John Sentamu peerage 'imminent' amid House of Lords rowpublished at 15:22 British Summer Time 19 October 2020
The former Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, is expected to get a life peerage after the government was accused of "institutional prejudice" for failing to ennoble him.
Dr Sentamu, the UK's first black archbishop, retired in June after 15 years. Despite all his predecessors being made peers and allowed to continue sitting in the House of Lords, he was not.
But a source has now told the Press Association the move is "imminent".
The Whitehall source said the delay was due to a procedural hold up with the House of Lords Appointments Commission.
Previously a No 10 spokesman had told the Sunday Times Dr Sentamu was kept off the list to keep House of Lords numbers down, despite the prime minister including his brother, Jo Johnson.
His successor, the Most Reverend Stephen Cottrell, said he had been "disturbed" at the move.
David Lammy, the shadow justice minister, said on Twitter: "No 10 snubbed Britain's first black archbishop for a peerage because it says the House of Lords is too large, but it made room for Ian Botham and Theresa May's husband - Blatant institutional prejudice."