Speaker of the British House of Commons election, 2009

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Speaker of the British House of Commons, 2009

← 2000 22 June 2009
  John Bercow.JPG George Young Minister.jpg
Candidate John Bercow Sir George Young
Party Conservative Conservative
Popular vote 322 271
Percentage 54.3% 45.7%

Speaker before election

Michael Martin
Labour

Elected Speaker

John Bercow
Conservative

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The 2009 election of the Speaker of the House of Commons occurred on 22 June 2009 following the resignation of Michael Martin as Speaker following the parliamentary expenses scandal. Martin was the first Speaker since Sir John Trevor in 1695 to be forced out of office.[1] It was the first Speaker election since 11 May 2005, and the first contested election of a Speaker since 23 October 2000.[2]

Conservative MP John Bercow was elected as the new speaker, after three rounds of voting.

Rules

Under the new rules for the election of the Speaker, introduced in 2001,[3] candidates needed to be nominated by at least twelve Members of Parliament, at least three of them members of a party different from that of the candidate. Each member was allowed to nominate only one candidate. After the candidates' speeches, the House voted by secret ballot, with an absolute majority required for victory. If no candidate won a majority, then the individual with the fewest votes was eliminated, as were any candidates who received less than five per cent of the votes cast. The House continued to vote until one member received the requisite majority under a voting system known as the exhaustive ballot. Then, the House voted on a formal motion to appoint the member in question to the Speakership.[2] The Father of the House, Alan Williams, was the presiding officer of the Commons during the election process.[4]

The final stage of appointment of a new Speaker is a formality but has constitutional significance. The Queen must signify her approval of the new Speaker, which is done by the appointment of a Royal Commission.[5]

Candidates

Nominated candidates

The following individuals all confirmed their intention to stand for election to the office of Speaker, and were all in turn confirmed as nominated candidates by the Parliamentary authorities on the morning of the election:[6]

All 10 of the above candidates appeared at a Hansard Society hustings on 15 June.[12] This was the first full hustings to take place for a Speaker election,[15] although there was a hustings for the 2000 speaker election, which several of the candidates did not attend.[16]

Candidate who withdrew prior to nomination

The following candidate announced his candidacy, only to withdraw before the election was held:

Results

The result of the first secret ballot was announced at approximately 17:10 (16:10 UTC) on 22 June 2009, after the nominated candidates had all addressed the House of Commons. The result of the second ballot was announced at approximately 18:55 (17:55 UTC). Following the result of the second ballot, Beckett, Haselhurst and Beith withdrew their candidacies after their support fell, leaving a straight runoff in the third round between Bercow and Young. The result of the third ballot was announced around 20:30 (19:30 UTC).[18][19] Conservative MP John Bercow won, with 54% of the final vote.

Candidate First Ballot[20] Second Ballot[21] Third Ballot[22]
Votes  % Votes  % Votes  %
John Bercow 179 30.1 221 36.9 322 54.3
Sir George Young 112 18.9 174 29.0 271 45.7
Margaret Beckett 74 12.5 70 11.7 Withdrew
Sir Alan Haselhurst 66 11.1 57 9.5 Withdrew
Sir Alan Beith 55 9.3 46 7.7 Withdrew
Ann Widdecombe 44 7.4 30 5.0 Eliminated
Parmjit Dhanda 26 4.4 Eliminated
Richard Shepherd 15 2.5 Eliminated
Patrick Cormack 13 2.2 Eliminated
Sir Michael Lord 9 1.5 Eliminated
Spoilt/rejected ballots 1 0.2 1 0.2 0 0
Turnout[nb 1] 594 93.1 599 93.9 593 92.9

Following the final vote, a voice vote was taken on the formal motion to elect John Bercow Speaker of the House, which carried without any audible opposition. After this, Bercow was dragged to the Chair (as per House custom) by Charles Walker and Sandra Gidley, and gave an inaugural speech.

Notes

  1. At the time of the election, the full house had 646 seats. Two of these were vacant, five Sinn Féin MPs do not take their seats, and Alan Williams was not eligible to vote. Turnout is thus based on 638 possible voters.
  • The Labour MP John Mann said he had spoilt his ballot due to the candidates being "dismal".[23]

See also

External links

References

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  5. "How the Speaker will be elected", Daily Mail, 22 June 2009.
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