Of course, the members of the House of Lords are far less courteous in speech compared to Peel. According to their original words, it is: "If MPs rely on salary to live, they will serve only for wages, not for the country."
Actually, the opinions of the Lords are not entirely without reason, because political figures like Viscount Melbourne and Earl of Dalmo, who are wealthy, do indeed rarely make mistakes in economic matters. Of course, those with strong material desires like Viscount Palmeston and Viscount Godric are another matter.
After all, even among the nobility, there are wealth disparities.
In Britain, the gap between those impoverished nobles and wealthy ones like Earl of Dalmo is actually wider than between impoverished nobles and beggars.
And the political differences among wealthy nobles are as vast as between Agares and Baal.
Although Viscount Melbourne is the leader of the Whig Party, a reform party leader who rises to power, in reality, he is a Conservative.
