Misplaced Pages

Speaker of the Australian House of Representatives: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 03:29, 7 June 2011 editAussieLegend (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, File movers, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers173,395 edits Reverted 2 edits by ExcaliburPrime1 (talk): Undue weight. (TW)← Previous edit Revision as of 04:55, 7 June 2011 edit undoExcaliburPrime1 (talk | contribs)34 edits Undid revision 432967585 by AussieLegend (talk) See discussion page.Next edit →
Line 50: Line 50:


*In 1929 Speaker Sir ] declined to come into the House and cast a vote in committee when his vote would have saved the ] from defeat. As a result he was expelled from the ] and defeated in his constituency at the subsequent election. *In 1929 Speaker Sir ] declined to come into the House and cast a vote in committee when his vote would have saved the ] from defeat. As a result he was expelled from the ] and defeated in his constituency at the subsequent election.
*In 1975 the ] government refused to support Speaker ] when he named government minister ] for disrespect to the Chair: normally this would have resulted in the minister's suspension from the House. The Speaker resigned on the spot, although he was under no obligation to do so. This is the only circumstance where a Government had failed to support a Speaker after a Member had been named.<ref>{{cite book |url=http://www.aph.gov.au/house/pubs/PRACTICE/5Ch06.pdf |chapter=The Speaker, Deputy Speaker, and officers |publisher=Australian House of Commons |page=197 |title=House of Representatives Practice |editor=Ian Harris, Clerk of the House of Representatives |accessdate=22 May 2011}}</ref> *In 1975 the ] government refused to support Speaker ] when he named government minister ] for disrespect to the Chair: normally this would have resulted in the minister's suspension from the House. The Speaker resigned on the spot. This is the only circumstance where a Government had failed to support a Speaker after a Member had been named.<ref>{{cite book |url=http://www.aph.gov.au/house/pubs/PRACTICE/5Ch06.pdf |chapter=The Speaker, Deputy Speaker, and officers |publisher=Australian House of Commons |page=197 |title=House of Representatives Practice |editor=Ian Harris, Clerk of the House of Representatives |accessdate=22 May 2011}}</ref>
*In 1982 Speaker Sir ] refused to insist that an opposition frontbencher, ], retract an allegation that the Prime Minister, ], was a liar. Snedden stood his ground despite furious demands from government members that Hawke either be made to retract or be named. The ''Hansard'' of the day's sitting shows that Sir Billy refused to put the question that 'the honourable member for Wills (Hawke) be suspended from the services of the House' so that Parliament can function for that day. *In 1982 Speaker Sir ] refused to insist that an opposition frontbencher, ], retract an allegation that the Prime Minister, ], was a liar. Snedden stood his ground despite furious demands from government members that Hawke either be made to retract or be named. The ''Hansard'' of the day's sitting shows that Sir Billy refused to put the question that 'the honourable member for Wills (Hawke) be suspended from the services of the House' so that Parliament can function for that day.
*In 2011, after a contentious debate on Carbon Pricing in which the Speaker Harry Jenkins declared a "general warning" for all members, Mr. Bob Baldwin interjected and was named by the Speaker. The Government moved that he be suspended, but Mr. Baldwin was supported by the Opposition "Coalition" and by independent MP Rob Oakeshott and WA Nationals MP Tony Crook, and the resulting vote on suspending Mr. Baldwin for 24 hours failed 71-72. Convention would normally have required the Speaker to resign, but the House of Representatives immediately thereafter approved a motion of confidence in the Speaker, and as a consequence, Speaker Jenkins continued in office.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.aph.gov.au/hansard/reps/dailys/dr310511.pdf|title=Commonwealth of Australia - House of Representatives - Hansard - May 31 2011}}</ref>


==Perquisites== ==Perquisites==

Revision as of 04:55, 7 June 2011

Speaker of the House of Representatives
The Speaker's chair in the House of Representatives
Incumbent
Harry Jenkins
since 12 February 2008
StyleThe Honourable
(Diplomatic)
Madam/Mister Speaker
(within the House)
AppointerElected by the Australian. House of Representatives
Inaugural holderSir Frederick Holder, KCMG
9 May 1901
FormationConstitution of Australia
9 July 1900
DeputyPeter Slipper
Websiteaph.gov.au/speaker
This article is part of a series on the
Politics of
Australia
Constitution
Monarchy
Executive
Legislature




Judiciary


Elections
  • Recent elections


States and territories
Local government
Foreign relations




Ideologies
flag Australia portal

The Speaker of the House of Representatives is the presiding officer of the House of Representatives, the lower house of the Parliament of Australia. The presiding officer in the upper house is the President of the Senate. The current Speaker is Harry Jenkins, Jr, who was re-elected on 28 September 2010, following Labor's formation of a minority government against Liberal-National Coalition in 2010. He is the first Speaker whose parent was also a Speaker (his father Harry Jenkins, Sr. served as Speaker from 1983 to 1986).

The office of Speaker was created by the Constitution of Australia. The authors of the Constitution intended that the House of Representatives should be as nearly as possible a replica of the House of Commons of the United Kingdom.

Election

Section 35 of the Constitution provides:

The House of Representatives shall, before proceeding to the despatch of any other business, choose a member to be the Speaker of the House, and as often as the office of Speaker becomes vacant the House shall again choose a member to be the Speaker.

The Speaker is elected by the House of Representatives in a secret ballot. The Clerk conducts the election. The first Speaker, Sir Frederick Holder, sat as an independent after his election as Speaker, but since his death in 1909 the Speakership has been a partisan office and the nominee of the government party has always been elected. Unlike the Speaker of the House of Commons in Britain, the Speaker continues to attend party meetings, and at general elections stands as a party candidate.

There is no convention in Australia that the Speaker should not be opposed in his or her constituency, and three Speakers (Groom in 1929, Nairn in 1943 and Aston in 1972) have been defeated at general elections. Because the Speaker is always the nominee of the governing party, there is no expectation that a Speaker will continue in office following a change of government. While the Opposition sometimes nominates one of its own members for Speaker after a general election, this is understood to be a symbolic act, and party discipline is always followed in any ballot.

Most Speakers have been senior backbenchers of the party holding office at the start of a new Parliament, or at the time of the death or resignation of an incumbent Speaker. Four Speakers have been former government ministers (Watt, Groom, Cameron and Sinclair), one a former Parliamentary Secretary (Martin), and one (Snedden) both a former minister and a former Leader of the Opposition. Two were former state premiers (Holder and Watt).

There is no convention in Australia that Speakers should resign from Parliament on the end of their term: two Speakers (Makin and Scholes) have become Cabinet ministers after having been Speaker.

Role

The Speaker's principal duty is to preside over the House, although he is assisted in this by the Deputy Speakers and a panel of Acting Speakers, who usually preside during routine debates. The Speaker must maintain order in the House, uphold the Standing Orders (rules of procedure), rule on points of order, and protect the rights of backbench members. The Speaker is assisted by two deputies, both also elected by the House: the Deputy Speaker and Second Deputy Speaker, the latter of which must be elected from an opposition party. The Speaker, in conjunction with the President of the Senate, also administers Parliament House, Canberra, with the assistance of an administrative staff.

Australian parliaments are notoriously rowdy, and the Speaker frequently exercises the disciplinary powers available under Standing Orders. The Speaker may summarily order a Member to excuse him or herself from the House for one hour. For more serious offences, the Speaker may "name" a Member: he says "I name the Honourable Member for X," following the House's convention that Members are always referred to by their electorate. The House then votes on a motion to suspend the Member for 24 hours. (The House also had the power to permanently expel a Member, but this happened only once, in 1920– the member was Hugh Mahon. Under Section 8 of the Parliamentary Privileges Act 1987, the House no longer has the power to expel a member from membership of the House.)

Impartiality

Although Australian Speakers are supposed to behave with reasonable impartiality, they see it as part of their duty to support the Government of the day in getting its business through the House, and generally rule in favour of the Government on the frequent points of order raised by Opposition members. Speakers are regularly accused of favouring the Government, and on occasion motions of dissent in the Speaker's rulings or motions of no confidence in the Speaker are moved. These are always defeated along party lines.

On the other hand, the Speaker is not an active political figure like the Speaker of the United States House of Representatives. He or she does not take part in debates in the House, does not vote in the House except in the (rare) event of a tied vote, and does not speak in public on party-political issues (except at election time in his or her own constituency). He or she is expected to conduct the business of the House in an impartial manner, and generally does so.

There have been several memorable clashes between Speakers and the governments which caused them to be elected.

  • In 1929 Speaker Sir Littleton Groom declined to come into the House and cast a vote in committee when his vote would have saved the Bruce government from defeat. As a result he was expelled from the Nationalist Party and defeated in his constituency at the subsequent election.
  • In 1975 the Whitlam government refused to support Speaker Jim Cope when he named government minister Clyde Cameron for disrespect to the Chair: normally this would have resulted in the minister's suspension from the House. The Speaker resigned on the spot. This is the only circumstance where a Government had failed to support a Speaker after a Member had been named.
  • In 1982 Speaker Sir Billy Snedden refused to insist that an opposition frontbencher, Bob Hawke, retract an allegation that the Prime Minister, Malcolm Fraser, was a liar. Snedden stood his ground despite furious demands from government members that Hawke either be made to retract or be named. The Hansard of the day's sitting shows that Sir Billy refused to put the question that 'the honourable member for Wills (Hawke) be suspended from the services of the House' so that Parliament can function for that day.
  • In 2011, after a contentious debate on Carbon Pricing in which the Speaker Harry Jenkins declared a "general warning" for all members, Mr. Bob Baldwin interjected and was named by the Speaker. The Government moved that he be suspended, but Mr. Baldwin was supported by the Opposition "Coalition" and by independent MP Rob Oakeshott and WA Nationals MP Tony Crook, and the resulting vote on suspending Mr. Baldwin for 24 hours failed 71-72. Convention would normally have required the Speaker to resign, but the House of Representatives immediately thereafter approved a motion of confidence in the Speaker, and as a consequence, Speaker Jenkins continued in office.

Perquisites

A Member elected Speaker is entitled, while Speaker, to the title 'Honourable', which, with the approval of the Sovereign, may be retained for life. This privilege is usually only given to those who have served as Speaker for three years or more. The current Speaker, Harry Jenkins is the first Speaker to ask that "The Hon." not be used in reference to him, while also making clear that he was not attempting to set a precedent for future speakers; he is simply not personally comfortable with the title.

In the Chamber and for ceremonial occasions the Speaker may wear the formal Speaker's dress of a black Queen's Counsel gown, wing collar and bands. Traditionally, Speakers from the non-Labor parties have worn the formal dress but Speakers from the Australian Labor Party have not done so.

List of Speakers

# Name Party Term in Office Comments
1 Hon. Sir Frederick William Holder Independent 9 May 1901– 23 July 1909 Died in office.
2 Hon. Dr Charles Carty Salmon Commonwealth Liberal 23 July 1909–30 June 1910
3 Hon. Charles McDonald Labor 1 July 1910–8 July 1913 First time in role.
4 Hon. Sir William Elliot Johnson Commonwealth Liberal 9 July 1913–7 October 1914 First time in role.
Hon. Charles McDonald Labor 8 October 1914– 13 June 1917 Second time in role.
Hon. Sir William Elliot Johnson Nationalist 14 June 1917– 27 February 1923 Second time in role.
5 Rt. Hon. William Alexander Watt Nationalist 28 February 1923– 12 January 1926
6 Hon. Sir Littleton Ernest Groom Nationalist 13 January 1926– 11 October 1929 Defeated in his own seat
7 Hon. Norman John Oswald Makin Labor 20 November 1929–16 February 1932
8 Hon. George Hugh Alexander Mackay United Australia 17 February 1932– 7 August 1934
9 Hon. Sir George John Bell United Australia 23 October 1934–19 November 1940
10 Hon. Walter Maxwell Nairn United Australia 20 November 1940– 21 June 1943 Defeated in his own seat.
11 Hon. John Solomon (Sol) Rosevear Labor 22 June 1943– 21 February 1950
12 Hon. Archie Galbraith Cameron Liberal 22 February 1950– 9 August 1956 Died in office.
13 Hon. Sir John McLeay Liberal 29 August 1956– 31 October 1966
14 Hon. Sir William John Aston Liberal 21 February 1967–2 November 1972 Defeated in his own seat.
15 Hon. James (Jim) Francis Cope Labor 27 February 1973–27 February 1975
16 Hon. Gordon Glen Denton Scholes Labor 27 February 1975–16 February 1976
17 Rt. Hon. Sir Billy Mackie Snedden Liberal 17 February 1976– 4 February 1983
18 Hon. Dr. Henry (Harry) Alfred Jenkins, sr. Labor 22 April 1983– 11 February 1986 First Speaker whose son was a later Speaker.
19 Hon. (Gloria) Joan Liles Child Labor 11 February 1986– 28 August 1989 First, and to date only, female Speaker.
20 Hon. Leo Boyce McLeay Labor 29 August 1989– 8 February 1993
21 Hon. Stephen Paul Martin Labor 4 May 1993– 30 April 1996
22 Hon. Robert (Bob) George Halverson Liberal 30 April 1996– 3 March 1998
23 Rt. Hon. Ian McCahon Sinclair National 4 March 1998– 10 November 1998
24 Hon. (John) Neil Andrew Liberal 10 November 1998–16 November 2004
25 Hon. David Peter Maxwell Hawker Liberal 16 November 2004–12 February 2008
26 Hon. Henry (Harry) Alfred Jenkins, jr. Labor 12 February 2008– Present First Speaker whose father was a previous Speaker.

Notes

  1. Scaleplus
  2. Ian Harris, Clerk of the House of Representatives (ed.). "The Speaker, Deputy Speaker, and officers". House of Representatives Practice (PDF). Australian House of Commons. p. 197. Retrieved 22 May 2011.
  3. "Commonwealth of Australia - House of Representatives - Hansard - May 31 2011" (PDF).
  4. "Biography for Scholes, the Hon. Gordon Glen Denton, AO". ParlInfo Web. Parliament of Australia. Retrieved 24 August 2007.
Presiding officers of Australian legislatures
Federal, States and territories

Australia

New South Wales

Queensland

South Australia

Tasmania

Victoria

Western Australia

Australian Capital Territory

Northern Territory
SpeakerPresident

House of Rep.

Senate

Milton Dick (ALP)Sue Lines (ALP)
SpeakerPresident

Assembly

Council

Greg Piper (Ind)Ben Franklin (Nat)
Speaker

Assembly

Pat Weir
(LNP)
SpeakerPresident

Assembly

Council

Leon Bignell (Ind-ALP)Terry Stephens (Lib)
SpeakerPresident

Assembly

Council

Michelle O'Byrne (ALP)Craig Farrell (ALP)
SpeakerPresident

Assembly

Council

Maree Edwards (ALP)Shaun Leane (ALP)
SpeakerPresident

Assembly

Council

Michelle Roberts (ALP)Alanna Clohesy (ALP)
Speaker

Assembly

Mark Parton
(LIB)
Speaker

Assembly

Robyn Lambley (IND)
Categories:
Speaker of the Australian House of Representatives: Difference between revisions Add topic