Speaker of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly

Speaker of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly
Incumbent
Shelley Hancock

since 3 May 2011
Style The Honourable
Mr/Madam Speaker (In the House)
Appointer The Monarch's Representative at the behest of the Legislative Assembly
Term length Elected by the Assembly at the start of each Parliament, and upon a vacancy
Inaugural holder Sir Daniel Cooper
Formation 1856

The Speaker of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly is the presiding officer of the Legislative Assembly, New South Wales's lower chamber of Parliament. The current Speaker is Shelley Hancock, who was elected on 3 May 2011. Traditionally a partisan office, filled by the governing party of the time, Hancock replaced the previous independent Richard Torbay, following the 2011 general election.

Role

The Speaker presides over the House's debates, determining which members may speak. The Speaker is also responsible for maintaining order during debate, and may punish members who break the rules of the House. Conventionally, the Speaker remains non-partisan, and renounces all affiliation with his former political party when taking office. The Speaker does not take part in debate nor vote (except to break ties, and even then, subject to conventions that maintain his or her non-partisan status), although the Speaker is still able to speak. Aside from duties relating to presiding over the House, the Speaker also performs administrative and procedural functions, and remains a constituency Member of Parliament (MP).

The office of the Speaker is recognised in section 31 of the Constitution Act 1902 as the Legislative Assembly's "independent and impartial representative". The first act of the new Parliament, after the swearing in of Members, is the election of a Speaker. Section 31B of the Constitution Act outlines the method of election. Under section 70 of the Parliamentary Electorates and Elections Act 1912, the Speaker issues writs to fill vacancies caused otherwise than by a General Election, which would be issued by the Governor.

The Speaker's role in the House is to maintain order, put questions after debate and conduct divisions. In maintaining order the Speaker interprets and applies the Standing Orders and practice of the House by making rulings and decisions.

The Speaker also has extensive administrative functions, being responsible, with the President, for the overall direction of the Parliament. In this, the Presiding Officers are advised by the Clerks of both Houses. The Speaker is solely responsible for the operation of the Department of the Legislative Assembly.

If only one candidate is nominated for election, then no ballot is held, and the Assembly proceeds directly to the motion to appoint the candidate to the Speakership. A similar procedure is used if a Speaker seeks a further term after a general election: no ballot is held, and the Assembly immediately votes on a motion to re-elect the Speaker. If the motion to re-elect the Speaker fails, candidates are nominated, and the Assembly proceeds with voting. Upon the passage of the motion, the Speaker-elect is expected to show reluctance at being chosen; he or she is customarily "dragged unwillingly" by MPs to the Speaker's bench. This custom has its roots in the Speaker's original function of communicating the House of Commons' opinions to the monarch. Historically, the Speaker, representing the House to the Monarch, potentially faced the Monarch's anger and therefore required some persuasion to accept the post.

After election, the Speaker ceases to be associated with his or her former party. In 2007, Richard Torbay was the first independent Speaker since 1917, breaking a pattern of alternation between Labor and Conservative members which had occurred from the 1917 through to the 2003 elections of Speakers.

James Dooley (1925–1927) as Speaker, wearing the Labor variation of the dress.

Many Speakers also held higher or other offices while in Parliament:The first Speaker, Sir Daniel Cooper (1856–1860) was later made a Baronet, of Woollahra in New South Wales, in 1863; William Arnold (1865–1875) served in the Robertson and Cowper Ministries before becoming Speaker; Sir George Wigram Allen (1875–1882) also served as a Minister in the first Parkes Government; Edmund Barton (1883–1887) entered the new Federal Parliament in 1901 as the first Prime Minister of Australia (1901–1903) and thereafter served as a Puisne Justice of the High Court of Australia until 1920; James Dooley (1925–1927) before taking up the role of Speaker had served two terms as the Premier of New South Wales in 1921 and from 1921 to 1922; Reginald Weaver (1937–1941), later served briefly as Leader of the Opposition of New South Wales and as the first Leader of the NSW Liberal Party in 1945 before his death and John Aquilina (2003–2007) also served as a Minister in the Unsworth and Carr Labor Governments.

Dress

Following the Westminster tradition inherited from the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, the traditional dress of the speaker includes components of Court dress such as the black silk lay-type gown (similar to a QC's gown), a lace collar or jabot (another variation included a white bow tie with a lace jabot), bar jacket, white gloves and a full-bottomed wig. Often the dress variated according to the party in power, with most Labor party speakers eschewing the wig while retaining the court dress, while conservative and independent speakers tended to wear the full dress.

Reginald Weaver (1937–1941) as Speaker, wearing the full traditional dress.

The Speaker, currently, no longer wears the traditional court dress outfit. Kevin Rozzoli was the last speaker to do so. From 1995 to 2007, Speakers Murray and Aquilina opted not to wear any dress at all, preferring a business suit. Torbay chose not to wear the full court dress of the speaker upon his election in 2007, nevertheless he returned to tradition by wearing the gown during question time and significant occasions such as the Budget. Speaker Hancock has continued this practice. However, there is nothing stopping any given Speaker, if they choose to do so, from assuming traditional court dress or anything they deem appropriate.

Speakers of the Legislative Assembly

#NamePartyTerm startTerm end
1Sir Daniel Cooper None22 May 185631 January 1860
2Terence Aubrey Murray None31 January 186013 October 1862
3John Hay None14 October 186231 October 1865
4William Arnold None1 November 18651 March 1875
5Sir George Wigram Allen None23 March 187523 November 1882
6Edmund Barton None3 January 188331 January 1887
7James Young Free Trade8 March 188721 October 1890
8Sir Joseph Palmer Abbott Independent22 October 189012 June 1900
9William McCourt Liberal Reform13 June 190014 November 1910
10John Cann Labor15 November 191031 July 1911
11Henry Willis Liberal Reform24 August 191122 July 1913
12Henry Morton Independent22 July 191322 December 1913
13Richard Meagher Labor23 December 191316 April 1917
14John Cohen Nationalist17 April 191730 January 1919
15Daniel Levy Nationalist19 August 191912 December 1921
16Simon Hickey Labor13 December 192120 December 1921
Daniel Levy Nationalist20 December 192123 June 1925
17James Dooley Labor24 June 19252 November 1927
Sir Daniel Levy Nationalist3 November 192724 November 1930
18Frank Burke Labor25 November 193023 June 1932
Sir Daniel Levy United Australia24 June 193220 May 1937
19Reginald Weaver United Australia4 August 193727 May 1941
20Daniel Clyne Labor28 May 194127 May 1947
21Bill Lamb Labor28 May 194720 April 1959
22Ray Maher Labor21 April 195929 January 1965
23Sir Kevin Ellis Liberal26 May 19653 December 1973
24Jim Cameron Liberal4 December 197324 May 1976
25Laurie Kelly Labor25 May 197626 April 1988
26Kevin Rozzoli Liberal27 April 19881 May 1995
27John Murray Labor2 May 199528 April 2003
28John Aquilina Labor29 April 20037 May 2007
29Richard Torbay Independent8 May 20072 May 2011
30Shelley Hancock Liberal3 May 2011
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.