
Watch: House of Lords hit by leaflet protest
Peers were interrupted just before noon as a group of six people in the public gallery started shouting: 'Lords out, people in.'
They threw leaflets into the air and down into the chamber. The sitting was suspended for just under five minutes as they were escorted out and calm was restored.
Peers had been discussing the 80th anniversaries of Victory in Europe and Victory over Japan when they were disrupted.
The leaflets thrown by the small group said: 'Never mind the Lords here's the House of People.'
The other side of the leaflets said: ' Aristocrats and oligarchs: Out. Posties, mums, nurses and neighbours: In. Replace the House of Lords to save the UK.'
The protesters said they were acting on behalf of Assemble, an organisation that campaigns for the House of Lords to be abolished and replaced by a citizens' assembly.
Citizens' assemblies are selected by sortition, which means members of the public are picked at random via a lottery.
Supporters of this mechanism argue it means a more representative sample of the population are able to come together and debate important issues.
Protester Lucy Porter, 50, a primary school teacher from Leeds, said she was 'campaigning for a House of the people'.
On the Lords, she said: 'It's a symbol of everything that's outdated. We don't have a functioning democracy in this country.'
One protester, who wished to be known only as Christina, said: 'We did this action on behalf of Assemble and the ask is that, instead of a House of Lords, which is a house of unelected wealthy elites, we have a house of the people.
'So, we have citizens' assemblies where people can participate in real democracy, instead of having everything handed to them from up high.'
A spokesman for Assemble said: 'Today's action has been taken in support of the abolition of the House of Lords in favour of a House of the People – a new institution where any adult in the UK may be selected to serve, like a jury, to set the political agenda and balance the House of Commons.
'This action mirrors one undertaken by Suffragettes on October 28th 1908, where they took direct action by raining handbills onto the House of Commons, demanding suffrage for women in the UK.'
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