Speaker (politics)

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Speakers and presiding officers from various Commonwealth nations meet for a Commonwealth Speakers and Presiding Officers Conference in Wellington, New Zealand, 1984




Marshal's chair in the Sejm, lower chamber of the Polish Parliament


The speaker of a deliberative assembly, especially a legislative body, is its presiding officer, or the chair. The title was first used in 1377 in England.




Contents





  • 1 Usage

    • 1.1 Australia


    • 1.2 Italy


    • 1.3 Canada


    • 1.4 Singapore


    • 1.5 United Kingdom


    • 1.6 United States

      • 1.6.1 Federal


      • 1.6.2 States




  • 2 Similar posts


  • 3 List of current speakers


  • 4 See also


  • 5 References


  • 6 Further reading




Usage





Parliament of Albania


The speaker's official role is to moderate debate, make rulings on procedure, announce the results of votes, and the like. The speaker decides who may speak and has the powers to discipline members who break the procedures of the chamber or house.[1] The speaker often also represents the body in person, as the voice of the body in ceremonial and some other situations. The title was first recorded in 1377 to describe the role of Thomas de Hungerford in the Parliament of England.[2][3]


By convention, speakers are normally addressed in Parliament as 'Mister Speaker', if a man, or 'Madam Speaker', if a woman. In other cultures other styles are used, mainly being equivalents of English "chairman" or "president". Many bodies also have a speaker pro tempore (or deputy speaker), designated to fill in when the speaker is not available.



Australia


The Speaker of the Australian House of Representatives is the presiding officer of the Australian House of Representatives, the lower house of the Parliament of Australia. The President of the Australian Senate is the presiding officer of the Australian Senate, the upper house of the Parliament of Australia.



Italy


Italian parliamentarism is centered on the Presidents of the two Houses, vested in defense of the members and of the assembly as a whole;[4] so "the Speaker invites the representative of the Government not to deviate from the rules of parliamentary behavior".[5] Now constitutional community highlights changes also in this role.[6]



Canada


In Canada, the Speaker of the House of Commons is the individual elected to preside over the House of Commons, the elected lower house. The speaker is a Member of Parliament (MP) and is elected at the beginning of each new parliament by fellow MPs. The Speaker's role in presiding over Canada's House of Commons is similar to that of speakers elsewhere in other countries that use the Westminster system. The Speaker does not vote except in the case of a tie. By convention, if required to vote, the Speaker will vote in favour of continuing debate on a matter, but will not ultimately vote for a measure to be approved.


The Speaker of the Senate of Canada is the presiding officer of the Senate of Canada, the appointed upper house. The Speaker represents the Senate at official functions, rules on questions of parliamentary procedure and parliamentary privilege, and presides over debates and voting in the "Red Chamber". The Speaker of the Senate is appointed by the Governor General of Canada from amongst sitting senators upon the advice of the Prime Minister. The Speaker has a vote on all matters. In the event of a tie, the matter fails.


At the provincial level, the presiding officer of the provincial legidslatures is called the "Speaker" in all provinces except Quebec, where the term "President" is used. The presiding officer fulfills the same role as the Speaker of the House of Commons.



Singapore


In Singapore, the Speaker of the Parliament of Singapore is the head officer of the country's legislature. By recent tradition, the Prime Minister nominates a person, who may or may not be an elected Member of Parliament (MP), for the role. The person's name is then proposed and seconded by the MPs, before being elected as Speaker.[7] The Constitution states that Parliament has the freedom to decide how to elect its Speaker.[8]


While the Speaker does not have to be an elected MP, they must possess the qualifications to stand for election as an MP as provided for in the Constitution.[9] The Speaker also cannot be a Cabinet Minister or Parliamentary Secretary,[10] and must resign from those positions prior to being elected as Speaker.


The Speaker is one of the few public sector roles which allow its office-holder to automatically qualify as a candidate in the Singapore presidential elections.[11]



United Kingdom


The Speaker is the individual elected to preside over the elected House of Commons. The speaker is a Member of Parliament (MP) and is elected at the beginning of each new parliament by fellow MPs.


The Lord Speaker is the presiding officer of the House of Lords. The commonly used "Speaker of the House of Lords" is not correct. The presiding officer of the House of Lords was until recently the Lord Chancellor, who was also a member of the government (a cabinet member) and the head of the judicial branch. The Lord Chancellor did not have the same authority to discipline members of the Lords that the speaker of the Commons has in that house. The Lord Speaker is elected by the members of the House of Lords and is expected to be politically impartial.



United States



Federal


The Speaker of the United States House of Representatives presides over the lower house of Congress, the House of Representatives. This post is second in line to the presidency—after the vice president—and is therefore the third highest-ranking national office overall. In practise, however, this post is the highest-ranking in Congress as although the vice president is the President of the US Senate, his/her office and predominant responsibilities are White House, and therefore they do not have a day-to-day presence at Congress.



States


In the forty-nine states that have a bicameral legislature, the highest position in the lower house is usually called the "speaker". In Nebraska—the only state with a unicameral legislature—the senators elect one senator to serve as "Speaker of the Nebraska Legislature". In Tennessee, the senators elect a "Speaker of the Senate" who presides over the Tennessee Senate and serves as lieutenant governor.



Similar posts




Palace of the Croatian parliament


The presiding officer for an upper house of a bicameral legislature usually has a different title, although substantially the same duties.


When the upper house is called a senate, the equivalent title is often President of the Senate. Australia, Chile, the United States and many other countries have upper houses with presiding officers titled "president". In several American republics, the vice president of the country serves as the president of the upper house.


This pattern is not universal, however. Some upper houses, including those of Canada, have a speaker.


The Presiding Officer of the National Assembly for Wales, Presiding Officer of the Scottish Parliament, and Presiding Officer of the Northern Ireland Assembly fulfill the same role as the speaker.



List of current speakers






















































































































































































































































































































































































































































Country
Legislature (or legislative chamber)
Title
Incumbent
AlbaniaParliament of AlbaniaSpeaker
Ilir Meta
ArmeniaNational Assembly of ArmeniaSpeaker
Hovik Abrahamyan
AustraliaAustralian House of RepresentativesSpeaker
Tony Smith
AustriaNational CouncilPresident of the National Council
Doris Bures
BangladeshJatiya SangsadSpeaker
Shirin Sharmin Chaudhury[12]
Belgium
 »Parliament of Belgium
Chamber of Representatives of Belgium
President (Voorzitter/Président/Präsident)

Siegfried Bracke (N-VA)
 »Parliament of Belgium
Senate of Belgium
President (Voorzitter/Président/Präsident)

Christine Defraigne (MR)
 »Brussels-Capital Region
Parliament of the Brussels-Capital Region
President (Président/Voorzitter)

Charles Piqué (PS)
 »Flanders (Community and Region)Flemish Parliament
President (Voorzitter)

Jan Peumans (N-VA)
 »French Community
Parliament of the French Community
President (Président)

Philippe Courard (PS)
 »German-speaking Community
Parliament of the German-speaking Community
President (Präsident)

Karl-Heinz Lambertz (SP)
 »Wallonia
Parliament of Wallonia
President (Président/Präsident)

André Antoine (politician) (cdH)
BotswanaNational Assembly of BotswanaSpeaker
Gladys Kokorwe
BulgariaNational Assembly of BulgariaChairperson
Tsetska Tsacheva
CambodiaNational Assembly of CambodiaPresident
Heng Samrin
Canada
 »Parliament of Canada
Senate of Canada
Speaker (Président)

George Furey
 »Parliament of Canada
House of Commons of Canada
Speaker (Président)

Geoff Regan
China
 »National People's Congress
Standing Committee of the National People's CongressChairman
Li Zhanshu
 »Hong Kong
Legislative Council of Hong KongPresident
Andrew Leung
 »Macau
Legislative Assembly of Macau
President (presidente)

Ho Iat Seng
CroatiaCroatian Parliament (Sabor)
President
Željko Reiner
Czech Republic
 » Parliament of the Czech Republic
Chamber of Deputies of the Parliament of the Czech RepublicSpeaker of the Chamber of Deputies of the Parliament of the Czech Republic
Radek Vondráček
 » Parliament of the Czech Republic
Senate of the Parliament of the Czech RepublicSpeaker of the Senate of the Czech Republic
Milan Štěch
Denmark
Parliament of Denmark (Folketinget)
Speaker
Pia Kjærsgaard
 » Faroe Islands

Parliament of the Faroe Islands (Løgtingið)
Speaker
Páll á Reynatúgvu
 » Greenland

Parliament of Greenland (Inatsisartut)
Speaker
Lars Emil Johansen
EgyptHouse of Representatives (Egypt)Speaker
Ali Abdel Aal
EstoniaRiigikoguSpeaker
Eiki Nestor
Finland
Parliament of Finland (eduskunta/riksdagen)
Speaker
Paula Risikko
France
National Assembly (Assemblée Nationale)
President
François de Rugy
GhanaParliament of GhanaSpeaker
Mrs. Justice Joyce Adeline Bamford-Addo
GermanyBundestag
President of the Bundestag (Bundestagspräsident)

Wolfgang Schäuble
GreeceVouliPresident
Nikos Voutsis
Hungary
National Assembly of Hungary (Magyar Köztársaság Országgyűlése)

President (elnöke)

László Kövér
IcelandParliament of IcelandSpeaker
Steingrímur J. Sigfússon
IndiaLok SabhaSpeaker
Sumitra Mahajan
Indonesia
People's Representative Council (Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat)
Chairman
Fadli Zon
IrelandDáil ÉireannHead of the Council (Ceann Comhairle)
Seán Ó Fearghaíl
IranMajlis of IranSpeaker/Chairman [رئیس]
Ali Larijani
IsraelKnessetSpeaker/Chairman [יושב-ראש]
Yuli-Yoel Edelstein
ItalyItalian Chamber of DeputiesPresident
Roberto Fico
Japan
 »National Diet
House of RepresentativesSpeaker
Tadamori Oshima
 »National Diet
House of CouncillorsSpeaker
Chuichi Date
Kenya
 »Parliament of Kenya
Senate of KenyaSpeaker
Kenneth Lusaka
 »Parliament of Kenya
National Assembly of KenyaSpeaker
Justin Muturi
KosovoAssembly of KosovoChairman
Jakup Krasniqi
LatviaSaeimaChairwoman of Parliament
Ināra Mūrniece
LebanonParliament of LebanonSpeaker
Nabih Berri
LiechtensteinLandtag of LiechtensteinPresident
Albert Frick
LithuaniaSeimasSpeaker
Loreta Graužinienė
LibyaCouncil of DeputiesPresident
Aguila Saleh Issa
MacedoniaAssembly of the Republic of MacedoniaSpeaker
Talat Xhaferi
Malaysia
House of Representatives of Malaysia (Dewan Rakyat)
Speaker
Mohamad Ariff Md Yusof
MaltaHouse of Representatives of MaltaSpeaker
Angelo Farrugia
MexicoChamber of Deputies (Cámara de Diputados)President
Ruth Zavaleta Salgado
MoldovaParliamentPresident
Marian Lupu
MontenegroAssembly of MontenegroPresident
Ranko Krivokapić

Nepal

Parliament of Nepal
Speaker

Onsari Gharti Magar
NetherlandsHouse of Representatives of the NetherlandsSpeaker
Khadija Arib
New ZealandHouse of RepresentativesSpeaker
Trevor Mallard
NigeriaNational Assembly of NigeriaSpeaker
Yakubu Dogara
NorwayStortinget
President of the Storting (Stortingspresident)

Olemic Thommessen
North KoreaSupreme People's AssemblyChairman of the Presidium
Kim Yong-nam
PakistanNational Assembly of PakistanSpeaker
Sardar Ayaz Sadiq
ParaguayChamber of Senators of ParaguayPresident
Mario Abdo Benítez
PhilippinesHouse of Representatives of the PhilippinesSpeaker
Pantaleon Alvarez
PolandSejm of the Republic of PolandMarshal
Marek Kuchciński
PortugalAssembly of the RepublicPresident
Eduardo Ferro Rodrigues
 »Azores

Legislative Assembly of the Azores

President (presidente)
Ana Luís
 »Madeira
Legislative Assembly of Madeira
President (presidente)
José Tranquada Gomes
RussiaState DumaChairman
Vyacheslav Volodin
SerbiaNational Assembly of SerbiaPresident
Maja Gojković
SingaporeParliament of SingaporeSpeaker
Tan Chuan-Jin
SlovakiaNational Council of the Slovak RepublicSpeaker
Andrej Danko
Solomon IslandsNational Parliament of Solomon IslandsSpeakerSir Peter Kenilorea
South AfricaNational Assembly of South AfricaSpeaker
Baleka Mbete
South KoreaNational Assembly of South KoreaSpeaker
Chung Sye-kyun
South SudanNational Legislative Assembly of South SudanSpeakerJames Wani Igga
Spain
 »Cortes Generales
(Spanish parliament)
Congress of the DeputiesPresident
Ana Pastor
 »Cortes Generales
(Spanish parliament)
Spanish SenatePresident
Pío García-Escudero
Sri LankaParliament of Sri LankaSpeaker
Karu Jayasuriya
Suriname
National Assembly of Suriname (De Nationale Assemblee)
Chairman
Jennifer Simons
SwedenRiksdagSpeaker
Urban Ahlin
SwitzerlandNational CouncilPresidentJürg Stahl
TaiwanLegislative YuanPresident
Su Jia-chyuan
ThailandHouse of Representatives of ThailandPresident
Somsak Kiatsuranont
TongaLegislative Assembly of TongaSpeaker
Sialeʻataongo Tuʻivakanō
UkraineVerkhovna RadaChairman
Andriy Parubiy
United Kingdom
 »Parliament of the United Kingdom
House of Lords of the United KingdomLord Speaker
Norman Fowler
 »Parliament of the United Kingdom
House of Commons of the United KingdomSpeaker
John Bercow
 » Isle of Man
House of KeysSpeaker
Steve Rodan
 » Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland AssemblySpeaker
Robin Newton
 » Scotland
Scottish ParliamentPresiding Officer
Ken Macintosh
 » Wales
National Assembly for Wales
Presiding Officer (Llywydd)

Elin Jones
United StatesUnited States House of RepresentativesSpeaker
Paul Ryan
UruguayChamber of Deputies of UruguayPresident
Ivonne Passada
VanuatuParliament of VanuatuSpeakerGeorge Andre Wells[13]
VenezuelaNational AssemblyPresident
Henry Ramos Allup
VietnamNational Assembly of VietnamChairman
Nguyễn Sinh Hùng
ZimbabweHouse of Assembly of ZimbabweSpeaker
Jacob Mudenda


See also


Generic
  • Speaker of the senate (disambiguation)

  • Speaker of the House of Assembly (disambiguation)

  • Speaker of the House of Commons (disambiguation)

  • Speaker of the House of Representatives (disambiguation)

  • Speaker of the Legislative Assembly

  • Speaker of the National Assembly (disambiguation)

  • List of current presidents of assembly

Specific
  • Speaker of the Senate of Canada

  • List of Speakers of the House of Commons of England


  • Cathaoirleach (Speaker of the Irish Senate)

  • Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario

  • Speaker of the Palestinian Legislative Council

  • Marshal of the Senate of the Republic of Poland

  • Lawspeaker


  • Lord Speaker (Speaker of the United Kingdom House of Lords)

  • Speaker of the United States House of Representatives


References




  1. ^ As in case of disorders in the floor: Italian traditions knew cases of extreme contestation, not much different from tumults stigmatized in Ukrainian parliaments, Taiwanese and South Korean: Buonomo, Giampiero (2014). "I tre giorni della supercazzola". L’Ago e il filo edizione online.   – via Questia (subscription required)


  2. ^ Journal of the House of Commons: January 1559; 1559; accessed August 2015


  3. ^ Lee Vol 28, pp. 257,258.


  4. ^ Mancini and Galeotti believed that "in the enclosure of the House the exercise of presidential power should not be limits or obstacles whatsoever" (Mancini-Galeotti, Norme ed usi del Parlamento italiano, Roma, 1887, pag. 97).


  5. ^ (in Spanish) Sanciones disciplinarias y policía interna en el ordenamiento parlamentario italiano ‘’AA.VV., Derecho parlamentario sancionador’’, Eusko Legebiltazarra, Parlamento Vasco ed., 2005p. 236-271


  6. ^ F. Bilancia, L’imparzialità perduta (a proposito dei Presidenti di Assemblea parlamentare), in Aa.Vv., Studi in onore di Gianni Ferrara, vol. I, Giappichelli, Torino 2005, pp. 311 ss..


  7. ^ Lee, Min Kok (8 January 2016). "Halimah Yacob to be renominated as Speaker of Parliament: 7 things you may not know about the post". The Straits Times. Archived from the original on 7 August 2017. Retrieved 7 August 2017. 


  8. ^ Constitution of the Republic of Singapore, Art. 40(2).


  9. ^ "Speaker of Parliament". Parliament of Singapore. Archived from the original on 7 August 2017. Retrieved 7 August 2017. 


  10. ^ Constitution of the Republic of Singapore, Art. 40(2).


  11. ^ Constitution of the Republic of Singapore, Art. 19(3)(a).


  12. ^ "Shirin to become first woman Speaker". bdnews24.com. 29 April 2013. Retrieved 29 April 2013. 


  13. ^ "01 September confirmed as date for Vanuatu Presidential Election". Islands Business. 2009-09-02. Archived from the original on 2012-02-23. Retrieved 2009-08-20. 



Further reading


  • Bergougnous, Georges. Presiding Officers of National Parliamentary Assemblies: A World Comparative Study. Trans. Jennifer Lorenzi. Geneva: Inter-Parliamentary Union, 1997. ISBN 92-9142-028-X.

  • Green, Matthew N. The Speaker of the House: A Study of Leadership (Yale University Press; 2010) 292 pages; US House

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