News1 min ago
Has Gordon Brown been offered a Lordship?
They seem to offer them to departing Prime Ministers. But would he take it if offered?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by rov1100. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
-- answer removed --
Peerages are offered to departing PMs, traditionally an earldom, though as that is an hereditary peerage they are now offered a life barony. Prescott retired from the Commons, Brown is still a member. Churchill and Heath refused peerages as they wished to remain members of the Commons. Major also refused a peerage.
-- answer removed --
Andy, if you choose to have a go at Prescott's life peerage and make an anti-Labour point of it, then let me do likewise for Jeffrey Archer.
His life perage, was awarded by Major in 1992 largely for the charity money he supposedly raised for Iraqi Kurds. According to Wikipedia, he claimed a concert he'd organised raised £57,000,000, well worth an honour perhaps. However, it transpired it had made only £3,000,000. Apart from that, he was already mired in all sorts of grime, as a result of which he ended up by being imprisoned.
I have to ask you, therefore, old friend, whether that represented - to paraphrase you own words - "the last sorry lingering threads of what passed for dignity in the Conservative Party." At least old Johnny-boy had a decent right hook...and he never got banged up!
His life perage, was awarded by Major in 1992 largely for the charity money he supposedly raised for Iraqi Kurds. According to Wikipedia, he claimed a concert he'd organised raised £57,000,000, well worth an honour perhaps. However, it transpired it had made only £3,000,000. Apart from that, he was already mired in all sorts of grime, as a result of which he ended up by being imprisoned.
I have to ask you, therefore, old friend, whether that represented - to paraphrase you own words - "the last sorry lingering threads of what passed for dignity in the Conservative Party." At least old Johnny-boy had a decent right hook...and he never got banged up!
To be fair QM, I don't think that the question of peerages is really a party political one, although one might have expected the more egalitarian members of the Labour Party to be slightly more reluctant to accept such honours than is the case. It is not something I have ever had strong feelings about, since the effect of the peerage on the governance of the country is negligible. I must, however, confess to having raised my eyebrows at the ennoblement of Peter Mandelson. It reminded me of the great American satirist, Tom Lehrer, who announced his retirement on the day when Henry Kissinger was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, on the grounds that such an appointment had rendered satire totally redundant and there was nothing more for him to do.
Ah, grandad, but did you ever SEE him playing croquet rather than just standing holding a croquet-stick (club, racquet or whatever it's called)? How did he get on? Did he win the game you saw? Have you a shred of evidence that he ever even tried the game on any occasion other than the one the press managed to get pictures of?
By comparison, we KNOW the hook worked!
By comparison, we KNOW the hook worked!
Mike, we could argue about dodgy politicians of any party until the cows come home; however, it is often forgotten that the Commons Standards and Privileges Committee cleared Mandelson of any wrongdoing in the matter of the Robinson loan, as did the Hammond Inquiry into the matter of the Hinduja passport.
He was such a hate-figure to them that it has simply become a right-wing mantra that he was guilty WHATEVER the investigative processes found...a common flaw in right-wing thinking.
I have no particular axe to grind on behalf of Mandelson, but perhaps we should just leave it there. I think I shall.
He was such a hate-figure to them that it has simply become a right-wing mantra that he was guilty WHATEVER the investigative processes found...a common flaw in right-wing thinking.
I have no particular axe to grind on behalf of Mandelson, but perhaps we should just leave it there. I think I shall.
As always, a salient point well made QM - how are you?
i would entirely agree that the Tory Party has nothing to point the finger about in terms of sleaze - it just seems so much more hypocrytical that Prescott made more noise than anyone else about 'privieledge' and then took the honour when it was offered.
None of the recent politicans have exactly covered themselves in glory when it comes to behaving in a manner appropriate to their office..
i would entirely agree that the Tory Party has nothing to point the finger about in terms of sleaze - it just seems so much more hypocrytical that Prescott made more noise than anyone else about 'privieledge' and then took the honour when it was offered.
None of the recent politicans have exactly covered themselves in glory when it comes to behaving in a manner appropriate to their office..
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.