"Hereditary"
Read the latest UK headlines, on NewsNow. UK news, analysis and opinion from around the world.
www.newsnow.co.ukI don’t have live tool access right now to pull the very latest updates, but I can share the current context you likely want.
The topic of “hereditary peer” typically refers to the hereditary peers who sit in the House of Lords. As of 2026, Labour-led reforms were enacted to remove the remaining hereditary peers from the Lords, ending their right to sit and vote. This followed promises in the 2024 Labour manifesto and subsequent legislation, with the process concluding during the 2026 parliamentary session.[2][8]
Before that culmination, discussions and debates centered on whether to retain any hereditary presence, how to handle transitional arrangements, and whether broader Lords reform should accompany the change. Parliamentary discussions and commentary from 2024–2025 reflect ongoing scrutiny of the reform path.[3][4]
If you’re looking for the very latest news (today’s updates, live reactions, or parliamentary progress), I can fetch current sources and summarize them with citations. Would you like me to search for the most recent coverage now?
Read the latest UK headlines, on NewsNow. UK news, analysis and opinion from around the world.
www.newsnow.co.ukIn an interview with iNews in March 2020 the Earl of Shrewsbury (one of the oldest titles in the UK) said that a law to end male primogeniture (the automatic male inheritance of titles) would inevitably be bought forward in the near future and that hereditary peers would cease to sit in the House of Lords. Despite being the recipient of his title due to primogeniture, the Earl himself supports its abolition. … Grocott’s bill failed to make progress through the House of Lords. However, at some...
www.politicsonline.co.ukMPs debated the bill to abolish hereditary peers’ right to sit and vote in the House of Lords. But what were the opposition’s arguments? We reflect on the Government's first 100 days: is it improving legislative standards? Twenty Private Members’ Bills were announced this week: which ones may get traction? And a new Speaker’s Conference on the safety of MPs and candidates has been established. So, what is it, and what might it do?
www.hansardsociety.org.ukThe Labour government has plans to end their 'outdated and indefensible' lawmaking position in the upper house
www.theguardian.com