Aren't most of the members of the House of Lord's there because of their peerage?
Even so, it is a fact that 26 of them are simply because they are CofE Bishops: this is naked special privilege in the public arena.
I see nothing wrong or mutually exclusive about the House of Lords and who sits in it considering religion and politics.
I see a lot wrong with it in a democracy: it political governance by the unelected.
Most of the house of Lords are people there because of their status in life or their job.
Where none of them are elected.
But I do not feel that there is anything hampering by either as all know their place.
In a democracy any place in political governance by default in ananchronism, as is the sychophancy surrounding the aristocracy/monarchy.
The Country and the People should be their first priority.
Maybe so, but the problem is that they don't need to convince us of this first, and we don't get the chance to either select or reject them.
I feel the Church have a better grasp on life and the reality of those living in the real world than aristocracy.
Hard to see how 26 CofE Bishops are especially qualified to take part in political governance, and nor does it seem to me that their 'grasp on life' is commendable given the history surrounding the specific organisation they represent. Then there is the matter of the general decline of Christianity across U.K. society, and it is even harder to see how 26 CofE Bishops have any relevance to real life here in the West of Scotland.
So, perhaps they'd do better to stand on a CofE manifesto and let their local electorate determine they extent of their participation in political governance. I say bin the HofL and if there is to be a second chamber at all then its membership should be the result of regular elections.