Month: March 2004

  • Legislator-for-Life May Head BBC

    A legislator-for-life, Barbara Scott, is one of the two leading candidates to chair the board of the BBC state broadcaster. Ms. Young was appointed as a legislator-for-life in 1997 and is a member of the Labour Party group in the unelected second chamber of the legislature. The other leading contender for the post is Michael…

  • Former BBC Boss Turns Attention to Wealthy

    Gavyn Davies, former BBC chairperson, has told friends that “he expects to spend most of his time on the wealth management business” according to the Financial Times. He is talking to Goldman Sachs bankers about setting up a company to manage the investments of wealthy clients. The state broadcaster formerly headed by Mr. Davies extorts…

  • Legislators-For-Life To Lose Powers

    Charles Falconer, the so-called Lord Chancellor, has announced that parliament will be asked to restrict the powers of the legislators-for-life who sit in the second chamber of parliament The exact nature of the proposed change was not revealed, only that the unelected legislators would have less ability to influence legislation. The announcement was made as…

  • Hereditary Legislators Reprieved

    There will be no more reform of the House of Lords in this session of parliament, the government has announced. This means that the remaining 93 hereditary legislators-for-life will keep their seats in the legislature for the time being. The decision not to go ahead with a bill to remove the hereditary legislators was taken…

  • Churches To Get More Of Taxpayers’ Cash

    Religious groups are to receive a special tax break, Chancellor Gordon Brown has announced. They will not have to pay the value added tax paid by others when they repair their places of worship in the next two years. The state Anglican church, which already receives a bite from each tax payment, was among the…

  • Legislators-for-Life Block Democratic Reform

    The legislators in the unelected chamber of Britain’s legislature have effectively blocked a bill that would separate the nation’s highest appeal court from the legislature. At present the chief justices are also legislators. The so-called Lords voted by 216 to 183 to delay the Bill for months of scrutiny. The government is now expected to…

  • Australian State Replaces Royal Symbols

    The New South Wales parliament in Australia has passed the State Arms, Symbols and Emblems Bill 2003. Clause 4 of the Bill provides that the State arms or State symbols, rather than the royal arms of the United Kingdom, are to represent the authority of the State in a parliament building, a courthouse, an office…

  • Government Denies Charge of Promoting Democratic Values

    The degraded state of British democracy was highlighted today by a report in the conservative Daily Telegraph that the government had been forced to deny that it had a “republican agenda.” A government minister was quoted as defending the dropping of “Crown” from the name of the Crown Prosecution Service as intended to reduce public…

  • Chief Justice Attacks Court-Legislature Separation

    Chief Justice Woolf, the most senior judge in Britain, has tried to redrail government plans for democratic reform of the judicial system. He told a Cambridge University audience that creating a final court of outside the legislature would result in a “second class supreme court.” Woolf claimed that the separation of powers, widely regarded as…

  • Crown To Go From Prosecution Service

    Home Secretary David Blunkett has confirmed that the Crown Prosecution will soon be known as the Public Prosecution Service. This follows news that the Prison Service is also to be freed of its link to the feudal institution of monarchy.