indeed.

  • @tikatank6772
    @tikatank6772 Před rokem +2

    And these jokers call themselves champions of democracy !

  • @rainbowappleslice
    @rainbowappleslice Před rokem +12

    Kinda crazy that the guy interviewed was in parliament for 48 years and say 9 prime ministers, and in 2022 as a 16 year old I’ve seen 7.

  • @Cigybutt
    @Cigybutt Před 2 lety +30

    70,000 pounds over 5 years is not ten pounds a week, it's 269 pounds.....

  • @siddharthabhattacharya1718
    @siddharthabhattacharya1718 Před 5 měsíci +2

    It is time to inform British people what these undemocratic Lords and Ladies are contributing to the country. How unique British democracy is. without making any iconoclastic nonsense.

  • @upulalahakoon5717
    @upulalahakoon5717 Před 8 měsíci +35

    I am not a Christian.I am a buddhist but honestly I love the way Britain continues their traditions ❤
    Congratulations from Sri Lanka

  • @rogg8496
    @rogg8496 Před 2 lety +43

    Only 12% of the members in the house of Lords have inherited their position.

    • @markkelly4102
      @markkelly4102 Před 2 lety +13

      12% too many.

    • @RoseSiames
      @RoseSiames Před 2 lety +6

      12% Inherited
      3.4% Bishop
      and the rest bought their way in

    • @Zizzles
      @Zizzles Před 2 lety +3

      @@RoseSiames aren’t most of the life peers retired MPs?

    • @RoseSiames
      @RoseSiames Před 2 lety +2

      @@Zizzles oh yes

    • @prosperitylife5344
      @prosperitylife5344 Před 2 lety +1

      Don’t care 🤷🏾‍♂️ why they there anyways. Corruption

  • @femboyskeleton9150
    @femboyskeleton9150 Před 2 lety +186

    I'm not a big fan of the house of lords but this is so clearly bias it's repulsive, and they clearly entrapped that peer absolutely disgusting practice and I would have expected better from channel 4

    • @Jmcinally94
      @Jmcinally94 Před 2 lety +11

      Good journalism is when you soft ball questions that don't hold people accountable. Make sure you tell the interviewee all the questions in advance so they have a chance to say no or create spin in advance.
      I agree this is a one sided video, but to complain about "entrapping" this peer makes it clear you have your own bias about who deserves to be treated with unearned respect.

    • @daegeunjeong3683
      @daegeunjeong3683 Před 2 lety +2

      Agreed

    • @MrBopee
      @MrBopee Před 2 lety +2

      Not sure why you would expect much better after their reputation...

    • @thepigdot
      @thepigdot Před 2 lety +5

      Funnily enough, I thought the peer wondering around his garden actually came across very well despite the bias.

  • @jonathanwright8025
    @jonathanwright8025 Před rokem +48

    I honestly think the Italian Senate is the best idea for an Upper House: people who have accomplished something, who are seen as competent in their field, are appointed by the president with the consent of the Lower house. A house composed of people who have already proven themselves competent and have been endorsed by elected officials seems like a good idea.

    • @simonefiorentini840
      @simonefiorentini840 Před 11 měsíci +9

      I correct you: these are senators appointed for life. The Italian Senate is elected in general elections of the Parliament. The President of the Republic can appoint up to 5 Senators, that aren't part of political parties, for specific merits towards science, politics, society or something else. They are appointed for life and they can resign when they want.

    • @IrishCarney
      @IrishCarney Před 5 měsíci +3

      Since the Lords are appointed by the King "under the advice of his government" that basically means that nobody is going to get a new peerage who hasn't already been accepted by the elected leadership of the majority of the elected House.

    • @taoliu3949
      @taoliu3949 Před 3 měsíci

      That is the House of Lord's. Most lords are not hereditary, but life peers (they only keep their peerage for life and cannot be inherited). Parliament would recommend "accomplished" individuals for peerage to sit in the House of Lords.

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 Před 3 měsíci +2

      That's an atrocious idea. Competent people are already overrepresented in all institutions and in all offices that can make decisions, in all parliament, in the judiciary and the media.
      If anything they should make a special house for incompetent and lazy people.

    • @taoliu3949
      @taoliu3949 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@MrCmon113 That's what the lower house is for, to represent the masses.

  • @Shetoocrazy
    @Shetoocrazy Před rokem +7

    The personal statements caught me entirely off-guard 😂😂

  • @filiphelset872
    @filiphelset872 Před 2 lety +477

    I don’t know where this obsession over total democracy comes from. The House of Lords is a great example of how much work can be done when you don’t have to focus on winning elections every four years. Total democracy would require each citizen to know exactly what’s best for themselves and the rest of society, which is simply not possible.

    • @afgor1088
      @afgor1088 Před 2 lety +18

      name a worthwhile thing the house of lords has actually done

    • @T0M_X
      @T0M_X Před 2 lety +78

      @@afgor1088 allowed to hold suspected terrorists for 42 days, halted the tax credit fiasco and came up with the dormant cash act to name a few. They are the unsung heroes in a lot of cases

    • @owenlees1832
      @owenlees1832 Před 2 lety +8

      Total democracy has worked in the past. Representative democracy allows citizens to be ignorant by giving away their say to a representative.

    • @zeroroninoh
      @zeroroninoh Před 2 lety +40

      @@owenlees1832 total democracy is not always right

    • @owenlees1832
      @owenlees1832 Před 2 lety +4

      @@zeroroninoh it works though, it has worked many times throughout history. One of the main arguments liberals used in the late 18th to early 20th century for implementing representative democracy that democracy endows the average man with an interest in political matters, and thus reduces the tendency for ignorance. However, by having representatives, people give away this endowment and remain relatively ignorant as they are not required to think through complex political and economic questions. Total, or direct, democracy ensures people have to take an interest in politics, and thus reduces ignorance, a pattern seen throughout history. Apply this to the workplace in abolishing capitalism, and suddenly we have a truly democratic society.

  • @haha-lj5sq
    @haha-lj5sq Před 2 lety +3

    Why does this reporter always look like he’s on the verge of dropping a mean freestyle diss track

  • @Random13Guy
    @Random13Guy Před 4 měsíci +2

    I really don't like it when people bring in the 'cost factor', the 'taxpayer money' stuff into the conversation; it is a small price to pay for A COUNTRY to operate smoothly.

  • @jacquelinebailey3637
    @jacquelinebailey3637 Před 28 dny +1

    what a joke they all are, and once again, we, the public, are paying for this.

  • @igneridelgado7866
    @igneridelgado7866 Před 2 lety +488

    I kind of like the idea of having a group of non political party affiliation participate in democracy.

    • @afgor1088
      @afgor1088 Před 2 lety +132

      they're not apolitical. they represent the interests of the wealthy. that is inherently political

    • @goose9515
      @goose9515 Před 2 lety +24

      Everything is political

    • @harrylundie5542
      @harrylundie5542 Před 2 lety +9

      @@afgor1088 well that’s not true is it really

    • @afgor1088
      @afgor1088 Před 2 lety +33

      @@harrylundie5542 yes. It is true

    • @brunobarton-singer9622
      @brunobarton-singer9622 Před 2 lety +16

      well that's not the lords! 507 peers are associated to the three main parties. Many are donors, or ex-MPs being rewarded for party loyalty

  • @davidstokes8441
    @davidstokes8441 Před rokem +7

    The important part, the legislative part of Britain's parliament is the Commons. The Lord's is there as a brake to extreme and badly written law sent to it from the Commons. InOz until reasonably recently the Upper Houses of our Parliaments were elected by land owners only, and exists for the same reason.

  • @avremke24
    @avremke24 Před rokem +11

    I’m English born and bred and haven’t got a problem with this system of my government. I fully support it!

  • @jackmatthews7243
    @jackmatthews7243 Před 2 lety +150

    If the Lords were to be elected why should the Commons retain primacy?

    • @spareumbrella8477
      @spareumbrella8477 Před 2 lety +51

      Not only that, it would actually make it harder for the Lords to do its job. They're supposed to be scrutinising legislation, which will sometimes entail doing something deeply unpopular. However their job isn't to be electable or even liked. They're job is to make sure legislation that ends up on the Queen's desk is robust and effective.
      That's not to say the Lords isn't due some reform. I'd like to see a few more Doctors, Teachers, Lawyers, etc. People with decades of experience and are well-respected in their fields. There's far too many former politicians. But they shouldn't be elected.

    • @caior5377
      @caior5377 Před 2 lety +4

      @@spareumbrella8477 I agree with you

    • @tekashiii
      @tekashiii Před 2 lety +1

      Having an upper house and a lower house is common. Like in the US, they have congress and the senators. They can just copy that system no problem

    • @sivaprasadv77
      @sivaprasadv77 Před 2 lety +2

      @@tekashiii US is a federation while UK isn’t so it won’t really work.

    • @tekashiii
      @tekashiii Před 2 lety

      @@sivaprasadv77 majority of the countries in the world already uses this system. Unitary or federal, it doesnt matter. It IS easy if they actually wanted to do it

  • @thepigdot
    @thepigdot Před 2 lety +183

    I think the lords are fine so long as they're picked based on merit, rather than by donations to political parties. They should be nominated based on a third party non-political body, picking the best economists, scientists, businessmen, environmentalists, etc.

    • @inanis9801
      @inanis9801 Před 2 lety +9

      I don't really mind inherited lords.

    • @feelmehish8506
      @feelmehish8506 Před 2 lety

      third party body? you fucking crazy?

    • @brunobarton-singer9622
      @brunobarton-singer9622 Před 2 lety +2

      there is a third-party body currently, but the PM has the ability to overrule and ignore it - and does. More generally, it's a nice idea but who decides which experts and what balance? Tories would push for more businessmen, Labour for more environmentalists, etc. Once elections are removed as a check on power and these decisions are made behind closed doors, corruption flourishes. I think each party should put forward their best selection of experts - in a party list, and people can vote on which list they like best. There could be a list for the current unaligned peers as well, and we could see how well they'd do, judged on their merits.

    • @inanis9801
      @inanis9801 Před 2 lety +6

      @@brunobarton-singer9622 you can't have experts on specific things making decisions about hundreds of diffrent topics. For example an expert on environmental living might vote to pass a law pass a law where every new house must have solar Panels then there is no affordable housing. And if there is a financial expert they may never agree with them. You need people who know bits about everything but have what is best for there constituents in mind, that way they can consult bodys of experts ( which also eliminates the individual biases one expert might have.)

    • @brunobarton-singer9622
      @brunobarton-singer9622 Před 2 lety +6

      @@inanis9801 so are you saying, abolish the lords entirely? I think that's also a reasonable position. My point is just that if you like the idea of a second house which is a bit more long-term and focused on expertise, the current system isn't that and I was suggesting an alternative. I think there's nothing wrong with experts in particular topics in the commons or the lords, I just think it should ultimately be up to voters

  • @bbnCRLB
    @bbnCRLB Před rokem +1

    Nobody has ever believed UK is a democracy. We have known about the royal family for ages.

  • @amxoppl7589
    @amxoppl7589 Před 7 měsíci +3

    This guy is shocked he lives in constutional monarchy 😱

  • @pioneer_1148
    @pioneer_1148 Před 2 lety +402

    The Lords exists for a very simple reason.
    Despite most of Britain (myself included) hating the idea of an unelected house The lords somehow seems to work out as a better representation of public will than the commons.

    • @9grand
      @9grand Před rokem +8

      How?

    • @shamrock141
      @shamrock141 Před rokem +133

      ​@@9grand as one of the lords said, they don't have to worry about elections, so they don't worry about pleasing a very select group of people, they are free to think of the big picture

    • @9grand
      @9grand Před rokem +35

      @@shamrock141 Same could be said for dictators !

    • @shamrock141
      @shamrock141 Před rokem +82

      @@9grand that would be the case, but the difference is the lords do not have the power to create or repeal laws on their own. They have to work through the house of commons

    • @9grand
      @9grand Před rokem +5

      @@shamrock141 But have the right to veto or influence it ?!

  • @ercazz19
    @ercazz19 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Here in France we are glad to see this video in english class

  • @Ricky-Tok
    @Ricky-Tok Před rokem +1

    Being French, I find this so anti-democratic and dangerous for a proper representation of the common people. Having more than half of the parliament from rich families, non elected, how could this ever be fair or profitable for common English citizens ?

  • @patrickjones7941
    @patrickjones7941 Před rokem +14

    The House of Lords cannot veto legislation. It can offer amendments and propose legislation that may be difficult for an elected member of Commons to offer.

  • @aliboy357
    @aliboy357 Před rokem +319

    What you failed to mention are the seats reserved for senior figures of the Islamic and Jewish faiths and if I remember correctly there is at least one senior member of the Catholic church in the chamber to round out the representation of the major faiths and that the members who have salaries have said salaries as a result of having a job outside the House of Lords. They don't get paid by the house to have their seat.

    • @silverismoney
      @silverismoney Před rokem +23

      They do get a £323 a day "allowance" to attend though. As well as dodgy expenses.

    • @johnkirke8356
      @johnkirke8356 Před rokem +13

      Lords Spiritual and Lords Temporal… up to the early 20th century the Lords had veto power over bills passed in the Commons… and the Head of State is not elected either!!

    • @liquidcitrus145
      @liquidcitrus145 Před rokem

      00⁰00⁰

    • @HD-mp6yy
      @HD-mp6yy Před rokem +8

      @@johnkirke8356 Name one respectable elected head of state in the past 50 years.

    • @pyrylehtonen-caponigro3198
      @pyrylehtonen-caponigro3198 Před rokem +8

      @@HD-mp6yy Sauli Niinistö, president of Finland. He is highly respected by the Finnish people and international community, same goes with former Finnish presidents like Martti Ahtisaari.

  • @charlessmith9903
    @charlessmith9903 Před 4 měsíci +15

    As an American I can say 2 things 1.) It's fascinating how Britain's government works and how very different it is from our House and Senate and 2.) I can also say a House and Senate doesn't solve a damn thing. It's all about parties today which btw our founding fathers despised (hint hint America).

  • @thecuddlyaddict
    @thecuddlyaddict Před 2 lety +67

    £200 is lavish expenses for a politician. Hahahahahahahahaha, that is literally the most insignificant amount a politician has ever spent. Imagine being outed for £200 while you are most likely partly responsible for thousands or hundreds of thousands of pounds wasted.

  • @halakurshov1380
    @halakurshov1380 Před rokem +1

    And yet they try to preach about democracy 🙄

  • @peteraschaffenburg1
    @peteraschaffenburg1 Před rokem +2

    Doesn´t it bother anyone there are 26 seats reserved for the Church of England? What on earth do they have anything to do with government?

  • @hansofaxalia
    @hansofaxalia Před rokem +437

    “When you say we aren’t accountable to the public, that is correct”
    -public servant

    • @BiglerSakura
      @BiglerSakura Před rokem

      @@manuelolaya3194 yes, by the very definition they are not intended to be public servants - that would be a rePUBLIC. As Gt.Britain is a monarchy, it is obviously under the rule and in the possession of feudal lords.

    • @EverGameStudios
      @EverGameStudios Před rokem +17

      She is not a public servant.

    • @hansofaxalia
      @hansofaxalia Před rokem +9

      @@manuelolaya3194 thanks for enlightening me, but I simply do not care :)

    • @pepela8214
      @pepela8214 Před rokem +12

      @@hansofaxalia Based and democracy-pilled

    • @xaoz2362
      @xaoz2362 Před rokem

      @@hansofaxalia don't be an idiot then...

  • @shimanopetermann9068
    @shimanopetermann9068 Před 2 lety +33

    A really interesting thing that I hadn't thought of before, was when the Earl said that the Lords are not subjects to popular pressure. I mean think about it: How many politicians are there that make poor choices to get elected? They promise people what they want, not necessarily what they need and often don't keep those promises and act shady because for them it's not about the greater good but about election results. Someone who isn't elected doesn't have that kind of pressure and is free to make choices that may not be popular but are for the good of the country. It's an interesting idea. That being said for me - coming from a republic (Germany) - it still seems kinda odd that politicians should inherit their offices. Maybe a middle ground would be interesting. For example the House of Lords could be made of people from specific branches e.g. heads of universities, trade unions, religious groups (like a certain number of seats for muslims, catholics, protestants, bhuddhists, jews etc.), NGOs, science institues and so on. 🤔

    • @caligulalonghbottom2629
      @caligulalonghbottom2629 Před 2 lety +4

      I mean, I hate the specific seats for different religions thing and that wont happen as long as there is a state religion, the church of England. I'd rather just see the bishops expelled.

    • @armingleiner5292
      @armingleiner5292 Před rokem +2

      Thats a big reason why I want the Kaiser to return here in Austria and in Germany :)

    • @erica.5620
      @erica.5620 Před rokem

      Exactly!

  • @jennifergirling6850
    @jennifergirling6850 Před rokem +2

    Why does Britain need 800 lords?

  • @jobnieloliva5358
    @jobnieloliva5358 Před rokem +1

    These are the same people who throw a fit when a poor person gets any government assistance.

  • @adamseery5012
    @adamseery5012 Před 2 lety +57

    This has a sense of “let’s make fun of tradition”

    • @guyincognito7979
      @guyincognito7979 Před 2 lety +14

      Tradition in this case is unnecessary and stupid

    • @addmin5487
      @addmin5487 Před 2 lety +6

      Well yeah it looks stupid, and it isn’t democratic. Its the remnants of monarchy rule

    • @YevOnegin
      @YevOnegin Před 2 lety

      @@guyincognito7979 newsflash, every "political stance" active in the UK today is "traditional", as they're all over a century old, and even worse, based on politics most of which are over 2000 years old. Whether its democracy, republicanism, tribalism, religion, communism, anarchism, socialism. They all have their roots in tradition, one way or another.

    • @guyincognito7979
      @guyincognito7979 Před 2 lety +1

      @@YevOnegin i didn't say tradition is always stupid but this particular one is.

    • @YevOnegin
      @YevOnegin Před 2 lety +1

      @@guyincognito7979 what, this tradition of minimal influence who can't even pass laws? Thinking practically, I'd assume the house of commons being full of people who act as mouthpieces for billionaires' interests would be a bigger problem as far as traditions go. But going after the aristocracy is just in vogue, isn't it

  • @gerry343
    @gerry343 Před 2 lety +13

    8:20 Pointing the finger at somebody else does not excuse your own behaviour.

  • @ibro8855
    @ibro8855 Před 4 měsíci +2

    My country has an unelected upper house as well called the House of Elders.

  • @gerardjagroo
    @gerardjagroo Před 2 lety +84

    The purpose of the House of Lords is to act as a counterbalance against the extremes and demagoguery of the Commons.
    Commons is there to do the actual law making.

    • @alexkfridges
      @alexkfridges Před 2 lety +8

      I.e., make everything way more conservative

    • @thagamerzzz
      @thagamerzzz Před 2 lety +12

      @@alexkfridges radical change is never good for a country, whether its reactionary or revolutionary. The Lords ensures that any change that occurs is organic and gradual, which is better for the country

    • @IvarDaigon
      @IvarDaigon Před 2 lety

      So your entire argument is... to counter a house where a common person could end up having delusions of grandeur we will stack another house full of people who are born with delusions of grandeur... or to put it another way... "to avoid someone like Boris Johnson gaining too much power we are going to stack an entire chamber full of Boris Johnsons."
      Every other stable democracy on earth that does not have hereditary peerage just has a second chamber of elected office holders to counter-balance the first chamber.

    • @rwboa22
      @rwboa22 Před rokem +3

      Or as their counterparts in Canada referred to their Senate (the equivalent to the Lords) as "the chamber of second sober thought."

    • @jordanforbes2557
      @jordanforbes2557 Před rokem +3

      @@thagamerzzz "better for the country". That's laughable, there is absolutely no way to ensure that with a House of Lords who are appointed by the government. Most Lords are Conservative, so I think what you mean is better for the wealthy minority.

  • @Gerry1of1
    @Gerry1of1 Před 2 lety +53

    You drove home the point "not elected not elected not elected." Barely touched on the concept that NOT having to run allows the ability to promote good laws that don't sell well. You could have spent a bit more time on what the House of Lords does.

    • @afgor1088
      @afgor1088 Před 2 lety +1

      which good laws? name one

    • @Gerry1of1
      @Gerry1of1 Před 2 lety +12

      @@afgor1088 Lord Henley or Earl of Mansfield who lead the fight against slavery and passed the first laws abolishing it even though it was detrimental to the British Economy.
      The Married Woman's Property Act which allowed married women to keep their wages and investments and not give the husband control of them.
      There are lots of good laws.

    • @afgor1088
      @afgor1088 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Gerry1of1 😂 jesus you had to go far back. We're getting rid of it whether you like it or not the next generation of voters hate it

    • @Gerry1of1
      @Gerry1of1 Před 2 lety +7

      @@afgor1088 Not far back, just the first ones I thought of. Want more good laws? Women's right to vote 1920s ... Equal Rights for races...1960s . Equal rights for gays... oh wait, we didn't pass that one yet... Some laws are bad. Some are good.
      What is your point ?

    • @afgor1088
      @afgor1088 Před 2 lety

      @@Gerry1of1 that the house of Lords is pointless and undemocratic.
      Goodbye

  • @empice2k
    @empice2k Před 4 měsíci +2

    The UK is a CONSTITUTIONAL MONARCHY not a Democracy. 😳🤨

  • @PlatinumNanos
    @PlatinumNanos Před 5 měsíci

    No one is saying you should take public transport, the problem is that your private transport was tax payer funded!

  • @adamvifrye2690
    @adamvifrye2690 Před 2 lety +139

    seems like an interesting and perhaps effective concept to have a portion of the government not having to worry about elections which can actually enact long term ideas and changes instead of the more short term focused elected officials which every democracy are going to begin to crack under the pressure of, just for the fact that it seems like everyone in the world has decided at the same time to deficit spend all the time, til the end of time, because that spending helps the boys stay elected.
    especially when these sort of non term based officials are largely used in a regulatory and accountability position.

    • @whatwhat3432523
      @whatwhat3432523 Před 2 lety

      Thats why you have an administration. The only reason things get shaken up in a system like that, is if the people elect populists and sharlatans.

    • @deusvult6920
      @deusvult6920 Před 2 lety

      The deficit spending is because every country is owned by a Rothschild Central Bank.

    • @ValensBellator
      @ValensBellator Před 2 lety +3

      That’s why I’ve always wanted longer terms for house of reps here in the USA combined with strict term limits so re-election is never on the table.

    • @RoseSiames
      @RoseSiames Před 2 lety

      Although what’s to say they have to give anycare about the state or government, a lord could very much not do anything and stay home all day

  • @Simon-qj6mc
    @Simon-qj6mc Před 2 lety +59

    That's actually really good, I wish we had the same in France. Because they are not submitted to short term populist considerations to get reelected. They are the backbone of the political system as they can think long term without thinking about how popular they are.
    The issue of representativity is important though, so that the lords even though they might be elected for life should represent to some extent society at large, with notables from different religious and ethnic backgrounds.

    • @arthurcaron9453
      @arthurcaron9453 Před 2 lety

      You have the same in France, the Senate is just as undemocratic, except for the 92 hereditary peers, which like you saw in the video, not even the benefitted support

    • @bluesky8869
      @bluesky8869 Před 2 lety

      @@arthurcaron9453 What are you on about? Members of the French Senate are elected for 6 years. The House of Lords, they are appointed or inherit their seats for life. This is the antithesis of democracy.

    • @tomriley5790
      @tomriley5790 Před rokem

      In general they do, simply because the overwhelming majority are appointed and generally get appointed by different governments over time, although obviously you have to have done something pretty remarkable in life to get appointed there's a good mix.

    • @jordanforbes2557
      @jordanforbes2557 Před rokem +1

      I believe the vast majority of Lords are Conservatives. So the representation isn't really there.

    • @malopephasha5341
      @malopephasha5341 Před rokem

      @@jordanforbes2557 they are conservatives they conserve traditions of a country

  • @Healthandwealth9422
    @Healthandwealth9422 Před rokem +1

    “Here in the UK you see someone get stabbed…. In broad daylight”

  • @Skeyyelit-uw9tz
    @Skeyyelit-uw9tz Před 7 měsíci +2

    Just found out. House of lords is actually higher in power than house of commons.

  • @1mezion
    @1mezion Před 2 lety +15

    The baroness should have just asked him to state how many people were in the car at the time and who they were since he's the one making the accusation

  • @thomasroutt380
    @thomasroutt380 Před 2 lety +4

    I know absolutely nothing about British politics but from what i can gather… if it ain’t broke don’t fix it

  • @mengqingrui
    @mengqingrui Před rokem +43

    70,000 pounds for 5 years is 10 pounds a week, she has more weeks in a year than my year or there were many rooms, so needed many flowers.

    • @garethevans5513
      @garethevans5513 Před rokem +3

      Yeah it's about £270 a week at them figures. All corrupt

    • @mengqingrui
      @mengqingrui Před rokem

      I think she genuinely doesn't have a sense of elementary school math just like many politicians in the country, who just talk non sence but enough for them to be there.

  • @gyaniadmi2347
    @gyaniadmi2347 Před rokem +1

    As an outsider, let Britan be Britain. Why does it need to be same as other countries. I don't think they should change the process of election of House of Lords.
    There is a danger in doing that, it will collapse the fabric of the country..
    Who is the guy who is interviewing?

  • @Faithfulstar_99
    @Faithfulstar_99 Před 2 lety +138

    Democracy doesn't always work, hereditary government doesn't always work. So maybe a mix of both isn't such a bad thing? I don't know though

    • @robertschooner1812
      @robertschooner1812 Před 2 lety +1

      Wrong! Show me where a democracy doesn't work? As a Yankee Schooner and one of the free peoples of America! We didn't fight England three different times so that way we could elect people or appoint them for life. In fact even in our own government they are talking about term limits for individuals who are in Congress. No individual should sit in definitely on the bench. And note America is not a democracy it is a Democratic Republic. And England is a monarch with the veneer of a democracy.

    • @paddyfalco8497
      @paddyfalco8497 Před 2 lety +8

      @@robertschooner1812 Whilst not completely disagreeing, I don't think a significant proportion of the people of today have the knowledge, general standard of education, nor cognitive capacity, not to elect governments which would inherently be so volatile to social stigma and change, and have such a lack of consistency as to the ability to comprehend the effects of their decisions. In many ways, it is largely the highly educated who can draw logic/reference from the century-old evolution of law and government, and are taught the importance of this; giving somewhat of a consistency of moral and logical thinking. Surely concern lies there, where a teenager has such a seemingly pessimistic view of their own surrounding generations...

    • @Faithfulstar_99
      @Faithfulstar_99 Před 2 lety +8

      @@robertschooner1812 Hitler was elected

    • @robertschooner1812
      @robertschooner1812 Před 2 lety

      @@Faithfulstar_99 yes he was! But then again so was Churchill when he lied to the American people to bring him into the war.

    • @Faithfulstar_99
      @Faithfulstar_99 Před 2 lety +6

      @@robertschooner1812 To say that one form of government works completely is a massive statement. It is suggesting that the there is no abuse of power in democracy, that people are always right if they are elected. I am not suggesting that democracy is wrong, I am just suggesting that it isn't perfect.

  • @waffle-waffle5416
    @waffle-waffle5416 Před 2 lety +14

    that earl has a point, common politician has 4-5 years time in office and they'll spend half of it just to campaign to get elected next years or for partisan sake so they have more incentive to do things that align with people who might elect him whether it's good or bad rather than doing it for the benefit of the opposition, it's basically the same as feudal system of power struggle where feudal lord would waste their time to get and keeping their position instead of actually working for the masses, sometime politician who doesn't work based on partisanship or lobbyist are those who are about to retired or have nothing to lose

    • @Esquarious
      @Esquarious Před 2 lety

      If you're saying that someone who isn't democratically elected will not have to constantly consider the will of the governed populace in their agenda then I cannot disagree. However, the idea that democracy is like feudalism so therefore we need more lords, a literal feature of a feudal society, has quite an Orwellian "Freedom is slavery," vibe.

  • @Mmartins1097
    @Mmartins1097 Před 4 měsíci +9

    American-Brazilian here. This is actually great. one of the issues we have in the United States is that our governance is disgustingly greedy and when you relieve a particular group of citizens from the need for greed you have a small control group that make legislation or helps impede legislation without the sway of money or power.

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 Před 3 měsíci

      If you give your stuff to the thief, he can't steal it.
      Brilliant plan.

  • @garyvahl7658
    @garyvahl7658 Před rokem +1

    It is called a Constitutional Monarchy.

  • @rockpadstudios
    @rockpadstudios Před rokem +16

    In some ways with people like this man it could be beneficial looking at the people we elect in the US.

  • @kenneth3617160
    @kenneth3617160 Před rokem +1

    Without the house of lords, the democratically elected would turn the lake district into a profitable industrial estate.

  • @kennethyoung2423
    @kennethyoung2423 Před rokem +48

    Always good to see our institutions probed with the insight and predictable edginess of a fifth form Modern Studies project.

  • @m.adenan3730
    @m.adenan3730 Před rokem +114

    What most people always forget about hereditary roles is that these people don't just sit around in castles drinking tea and wine while waiting until it's their turn to hold the hereditary role, they are taught and educated explicitly to fill that exact role for most of their life, unlike elected politicians that spends half of theirs drinking beer while learning how to speak a hundred words while saying nothing at all, until one day they decide that they want to join politics to serve the nation and the people (and most of all themselves)

    • @mcbabwe4977
      @mcbabwe4977 Před rokem +6

      You’re thinking of monarchs. Peers don’t NEED to serve, they’re really just rich people who can serve.

    • @stephenderry9488
      @stephenderry9488 Před rokem +13

      To be a devil's advocate, these are people who have had access to the best education, so they are (presumably) better educated. They own most of the land in the country so they are aware of issues relating to land ownership, be it economic, environmental or logistical. Many (by no means all) will be very wealthy and have a firm grasp of wealth management, investment and economic growth - their estates are like national economies in miniature. They have (sigh) a unique perspective on tradition and history and how the current system we have compares to the past, and the role of their ancestors at various times (some of whom will almost certainly have been exiled or executed). Perhaps they are out of touch with the average person on the street, but they are very well connected to the history, function and ceremonial nature of the institutions of state, and, as you stated, have the time and economic independence to, and perhaps the historical expectation that they should, serve their country in some way. They may bring more value to legislative oversight than a career politician. But do we really need 92 of them?

    • @shauntempley9757
      @shauntempley9757 Před rokem

      @@stephenderry9488 Yes. Because they are candidates in case of needing them to be chosen to sit on the Thrones of 14 nations if the current family suffers disaster.
      They do not have that education and experience for nothing. They do on the small scale what the Monarch does for the 14.

    • @BOOOOOOOONE
      @BOOOOOOOONE Před rokem

      Jesus Christ, the number of snivelling cucks pining for aristocracy on here is obscene.

    • @michaelandrews4783
      @michaelandrews4783 Před rokem

      How could letting the rich rule over the rest of the population possibly go wrong? idot

  • @victordkv8525
    @victordkv8525 Před měsícem

    From the continent: 900 unelected Bertie Woosters?! A confirmation of non-egalitarianism stil rampant in England.

  • @robertmontague1216
    @robertmontague1216 Před 4 měsíci +1

    The Lords were the original "parliament" that was formed after the Barons and King John agreed to Magna Carta,

  • @tb3ezzy
    @tb3ezzy Před rokem +20

    If they remove this, the monarchy has very little chance of survival

    • @tybaltmarr2158
      @tybaltmarr2158 Před rokem +3

      I think that’s probably the goal. The media ;) conglomerate loves the American system because they’re able to manipulate the public, who the elected politicians are (somewhat) beholden to

    • @GHOSTTIEF
      @GHOSTTIEF Před rokem +5

      @@tybaltmarr2158 American politicians are only beholden to corps if the public were smarter and more informed that wouldn’t be the case.

    • @josipj705
      @josipj705 Před rokem

      good

    • @josipj705
      @josipj705 Před rokem

      @@tybaltmarr2158 the American system is controlled by rich corpos and the british by rich descendants of corpos, I don't get people who support inherited power, it's just plain stupid

    • @tybaltmarr2158
      @tybaltmarr2158 Před rokem

      @@midlos nah I'm pretty happy, I know where I am in the food chain. UKs not perfect but there isn't anywhere else I'd rather live. Don't be salty just because we set the standard for all future imperialist countries, USA included. you're welcome by the way :D

  • @MarkVrankovich
    @MarkVrankovich Před 2 lety +5

    It's a good thing. Here in New Zealand we only have one house, and an incompetent PM whose party keeps pushing quite serious legislation through. Which has resulted in a number of badly thought out and ideological driven laws being passed, with many of unintended consequences. If there was a second house laws like this had to get through then it would increase the chances of bad laws being caught before they emerge to do harm.

  • @jayraphaeljiaosallent
    @jayraphaeljiaosallent Před 3 měsíci

    Britain has its own definition of DEMOCRACY

  • @hans-joachimtenhoope1744

    We have the same thing in the Netherlands, it is called the first chamber (eerste Kamer).
    Their job is basically to check if the propositions of the second chamber (tweede kamer) do not violate existing rules and laws.
    Members of the second chamber are elected by the people, members of the first chamber are not.

  • @travisjoyce4678
    @travisjoyce4678 Před rokem +9

    I'd be more concerned about the fact that you can't get a fixed rate mortgage in the UK than whether or not a baroness is part of parliament....

    • @windwaker0rules
      @windwaker0rules Před 9 měsíci

      .... but the reason for that is because of the house of lords making policy that makes a fixed rate mortgage impossible.

    • @travisjoyce4678
      @travisjoyce4678 Před 9 měsíci

      @@windwaker0rules Isn't that in the purvue of the House of Commons?

  • @Dark_Knight950
    @Dark_Knight950 Před 2 lety +5

    I want to be in the House of Lords....

  • @scheikundeiscool4086
    @scheikundeiscool4086 Před rokem

    Worst thing is not only is she lying about her expenses she is also lying badly. 70.000 over 5 years is 10 a week ? That is only 2600. WHERE DID THE OTHER 67400 go? These ppl are the worst not only are they massivly corrupt but they do not even percive how corrupt they really are. They feel like it is their right to live of of others.

  • @petiertje
    @petiertje Před rokem +16

    I am not a British citizen (I live across the slightly less large pond ;-) ) but I know that, even though we don't have such a part of our government, the current state of politics is like a neglected house which doesn't only need new paint but a complete restructure. From what I hear and read of other countries it's much more similar there than you might think by just looking superficially.
    A lot of the politics is about the latest outrage/hype/'sudden' problem and very little is about the long term future of the country and it's impact on the world as a whole. Since most chosen people in parliament are afraid to not get re-elected there is a disturbing lack of vision and willingness to make the tough calls early enough to prevent the next disaster.
    So, while I agree having ruling people outside of the democratic system does have it's flaws, it can also be used as a tool for forcing the elected officials to act upon less popular topics and enforcing the elected parliament to govern with more long term goals instead of just the next cheap vote grab and 'public opinion'.
    Perhaps it's not a matter of 'does the house of lords need to be chosen' but 'what is it's purpose and which tasks do they have'.

  • @kamachi
    @kamachi Před 2 lety +41

    The Lords have no real power, the Commons who are elected can ALWAYS overrule anything the Lords come up with. The Lords is a cultural relic of our past and should be kept. The constant attacks on English and British culture is never ceasing.

    • @edbush1415
      @edbush1415 Před rokem +1

      Yep 100% agree

    • @alexandreferreira1085
      @alexandreferreira1085 Před rokem

      Fully agree!!!! 👍👍

    • @blueciffer1653
      @blueciffer1653 Před rokem

      Costs taxpayers millions per for a useless unelected class of people. The (stupid) "culture" is useless. + Your culture sucks

    • @nomahope3182
      @nomahope3182 Před rokem

      The British went around destroying other people's cultures. Now you can't handle criticism of the English culture.

    • @kamachi
      @kamachi Před rokem +3

      @@nomahope3182 Cope and seethe.

  • @chechnya8006
    @chechnya8006 Před 2 lety +17

    In Thailand, appointed Senators can elect the Prime Minister together with MPs(most powerful than your).
    And sadly, many people who wrote this rule often referred to your Lords when they talk about "Why we need this Senate".

    • @gbnexofa5483
      @gbnexofa5483 Před rokem +1

      ถูก มันไม่มีความ สมดุลเลยถ้าเทียบกับสหราชอาณาจักร

    • @tombranch2261
      @tombranch2261 Před 4 měsíci

      Thailand is a glorified autocracy.

  • @barrywilson4190
    @barrywilson4190 Před rokem

    I don’t know, for 67 years I’ve witnesses the massive waste of time and money spent on reelection campaigns. Where can we find a workable solution?

  • @jackgallagher4146
    @jackgallagher4146 Před rokem

    "only works out as something like £40 a month for five years on flowers" she's genuinly unaware of how ridiculous she sounds

  • @angusmcmillan8981
    @angusmcmillan8981 Před rokem +8

    If the presenter wanted to rubbish peers he chose the wrong one to interview! I’ve had the privilege of working with John Palmer, 4th Earl of Selborne, who sadly died in 2021. John was utterly brilliant and worked tirelessly on science policy at national level, chairing the Lords Science and Technology Committee and putting in endless unpaid hours. So impressed were the top scientists at the Royal Society that they made him a Fellow (FRS) even though not a scientist - the only other person so honoured being David Attenborough. Oh and he was modest too, he didn’t say anything about his achievements in the interview (and I wonder if the interviewer knew about them?).

  • @leesteggles6367
    @leesteggles6367 Před 11 měsíci

    There's no Democracy in the house of Lord's..

  • @justin00372
    @justin00372 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Uk 11 th in ranking of democracy, how stupid democracy index can be

  • @nevm7469
    @nevm7469 Před 2 lety +75

    As an American I can say that having one unelected house made up of more technocratic highly informed “elites” who aren’t necessarily accountable to any base elements, extreme or otherwise, is probably actually a good and healthy and moderating element for society at this point. Two elected houses are sometimes too prone to minority populist impulses, depending on how they’re elected.

    • @kaiudall2583
      @kaiudall2583 Před rokem +6

      The Senate wasn't always elected by the people but rather by the states' governments.

    • @tokyomobster3072
      @tokyomobster3072 Před rokem

      Didn't this video show you that you don't have to be informed to get this job?
      How can elites understand and empathise with the people? They are under no obligation to go and find out what people think.

    • @tuluppampam
      @tuluppampam Před rokem

      You forgot that people cannot think critically and simply believe that democracy=good and hereditary power=bad

    • @linusmlgtips2123
      @linusmlgtips2123 Před rokem

      @@kaiudall2583 which was worse

    • @pandasniper1
      @pandasniper1 Před rokem

      @@linusmlgtips2123 the old senate system was way better

  • @williamrobinson4265
    @williamrobinson4265 Před rokem +3

    house of lords in england: yikes
    house of lords in japan: wow cool

  • @singami465
    @singami465 Před rokem +2

    Channel 4 being like "oh noooo, a house we cannot gerrymander until we control it :((((("

  • @worldtraveler84
    @worldtraveler84 Před 3 měsíci

    It’s actually a little comforting to know that Politics is screwed up all over the world

  • @baronvg
    @baronvg Před 2 lety +6

    When I hear those letters, I can’t help but laugh and actually be fine with it. It feels like maybe in this case, it’s hate the Game, not the Player.

  • @MSMS-ug3zu
    @MSMS-ug3zu Před 2 lety +22

    As far I as I am aware, the UK is the only country where the number of upper house members is larger than that of the lower house. I understand that these peers, lords, or overlords have some 'expertise', but isn't it time to start thinking about the right size and save money?

    • @randeknight
      @randeknight Před 2 lety +3

      Yes, but getting everyone to agree on the size and who should be removed would take so much time debating that they wouldn't be able to get around to talking about more pressing issues. eg. we've got a large Tory majority atm, and I'm sure they'd love to dismiss a bunch of labor peers to make their laws pass through easier, but once you've made that a precedent, what's to stop a future labor govt doing the same thing to dismiss a bunch of tory peers? (Note that the opposite currently happens - a new govt tries to ADD more peers predominately on their side, which is why we've got so fuckin many of them)

  • @sturlamolden
    @sturlamolden Před 4 měsíci

    OK, it could be far worse. Here in Norway we cannot vote for (or against) politicians, only for established parties. We cannot vote useless politicians out, because the parties will just put the same ones in. What we get is an establishment of professional sycophants, who can only suck up to the party officials. They will in turn form a sort of an oligarchy, taking all decisions, and even instructing MPs how to vote. After all, the MPs are in office because the party officials put them there. In fact, the parties have now come to the arrangement that MPs do not even have to show up at work, because they must vote as instructed they are not even allowed to speak as they wish. So the parliament it empty while the party officials rule in the names of their MPs. When an MP is allowed to speak, from a given a manuscript, they speak to an empty room because nobody cares what they have to say. There is nothing anyone in Norway can do about it, because voting for parties will just make sure the same oligarchs stay in office. Party officials cannot be elected, and they will always put the same sycophants in the parliament. We fool ourselves into thinking Norway is a democracy. In the UK, at least you can vote directly for politicians and keep them responsible. If you want to see what a really flawed democracy looks like, you need not look any further than to your neighbours to the east.

  • @deadmanthehekatonkheire994

    This D'Souza woman is actually unironically defending herself.
    Unbelievable.