Yet another of my little posts has been confirmed by a reputable organisation. This time it was my look and thoughts on Population Growth and the true cause being financial insecurity and housing costs. The resolution foundation today released a report which agreed with my observations – Key findings There is a large and growingContinueContinue reading “Let’s Rethink Population Growth – Someone else agrees”
Tag Archives: Politics
Lets’ Rethink Housing – I’m not alone
So as part of my Let’s Rethink series I had a ponder about the UK Housing market and what is causing it to stagnate, at the end of that I proposed the invention of a new investment vehicle to help drive building and increase the housing stock. Today (1st April 2026), the Government announced theContinueContinue reading “Lets’ Rethink Housing – I’m not alone”
Let’s Rethink The Lords: Unbundling The Lords
This finally feels like the moment where it makes sense to stop introducing new ideas and just look at the whole picture we’ve built up along the way. Not to declare a winner. Not to arrive at a single, tidy answer. Just to be honest about what’s actually on the table now that we’ve takenContinueContinue reading “Let’s Rethink The Lords: Unbundling The Lords”
Let’s Rethink The Lords: The Impossible Trade-off
Up to now, we’ve been looking at the things that have gradually drifted into the House of Lords — ethics, expertise, institutional memory — and asking whether there might be cleaner ways of handling them. But there’s a more basic question we’ve been carefully skirting since the start. What happens if we stop arguing aboutContinueContinue reading “Let’s Rethink The Lords: The Impossible Trade-off”
Let’s Rethink The Lords: The Experts Bench
In the last post, we landed on a fairly uncomfortable place. We rely on expertise and institutional memory far more than we tend to admit. We benefit from it when it’s there, and we notice when it’s missing. But we’ve never really decided where it should live, or how it ought to be represented. Instead,ContinueContinue reading “Let’s Rethink The Lords: The Experts Bench”
Let’s Rethink The Lords: Parliament’s Memory Bank
If we step back from the ethics question for a moment, there’s another role the House of Lords has quietly picked up over time. It’s become the place where long experience goes to sit. Not formally. Not because anyone designed it that way. Just because, little by little, it became obvious that Parliament still neededContinueContinue reading “Let’s Rethink The Lords: Parliament’s Memory Bank”
Let’s Rethink The Lords: The Unspoken Burden
This feels like a natural pause point — but not an ending. Up to now, we’ve spent a lot of time circling ethics. Not because it’s the only problem with the House of Lords, but because it’s one of the places where the strain in the system shows up most clearly. Ethical questions keep landingContinueContinue reading “Let’s Rethink The Lords: The Unspoken Burden”
Let’s Rethink The Lords: International Models
At this point in the conversation, it’s reasonable to pause and ask whether we’ve drifted into fantasy territory. Whenever a new institution is sketched out — especially one dealing with ethics, long-term judgement, or constitutional restraint — the instinctive reaction is often: this all sounds very British and very theoretical… but does anyone actually doContinueContinue reading “Let’s Rethink The Lords: International Models”
Let’s Rethink The Lords: Testing Ethical Guardians
At this point in the conversation, someone sensible usually clears their throat. “Okay,” they say. “I can see what you’re aiming at. But surely this is where it all starts to fall apart.” And that’s a fair instinct. Any time you propose a new institution — especially one dealing with ethics, long-term judgement, or constitutionalContinueContinue reading “Let’s Rethink The Lords: Testing Ethical Guardians”
Let’s Rethink The Lords: Refining the house.
Up to now, we’ve mostly been talking around the House of Lords rather than straight at it. We’ve looked at how ethical questions drifted into it, why that happened without anyone really planning it, and what might change if ethical reasoning had a clearer home of its own. Which brings us to the point inContinueContinue reading “Let’s Rethink The Lords: Refining the house.”
