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Research Note 38 1997-98

The Independence of the Speaker

Margaret Healy
Politics and Public Administration Group
30 March 1998


The resignation of the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon Mr Bob Halverson MP, on 3 March 1998 has raised again the issue of the independence of the Speaker. Throughout the history of the Commonwealth Parliament there have been many occasions when the House has debated the best means of ensuring that the Speaker can conduct the proceedings of the House of Representatives impartially and with decorum. While these debates often feature accusations of bias and partiality and stringent denials and counter-accusations, this is part of the cut and thrust of Australian politics. Generally, successive Speakers have striven to preside over parliamentary proceedings impartially, irrespective of their political affiliations, although there have been some exceptions.

Frequently the independence of the Speaker is seen as a matter to be determined in a structural or institutional way. Separating the Speaker from party is seen as enhancing the capacity to be impartial. But structure is not the only factor. Australia's political history and culture, and constitutional development, have profoundly affected the past and present operation of the office, and also influence and constrain options for change.

Speaker Halverson took office in the wake of election promises by the Coalition parties to improve the standing of the Parliament. In his first Headland Speech on 6 June 1995 Mr Howard said:

    The Coalition will seek to invest the Speaker of the next parliament with greater independence similar to his or her counterpart at Westminster.(1)

British Practice

The model against which the independence of the office of Speaker is generally measured is that of the House of Commons of Great Britain. There the Speaker inherits the mantle of spokesperson for and defender of the House of Commons in its historic struggle for parliamentary supremacy against the monarchy. British practice is that once elected, the Speaker continues in office unopposed for as long as he or she remains a Member of Parliament. The Speaker is impartial in the Chair, withdraws from party meetings and does not debate party issues. Furthermore, the Speaker is not opposed at general elections. These practices are regarded as fundamental to the maintenance of the Speaker's independence. Former British Speaker George Thomas wrote:

    For the past two centuries the House has expected the Speaker to abandon all party loyalties and to be outside the battle in the Chamber. If he is to bring complete impartiality and fairness to his work, this requirement is an absolute necessity...Our democracy owes more than words can say to the clash of ideas and the rough and tumble of party political debate, but it also owes an enormous amount to the fact that the Speaker is completely impartial in the political controversies.(2)

The Australian Experience

However the role of Speaker in Australian Parliaments has had a different history. Geoffrey Bolton explains Australian divergence from British traditions as arising from the fact that many of the British usages were scarcely established at the time when five of the six Australian colonies achieved self-government. He argued that the small numbers in colonial parliaments and fluctuating allegiances meant that every member's vote was crucial, including the casting vote of the Speaker. Colonial Speakers needed to participate in debate: to not have participated or shared in the allocation of funds for public works would have disenfranchised their constituencies.(3) This situation continued after federation. In the Commonwealth Parliament, the Cook Liberal Government (1913-14) relied on the Speaker's casting vote, and Speaker Sir Elliott Johnson's casting vote saved the Nationalist Government in 1921 on several occasions. Even more notable was Speaker Sir Littleton Groom's failure to use his casting vote in 1929: his abstention (following his usual practice of not voting in committee(4)) caused the defeat of the Bruce-Page Government. Both Bruce and Groom lost their seats at the ensuing election.

At federation, party affiliations were fluid, with no one party able to govern in its own right. Standing Order 1 of the House of Representatives stated (and still states) that unless otherwise provided, the practice of the House of Commons would apply. The first Speaker of the House of Representative, Sir Frederick Holder, held himself aloof from party politics. Elected unopposed in 1901, and again in 1904 and 1907, he held office until he collapsed on the floor of the House in 1909, in the midst of acrimonious proceedings. He died shortly afterwards. But the 1909 Fusion uniting the non-Labor parties solidified the two-party system. Since Holder's death, the Speaker has always been a member of the party holding government. After the 1913 election the ALP held 37 seats and the Liberals 38. The previous ALP Speaker Charles McDonald declined a Liberal Party invitation to continue in office: it made the offer to avoid having to supply the Speaker and be dependent on his casting vote.

Sir Billy Snedden, Speaker from 1976 to 1983, was a major advocate of independence through adoption of the British model. He argued that the Parliament could ensure that a Speaker remained in office under a change of Government, and that the party organisations could agree not to contest the seat held by the Speaker. He proposed that a Speaker should hold office for five to seven years, and should then resign from Parliament and not hold any further public office.(5) The Fraser Government did not adopt his proposals. Believing that a former Speaker should not remain in the House, Sir Billy resigned from Parliament after the election of the Hawke Government in 1983.

Impediments to the Adoption of the British System

It is unlikely that the British practice of not contesting the Speaker's seat could be adopted in Australia. The size of the respective parliaments is an important factor. With 659 members of the House of Commons, the government can generally dispense with one seat. The House of Representatives, with 148 members, is much smaller, and so therefore are government majorities. All seats are regarded as essential. Reserving a seat could affect an election result and the viability of a government.

A fundamental objection to making the Speaker's electorate non-contestable is seen to be the fact that this would deprive the people of that electorate of the choice of member. Should the incumbent Speaker be the only candidate, under sub-section 179 (2) of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918, he or she would be declared duly elected on nomination day. Thus there would be no opportunity or requirement for electors to cast their votes. This would be a serious breach of democratic rights, and inimical to Australian democratic principles.(6) It would be difficult to enforce such a practice. Parties might agree not to contest the electorate, but such agreements could scarcely bind other citizens wishing to stand as independent candidates. Should the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 be amended so as to provide a reserved and non-contestable seat, it is likely that the High Court would rule that this was unconstitutional.(7)

If the House of Representatives were to adopt this practice, the position of the President of the Senate would also be questioned. It would be difficult to argue that a State should in effect lose a Senate position. Section 23 of the Constitution gives the President a deliberative but not a casting vote: this is to ensure that the equality of the states is maintained when the Senate votes.

Section 35 of the Constitution requires that each Parliament must choose one of its members to be the Speaker. While there is nothing to prevent members of the House of Representatives from choosing the Speaker from the previous Parliament, it is a choice that must be made after each election. As a general principle one Parliament should not seek to bind the choice of a later Parliament. In addition, adoption of the British practices of unlimited tenure would not address the problem of how to remove a poor or ineffective Speaker.

What is to be Done?

While the NSW Constitution (after amendments in 1991 and 1992) now recognises its presiding officers as 'the independent and impartial' representatives of each House, there is no such provision in the Commonwealth Constitution, or in other relevant legislation.

With major impediments to the sort of changes that would see Australia adopt the British model of a non-party Speaker, how then can the House ensure that the Speaker can act with independence and impartiality, and not appear a partisan servant of the government? It seems that unless the Australian Parliament legislates on the issue, or modifies Standing Orders to this purpose, it must continue to approach the goal of an independent Speaker through the qualities, experience and efforts of the person holding the position, and through the co-operation of other members. This involves potential costs and benefits: the costs might be occasional loss of immediate partisan advantage, but the benefits are likely to accrue to the standing of the House. But as House of Representatives Practice argues:

Members are entitled to expect that, even though politically affiliated, the Speaker will carry out his or her functions impartially. Likewise, a Speaker is entitled to expect support from all Members, regardless of their party.(8)

  1. John Howard MP. Headland Speech 1. The Role of Government: a Liberal Approach. The Menzies Research Centre 1995 national lecture series, 6 June 1995.
  2. George Thomas. The Speakership, House of Commons, Westminster. The Parliamentarian, vol. 59, no. 1, January 1978: 2-3.
  3. Geoffrey Bolton. The Choice of the Speaker in Australian Parliaments. Parliamentary affairs, vol. 15, no. 3, Summer, 1962.
  4. House of Representative Practice. Edited by L M Barlin. 3rd edition. Canberra, AGPS, 1997:324-5.
  5. Sir Billy Snedden. Impartiality of the Speaker: the Westminster Convention in Relation to the Speaker. 21 May 1979. Published in The Parliamentarian, vol. 60, no. 3, July 1979: 129-132.
  6. Australian commitment to democratic electoral practices has been strong in such matters as the extension of the franchise, equality of electorates, frequency of redistributions and in its voting systems. However voters of the mainland Territories were denied full representative rights in the House of Representatives because of their territorial status and this was not fully remedied until 1968.
  7. See Theophanous v Herald and Weekly Times Ltd (1994) 68 AJLR 713; 124 ALR 1.
  8. House of Representatives Practice. op. cit: 180. See also Appendix 2. Speakers of the House of Representatives: 748-56.

 

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