The British House of Lords has blocked a proposed assisted dying bill, despite a majority vote in favor of the legislation in the House of Commons. Although the Lords cannot directly veto, their actions have effectively halted the initiative.
A proposed assisted dying bill will not become law in the current parliamentary session, as both sides acknowledge there is insufficient time to complete all necessary stages of debate in the House of Lords.
The House of Lords has voted 266 to 141 to support an Australian-style ban on social media for individuals under the age of 16, rejecting proposals for a public consultation.
Records reveal that peers Evgeny Lebedev and Ian Botham have the lowest attendance in the House of Lords, each attending only 1.12% of sessions in the past four years.
The House of Lords in the UK has voted in favor of a bid to decriminalize abortion in England and Wales, challenging a 164-year-old law that currently makes abortion a crime under most circumstances.
Letter sent to Starmer claims ‘small number of peers have been using procedural tactics’ to stymie its progress
More than 100 Labour MPs have called on Keir Starmer to stop the House of Lords from…
Colby Cosh discusses the perceived demise of another British tradition, the role of hereditary peers, suggesting that the House of Lords is increasingly resembling the Canadian Senate in its composition.
Hereditary peers are looking for an opportunity to remain in the House of Lords as the Conservative party considers a compromise deal offering 15 seats.
The British Parliament has decided to abolish the right of aristocrats to inherit a seat in the House of Lords, ending a centuries-old political tradition.
The British House of Commons has voted against a proposed ban on social media for teenagers, temporarily shelving the measure despite a split in political opinion and the House of Lords having introduced the motion.
Upper chamber accepts final draft of bill, which offers life peerages to some who would otherwise be removed
Hereditary peerages will be abolished before the next king’s speech after a deal was…
The UK House of Lords has rejected a bill that would have banned children under 16 from using social media, despite a Conservative amendment in January that sought to adopt such a measure.
A Conservative peer has stepped down after a House of Lords standards investigation into his interactions with ministers and advisers concerning PPE contracts during the pandemic.
The UK is set to begin a three-month consultation on banning social media for teenagers under 16, following approval from the House of Lords, and is also considering a curfew.
A peer associated with Labour leader Keir Starmer has postponed taking their seat in the House of Lords following new revelations concerning a charity.
A new Channel 4 documentary delves into the idea that former Prime Minister Tony Blair harbored delusions of grandeur, drawing comparisons to religious figures.
Allies of London Mayor Sadiq Khan have dismissed reports that he could join Keir Starmer’s cabinet, though it remains possible he could be granted a peerage and join the House of Lords while retaining his current role.
UK ministers are planning to push ahead with a compromise on capped 'mandation' powers for pension schemes, following the rejection of the initial draft law by the House of Lords.
Members of the UK House of Lords are voting again on a proposed social media ban for under-16s, following a new warning issued to the government by twenty-one bereaved parents.
The UK House of Lords has voted in favor of pardoning women who were previously convicted of illegal abortions, a move that has garnered significant public reaction.
The House of Lords is considering an amendment that would pardon women in England and Wales who were previously arrested, investigated, or convicted under 'unjust' abortion laws.
After MPs voted last year to change the law in England and Wales, members of the Lords will now put forward proposed amendments
MPs voted last year to end the criminalisation of women who terminate…
Hereditary peers are reportedly seeking to secure their positions in the House of Lords as the Conservative Party considers which 15 individuals to retain following a compromise deal.
The UK House of Lords is undergoing a constitutional reform to end the system of hereditary peers, a move described as a 'small revolution' and part of a broader modernization effort.
The UK Parliament has voted to end a centuries-old political tradition by removing hereditary aristocrats from the unelected House of Lords, a move that will take effect within weeks, ejecting hereditary nobles after 700 years.
The British House of Lords has voted to approve the removal of the last remaining hereditary peers, a move that continues the reform initiated by former Prime Minister Blair in 1999.
A new bill has passed that will abolish the 92 seats in the House of Lords currently reserved for hereditary peers, marking a significant reform of the UK's upper parliamentary chamber.
The UK government is considering abolishing hereditary peerage in the House of Lords, viewing them as relics of a bygone era, while 'hereditary lords' argue for their continued importance.
Lord Chadlington, a Conservative peer, announced his departure from the House of Lords after an investigation found he committed five breaches of standards related to £50m Covid PPE deals, having introduced the government to a supplier in which he had a financial interest.
The newly ennobled Lord Joe Docherty of Milngavie, who was nominated to join the House of Lords by the prime minister, was stripped of the party whip on Saturday, pending an investigation into alleged inappropriate behaviour
U.K. Parliament ratification of Chagos Islands sovereignty transfer to Mauritius remains uncertain as House of Lords considers legislation amid transatlantic tensions.
The World Economic Forum (WEF) is facing scrutiny as its CEO is under independent investigation for alleged ties to Jeffrey Epstein, referred to as a 'Davos Concierge'.
A proposed assisted dying bill will not become law in the current UK parliamentary session, as both proponents and opponents acknowledge there is insufficient time to complete all legislative stages in the House of Lords.
The UK House of Lords has debated the detention of Imran Khan, with members raising concerns about his deteriorating welfare, health, and access to jail facilities.
A new law in the UK will phase out the last hereditary seats in the British House of Lords, ending a tradition that dates back nearly a thousand years, with one peer expressing that the public will miss them.
On the second anniversary of his sister Paola Marra's assisted death, her brother is protesting outside parliament after the House of Lords blocked an assisted dying bill, expressing despair over the legislative setback.
After nearly 1,000 years, the last inherited seats in the British House of Lords are being phased out with a new law, marking the end of a long-standing tradition.
Hereditary peers in the UK are losing their traditional seats in the House of Lords, a move that is being discussed as a potential gain for parliamentarism.
The Conservative party is currently deciding which hereditary peers to retain in the House of Lords after being offered 15 seats as part of a compromise agreement.
The House of Lords voted to scrap the recording of non-crime hate incidents, months after the Metropolitan Police had already indicated it would cease investigating them. Lord Toby Young of Acton proposed the abolition.
The British Parliament has concluded a centuries-old tradition by passing legislation that removes the right of hereditary aristocrats to sit in the House of Lords, despite objections.
The United Kingdom is set to abolish the 92 hereditary seats in the House of Lords that have been protected since the 1999 reform, with the change taking effect this spring at the end of the current parliamentary period.
A new bill has passed that will abolish the 92 seats reserved for hereditary peers in the House of Lords, marking a significant reform to the UK's parliamentary system by removing those who inherit their titles.
A Conservative peer has resigned from the House of Lords after a standards investigation into his contacts with ministers and advisers regarding PPE deals during the pandemic.
A UK House of Lords committee is urging ministers to abandon plans that would allow tech firms to use the work of novelists, artists, and writers without permission, warning against sacrificing creative industries for speculative AI gains.
Efforts to introduce new laws allowing assisted dying for terminally ill individuals in the UK are likely to fail after legislation backed by MPs struggled to pass the House of Lords.
When Both Sides Go Quiet
Submitted by QTR's Fringe Finance
There is a political instinct that I’ve developed over the last few decade or so: when both parties are shouting, it’s business as usual. When both parties go quiet, pay attention, because something ugly is probably getting passed or covered up, and the American taxpayer is likely footing the bill of consequences.
Few public controversies in recent memory have generated as much bipartisan distrust as the handling of the Epstein files. Republicans accused Democrats of failing to pursue full transparency while President Biden was in office. Now Democrats accuse Republicans of withholding or slow-walking the release of the complete records. The blame shifts with political control, but the underlying fact pattern remains the same: both parties have figures of influence whose names have surfaced in connection with Epstein’s orbit.
That reality complicates the politics of accountability and fuels public suspicion that neither side is entirely comfortable with full disclosure.
What should have been a straightforward matter of transparency, identifying networks of power, influence, and possible criminal complicity, has instead unfolded as a slow humiliating drip of redactions, procedural delays, partial disclosures and cagey congressional testimony. Each release seems to raise more questions than it resolves. These questions revolve around sex trafficking, exploitation, abuse of minors, coercion and manipulation, elite complicity, obstruction of justice, etc.
But the deeper damage taking place now is not only about the crimes associated with Jeffrey Epstein. It is about institutional response. If only one political party had meaningful exposure to the scandal, the other would likely have been far more relentless in demanding transparency. But this is different. Despite Democrats harping on the files now, they were quiet in the years prior to Trump’s second term and, because Epstein’s connections span media, finance, academia, and politics, the discomfort still appears bipartisan.
And that is precisely what unsettles me.
When both political parties fail to press aggressively on something meaningful, especially something morally explosive, it often suggests that the issue cuts deeper than surface narratives allow. Bipartisan hesitation can signal overlapping vulnerability. Silence across the aisle is rarely accidental.
The horror here is not just what may have occurred in private circles of power, but the perception that the institutions tasked with accountability are reluctant to fully illuminate it. Justice delayed in cases involving elites feels less like procedural caution and more like reputational risk management. Whether or not that perception is entirely fair, it is corrosive.
Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs’ chief legal officer Kathryn Ruemmler announced her resignation after new emails with Epstein came to light, prompting internal pressure at the firm. British political figure Peter Mandelson resigned from the House of Lords and the Labour Party, and Scotland Yard has opened a criminal investigation into his ties with Epstein. In Norway, parliament has launched an external inquiry into prominent diplomats for their connections to Epstein, and police are investigating corruption allegations against former prime minister Thorbjørn Jagland and others.
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Across Europe, these disclosures have triggered formal probes, resignations, and institutional reviews that contrast sharply with the relative lack of accountability for high-profile figures in the United States, where calls for investigations and resignations have largely stalled. I mean, is Les Wexner really allowed to just walk around free at this point? How can that be possible? How are Kimbal Musk and Elon Musk allowed to remain on Tesla’s board? Why isn’t Bill Gates being hauled in front of congress?
I have long argued that Americans should apply the same “when both parties agree, the American public is getting screwed” scrutiny to monetary policy for a similar reason. It is one of the few areas where both major political parties display remarkable convergence. While they wage visible battles over cultural issues and tax rates, they tend to align on central banking frameworks, large scale liquidity interventions, and deficit tolerance. Like other cover-ups, that alignment deserves examination.
Monetary policy operates largely outside daily partisan warfare, yet it shapes purchasing power, asset prices, debt burdens, and wealth distribution. When balance sheets expand aggressively and markets are repeatedly stabilized during downturns, the effects are uneven. Asset holders often benefit first and most. Meanwhile, wage earners experience the lagging side effects such as inflationary pressure, higher living costs, and diminished purchasing power.
Supporters of Modern Monetary Theory argue that sovereign currency systems provide more fiscal flexibility than traditionally assumed. Critics counter that, in practice, repeated interventions risk entrenching a cycle in which gains are privatized and losses are socialized. When markets rise, the wealth effect accrues to those with substantial exposure. When markets falter, public backstops prevent collapse. The middle class absorbs the inflationary residue. And the wealth gap widens:
The structural similarity matters. When both parties avoid aggressive debate on a policy that materially burdens the average American, it raises the same instinctive question of what incentives are being protected. Monetary policy may not carry the visceral grotesqueness of the Epstein scandal, but it carries long term economic consequences that most Americans don’t know they are bearing, and don’t understand that they are being lied to about.
The comparison is not moral equivalence. It is structural parallel. In one case, alleged networks of power may be shielded by mutual hesitation. In the other, a financial architecture persists with limited democratic scrutiny because challenging it would destabilize shared political comfort. In both cases, bipartisan alignment dampens confrontation. Two forms of silence. Two different domains. Both revealing.
Foreign policy, particularly the authorization and funding of wars, has often followed a similar pattern. While domestic issues produce loud partisan divides, military interventions abroad frequently pass with overwhelming support from leadership in both parties. Public debate may flare at the margins, but institutional consensus tends to solidify quickly once action begins.
History shows that major military engagements, from post 9/11 authorizations to prolonged overseas conflicts, have often been backed by broad congressional majorities. The initial votes are decisive. The funding continues year after year. Only later, when costs mount and public opinion shifts, does meaningful dissent emerge. By then, strategic commitments and financial obligations are deeply entrenched.
Again, the pattern is not about moral equivalence between policy domains. It is about incentives. When both political parties converge quickly on matters involving immense money, immense power, or immense liability, scrutiny tends to narrow rather than widen. And when scrutiny narrows at the highest levels, the public’s role shifts from participant to spectator.
When both political parties fail to address something meaningful, when they close ranks instead of competing for exposure, the public should not assume the issue is trivial. More often, it suggests the truth behind the surface may be larger and more consequential than advertised.
Democracies depend not just on disagreement, but on adversarial pressure. When that pressure disappears, citizens are right to lean in, not tune out. When both sides go quiet, the story is rarely over. As the Epstein files are showing, it may simply run far deeper than we are being shown.
Now read:
Today's Epstein’s Records Destroy Official Narratives
Our Liquidity Addiction Continues
Do DOJ Docs Show Epstein Death Notice A Day Early?
The Hijacking Of Bitcoin: Epstein’s Hidden Network
Why America’s Two-Party System Will Never Threaten the True Political Elites
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Tyler Durden
Tue, 02/17/2026 - 14:00