Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Queensland explained

Post:Speaker
Body:the Legislative Assembly of Queensland
Incumbent:Curtis Pitt
Incumbentsince:13 February 2018
Style:The Honourable
Appointer:Elected by the Queensland Legislative Assembly
Formation:22 May 1860
First:Gilbert Eliott
Deputy:Joe Kelly[1]
Salary:AUD $287,035 (2015)

The speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Queensland is elected by the members of the Queensland Legislative Assembly to preside over sittings of the Assembly and to maintain orderly proceedings. The Speaker must be a member of the Legislative Assembly. The position is currently held by Curtis Pitt, a former Treasurer of Queensland who was elected to the post on 13 February 2018.[2]

Election

The Legislative Assembly must choose a new Speaker when it meets following a general election. The member with the longest period of continuous service presides during the election, which is conducted by secret ballot. The Government party nominates one of its own to serve as Speaker, and that nominee is likely to win since the party typically has a majority of the seats. If the office of Speaker falls vacant, for whatever reason, the Assembly must immediately elect a replacement. The Speaker remains in office "for all purposes" following a dissolution of Parliament until the day before the first day of the new Parliament, even if the Speaker was not a candidate for re-election or lost re-election.

Role

As the chief presiding officer of the Legislative Assembly, the Speaker is expected to be impartial in chairing debates and ensuring orderly conduct in the Chamber. When in the chair, the Speaker may only vote in the case of a tie, i.e. a casting vote. Unlike Speakers in many other Westminster system parliaments, when the Deputy Speaker or another member is in the chair, the Speaker may participate in debates and cast a deliberative vote. This is especially important in hung parliaments.

The Speaker is responsible for issuing writs for state by-elections, warrants for parliamentary privilege offenders and bringing before the bar of the Parliament such offenders for rebuke or sentence. Among the office's ceremonial duties are representing the Legislative Assembly to the Crown (as by, for instance, presenting the Address in Reply to the Throne Speech) and to entities outside Parliament.

Administratively, the Speaker has control of the Parliamentary Service and is responsible for the Parliament's budget, services, and administration.

Deputies

"As soon as practicable" after first meeting, the House must choose a member to serve as Deputy Speaker and Chairperson of Committees; in recent practice, the Premier moves the appointment of the Deputy Speaker without debate or opposition as the first matter of business on the second day of the Parliament. As with the Speaker, the House must immediately fill a vacancy in the office. Like the Speaker, the Deputy Speaker remains in office after a dissolution of Parliament until the day before the next Parliament convenes even if the deputy speaker loses re-election or did not run for reelection.

The role of Deputy Speaker is created by the Standing Orders of the Legislative Assembly, and that of Chairperson of Committees by section 17(1) of the Parliament of Queensland Act 2001. As Deputy Speaker, the member takes the chair when the Speaker is absent or at his or her request. When the House resolves into a Committee of the Whole, the Chairperson must take the chair. The current Deputy Speaker is Joe Kelly.

The Speaker also appoints up to eight Temporary Speakers who take the chair in the absence or at the request of the Speaker or Deputy Speaker. The Speaker may also dismiss members of the panel of Temporary Speakers. When in the chair, Temporary Speakers are referred to as “Deputy Speaker”.

When the Speaker is absent for a sitting day, the Deputy Speaker acts as Speaker and chooses a Temporary Speaker to act as Deputy Speaker during the Speaker's absence. If the Speaker and Deputy Speaker are both absent, the House must choose a member to act as Speaker for that day. This occurred most recently during 2020 when Speaker Pitt and Deputy Speaker Stewart (both regional MPs unable to travel due to COVID-19 restrictions) were absent and Temporary Speaker Joe Kelly was chosen by the House to act in their stead.

List of Speakers

Member Electorate Party Start of term End of term width=475 Notes
22 May 1860 13 July 1870
15 November 1870 21 June 1871 Premier of Queensland (1866; 1866–1867; 1874–1876)
7 November 1871 1 September 1873
Warrego6 January 1874 20 July 1876
25 July 1876 26 July 1883
Protectionist 7 November 1883 4 April 1888
Conservative/Ministerialist 12 June 1888 5 April 1893
Ministerialist 25 May 1893 15 February 1899
Ministerialist 16 May 1899 15 September 1903 Premier of Queensland (1903–1906); President of the Queensland Legislative Council
Conservative 17 September 1903 11 April 1907
Conservative 23 July 1907 20 January 1909
Kidston/Ministerialist 29 June 1909 10 March 1911 Died in office
Ministerialist/Liberal 11 July 1911 15 April 1915
Labor 12 July 1915 9 September 1919 Premier (1925–1929)
Labor 9 September 1919 9 January 1920 Became Lieutenant-Governor of Queensland; President of the Queensland Legislative Council
Labor 9 January 1920 11 May 1929
CPNP 20 August 1929 11 June 1932
Labor 15 August 1932 24 March 1939 Died in office
Labor 8 August 1939 31 July 1944
Fortitude ValleyLabor 1 August 1944 4 October 1950 Died in office
Labor 10 October 1950 3 July 1957
Country 27 August 1957 15 June 1960
Country 23 August 1960 25 May 1972 Longest-serving Speaker
Country/National 2 August 1972 28 October 1974
National 29 October 1974 4 July 1979
National 8 August 1979 17 October 1983
National 22 November 1983 1 November 1986
National 17 February 1987 24 November 1987
National/Independent [3] 2 December 1987 5 July 1989
National 5 July 1989 2 November 1989
Labor 27 February 1990 2 April 1996
Nicklin2 April 1996 13 June 1998
Labor 28 July 1998 21 July 2005
Mount IsaLabor 9 August 2005 9 October 2006
Mike ReynoldsTownsville10 October 2006 21 April 2009
Labor 21 April 2009 14 May 2012
Liberal National 15 May 2012 24 March 2015 First female Speaker
NicklinIndependent 24 March 2015 25 November 2017 First Independent Speaker since 1883
MulgraveLabor 13 February 2018 Treasurer of Queensland (2015–2017)
GreenslopesLabor 16 May 2023 12 September 2023 Acting Speaker

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: FIRST SESSION OF THE FIFTY-SIXTH PARLIAMENT, Thursday, 15 February 2018. Queensland Parliament. 26 February 2018. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20180226041632/https://www.parliament.qld.gov.au/documents/hansard/2018/2018_02_15_WEEKLY.pdf. 26 February 2018. dmy-all.
  2. Web site: Dumped Labor treasurer Curtis Pitt elected Speaker despite LNP protest. Felicity. Caldwell. 13 February 2018. Brisbane Times. 26 February 2018. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20180217141932/https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/politics/queensland/dumped-labor-treasurer-curtis-pitt-elected-speaker-despite-lnp-protest-20180213-p4z05w.html. 17 February 2018. dmy-all.
  3. https://documents.parliament.qld.gov.au/hansard/Index_BV/1987_1989index.pdf