Local LibDems want to create new seat for Speaker.
Liberal Democrats in the Buckingham constituency of the new Speaker of the
House of Commons, John Bercow, have launched a campaign to overturn the
convention which rules out normal Parliamentary elections in the Speaker's
seat.
They are calling on their party's national leadership to allow an official
Lib Dem candidate to contest the constituency at the coming General
Election, if reforms they are proposing to appoint the Speaker to an
honorary seat are not put in place by then.
The Buckingham constituency executive called the current system, whereby the
main parties do not field candidates against the Speaker, "outdated and
undemocratic."
Buckingham Lib Dems constituency chairman Ian Metherell said: "If the main
parties follow the generally-held Parliamentary convention of not standing
against the Speaker, thousands of voters who would have backed one of these
parties will be denied their right to vote for the party of their choice. We
believe this is fundamentally undemocratic. We want all electors in
Buckingham to have a full and proper opportunity to express their preference
for MP."
The local party's executive submitted an
emergency motion to the Lib Dem Autumn Conference, which opens in
Bournemouth next week (Saturday 19th September to Wednesday 23rd September),
calling for the present system to be reformed.
The motion calls on the government to add to the Constitutional Renewal Bill
currently before Parliament a provision that the Speaker would be
automatically appointed as MP for an honorary constituency. This would free
his former constituents "to exercise their democratic right to vote for the
party of their choice."
The motion goes on to urge the Party to "ensure that, if this reform is not
in place by the time of the general election, a Liberal Democrat candidate
will stand in the Speaker's constituency to enable voters to make a true and
unfettered democratic choice at the ballot box."
Ian Metherell said: "Almost 50 years after a bill was first proposed in
Parliament to give the Speaker an honorary constituency, such as the Palace
of Westminster, electors are still being effectively disenfranchised by an
outdated convention. And this is a state of affairs set to carry on as long
as John Bercow remains Speaker of the House of Commons.
"Since Mr Bercow's appointment we have been discussing this issue at local,
regional and national level and within our own membership. We are putting
forward a clear and positive proposal on how we feel the position of the
Speaker should be protected, and the electorate allowed a free choice of
MP."