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"Under the Peerage Act 1963 which came into effect in August that year, all Scottish peers were given seats in the House of Lords as of right. This right was lost under the House of Lords Act 1999 which provided that "[n]o-one shall be a member of the House of Lords by virtue of a hereditary peerage."[3] As a hereditary peer, Queensberry spoke in the House of Lords during the passage of the Sexual Offences Act 1967.[4] He explained in 2016 that he had been delighted to associate his family with a liberalising measure as "The Queensberry name had become so associated with the way Oscar Wilde was pilloried in 1895".[5]
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