John bercow

Watch: John Bercow tells Corbynista to ‘get a grip’ during Autumn Statement

From our UK edition

Last month relations between the Tories and John Bercow hit an all-time low as the Speaker called Sajid Javid 'incompetent' for taking too long to an answer a question. Well, David Cameron can at least take heart today that it's not just the Conservatives who can find themselves on the wrong side of the Speaker. Today Corbynista Clive Lewis was scolded by Bercow for making too much noise during the Chancellor's Autumn Statement. As George Osborne announced the details of the Spending Review only to be heckled by Lewis, Bercow paused proceedings to address the Labour MP: 'Mr Lewis, get a grip of yourself man -- calm. Take up yoga, you'll find it beneficial man.' https://vine.

Of course there’s no morality in top-level sport

From our UK edition

Why do transgendered people need separate toilets? I thought, according to the prevalent orthodoxy, that the new gender they had acquired was every bit as authentic as the one they had jubilantly renounced. So a separate toilet is surely otiose. And not just that, but the suggestion that they might need a separate toilet for micturition through their surgically emended private parts is surely offensive. The Speaker of the House of Commons, John Bercow, may be in trouble, then, for announcing his intention to install these mysterious receptacles throughout the Palace of Westminster to service the hordes of transgendered workers wandering around with extravagant beehive hairdos and outsize stiletto heels.

Watch: John Bercow calls Sajid Javid ‘incompetent’ in Commons showdown

From our UK edition

John Bercow's war with the Conservatives looks set to return after a lively exchange of words this lunchtime. The incident occurred after Javid responded to an urgent question from Labour on the steel industry regarding the 1,200 job losses Tata Steel. Bercow decided that Javid had taken too long to answer the question and told him it should have been 'blindingly obvious' to make a government statement on the matter instead. Rather than put the Business Secretary down gently, the Speaker let his feelings be known by calling Javid 'discourteous and incompetent' before warning him that 'it must not happen again'. 'What he should not do is fail to communicate with me in advance, ignore the convention and greatly exceed his allotted time.

Speaker Bercow: Corbyn will need to stick with new PMQs tone for months

From our UK edition

John Bercow has long made clear that he would like MPs to behave a little better at Prime Minister’s Questions, which he believes is so rowdy that it upsets voters. Well, he seems to have got what he wants, or at least for the first week of Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership of the Labour party. Last night, at a lecture to the think tank Policy Exchange, he was asked about the session, and whether he thought it would improve permanently. The Speaker said he didn't believe 'that a huge amount of additional work is required in terms of creative construction of the session', though he added that the session could be longer, or have a mix of open and substantive questions from MPs, if they wanted that.

MPs enjoy a summer of freebies

From our UK edition

With MPs being awarded a 10 per cent pay rise this summer, politicians have been left having to defend their annual salary of £74,00o from sceptics who point out that the boost comes at a time when their constituents face tough cuts. Still, Mr S wonders whether that number is too small an estimate after one takes into account all the freebies they can receive. According to the latest register of interests, MPs have been managing to enjoy a summer of freebies in between their constituency work. After John Bercow boasted last year that he had watched 65 of Roger Federer's matches, he looks on course to achieve a similar number for 2015.

John Bercow: clapping could be permitted in the Chamber

From our UK edition

The SNP may finally be having an effect on Westminster's rules and traditions. Ever since the 56 SNP MPs descended on Parliament they have been repeatedly told off by the Speaker of the Commons for breaking tradition by clapping in the Chamber: 'The convention that we do not clap in this Chamber is very, very long established and widely respected, and it would be appreciated if Members showed some respect for that convention.' Despite this, the SNP MPs have shown little regard for the rule, even going so far as to applaud Simon Burns after he told them it was against Westminster etiquette to clap. Now the tide may be turning in favour of the Scottish Nationalists.

John Bercow enjoys (yet another) sports jolly

From our UK edition

Last year John Bercow proudly boasted during an interview with Roger Federer on Radio 4 that he had watched 65 of the tennis ace's matches that year. An impressive feat perhaps, but also one that led taxpayers to ask how exactly the Speaker had found time to watch 65 Federer matches alongside his work duties. Michael Fabricant went on to accuse Bercow of behaving like royalty over the number of sports freebies he took. Not that the Speaker has let the criticism get to him. In fact, Bercow appears to be doing his very best to keep up his sports attendance record for the year 2015. The Speaker has so far racked up £2630.90 worth of sports jollies since the beginning of the year.

PMQs Sketch: Cameron’s lurches to the left

From our UK edition

‘Put that on your leaflets,’ snarled Cameron at PMQs. Inwardly he was gloating. Labour voted against Tory welfare reforms last night so the PM was able to boast that Labour is fighting the new living wage. Some say Cameron is lurching to the left with his Five Year Plans and his state-controlled pay rises. The same applies to law and order. He’s getting a pinkish tinge. Philip Davies asked him to review the regulations governing early release for serious offenders. Cameron said he’d give it a go. It’s not good enough, he seemed to imply, having murderers murdering people shortly after gaining their freedom by promising to become pillars of the community. But he didn’t seem too bothered by it. Then he made some astonishing disclosures about open prisons.

Lionel Richie is an unusual ‘Face in the Crowd’ on Parliament visit

From our UK edition

You might expect to see Lionel Richie pass outside your door, if you were in the Ivy last night, or in the VIP yurt of this month's Glastonbury Festival. But hello, which peer was he looking for this afternoon? The global superstar and former Commodores front man was accompanied by Lord Levy, after the two hit it off last week at an anniversary dinner for Jewish Care. Lord Levy appeared to be giving him a tour almost up there on the ceiling: https://twitter.com/ParlyApp/status/610445837563465728 https://twitter.com/BBCJLandale/status/610448057440804864 https://twitter.com/ParlyApp/status/610449582565261312 Richie was not up there all night long though, however, and was spotted heading off in the direction of the Speaker's Office.

Portrait of the week | 21 May 2015

From our UK edition

Home The annual rate of inflation turned negative in April, for the first time since 1960, with deflation of 0.1 per cent as measured by the Consumer Prices Index, so that a basket of goods and services that cost £100 in April 2014 would have cost £99.90 in April 2015. But, measured by the Retail Prices Index, inflation continued at a rate of 0.9 per cent. Marks & Spencer reported its first rise in annual profits for four years. Police trying to find the gang that broke into safe-deposit boxes in Hatton Garden last month arrested nine men. A botanist claimed unconvincingly that Shakespeare was depicted in the frontispiece of Gerard’s Herball dated 1597. Greggs, the baker’s, stopped selling loaves in many of its shops.

Karen Danczuk comes out in defence of Sally Bercow

From our UK edition

Of all the MPs' wives, Karen Danczuk and Sally Bercow may have amassed the most column inches. So perhaps it's not surprising that in the wake of Sally's latest news, Danczuk has come to her defence. Writing in this week's issue of the women's magazine Closer, Danczuk, who says she has been described as 'the new Sally Bercow', argues that onlookers should refrain from criticising Bercow over her alleged affair with her husband's cousin. She says that unless you yourself have been a politician's wife you cannot understand what it is like: 'Life as a politician's wife is a pressure cooker. And you can never switch off - you have a bath and there are politicians downstairs.

The ‘backbenchers’ champion’ is back

From our UK edition

John Bercow has just been re-elected unopposed as Speaker of the House of Commons. Those who had been hoping to get rid of Bercow decided not to pursue this to a vote this week, and so he is back in the chair. In his speech, he cracked a joke at the expense of Labour, saying that he would like the words on his own tombstone to be 'he was the backbenchers' champion'. He then sat through a welcome speech from David Cameron, wearing a slightly wry smile. That wry smile was Bercow recalling the last hours of the last Parliament, in which the Tories tried to stitch him up by sneaking through a rule change that would elect the speaker by secret ballot.

It’s time for John Bercow to hang up his gown

From our UK edition

There was a time when both MPs and viewers of Prime Minister’s Question Time would welcome an interjection from the Commons Speaker. Indeed, there was a time when the Speaker commanded the respect not just of the entire House but the whole nation. But, after almost six years of John Bercow in the chair, that feels like the long and distant past. In the good old days, when Betty Boothroyd was Speaker, MPs on all sides would fall silent at the first inkling that she was about to rise to her feet. First she would daintily withdraw her black-stockinged feet from the green leather stool in front of her. Then she would draw herself up to stand just as the long, deep, almost gutteral sound of the first syllable of 'Orrrrrrrrrrr-der' would reverberate around the chamber.

Charles Walker: I have been played for a fool

From our UK edition

The Commons has gone beyond uproar on the vote on the secret ballot to re-elect the speaker. There has been clapping, a standing ovation, and tears. Charles Walker, chair of the Procedure Committee, told MPs that he had been ‘played for a fool by the whips and the party leadership who had had meetings with him or bumped into him in Parliament without mentioning that they intended to debate his report today, or indeed to use it as a means of introducing a secret ballot on the re-election of the Speaker'. He was visibly emotional as he spoke.

Parliament finishes in uproar over Speaker vote

From our UK edition

Well, after months of Parliament appearing boring, tired and without things to discuss, the zombie seems to have woken up. MPs are currently in uproar in the Chamber over William Hague's proposal to make the re-election of the Speaker at the start of the Parliament a secret ballot. Naturally, those who really dislike Bercow are very happy with the proposal, but it's not just Labour MPs who have expressed their distaste for what's going on. Passionate supporters of Parliament as an institution, including Jacob Rees-Mogg, have criticised the move as one that undermines the House. Rees-Mogg called this 'jiggery-pokery' motivated by grudges against Bercow. It was not presented in the usual way at Business Statement last week and instead was snuck in at the very last minute last night.

Revealed: Julian Lewis’ email on the ‘unworthy manoeuvre’ against John Bercow

From our UK edition

William Hague has given today's vote that will set up a secret ballot on the re-election of the Speaker as a 'leaving present' to Tory MPs. But not all of them are happy with the way this vote is being carried out. Here is an email from Julian Lewis, passed to Coffee House, about what he calls an 'Unworthy Manoeuvre'. Other MPs are pleased that this could lead to a new speaker in the new Parliament, talking already about 'Speaker Hoyle'. From: "LEWIS, Julian" Date: 26 March 2015 00:09:46 GMT Subject: An Unworthy Manoeuvre by the Leader of the House Dear Colleague, At the start of this Parliament, the Procedure Committee undertook an investigation into elections for positions in the House.

Speaker Bercow apologises for comparing a minister to a washing machine

From our UK edition

If ever you needed evidence that politics at the moment is a bit, well, weird, John Bercow has just apologised in the House of Commons for comparing Esther McVey to a washing machine. At Work and Pensions Questions in the Commons on Monday, the Speaker cut the minister off during an answer by saying ‘I am reminded of the feeling when one thinks the washing machine will stop—but it does not!’ Today, in response to a point of order from Tory Heather Wheeler, Bercow said: ‘I hope I ordinarily treat members with great courtesy, it was an off-the-cuff remark, it may have been a foolish one, and I apologise for it.

Some poorly-timed heckles made for an unedifying PMQs

From our UK edition

Thank goodness there aren’t that many Prime Minister’s Questions left before the election. As James said, there was a rather end-of-term feeling to today’s session: indeed, it felt a bit like an end-of-term lunch where all the pupils are hopelessly overexcited and the teacher has given up. It wasn’t just that David Cameron decided he should troll John Bercow by reeling off a lengthy list of Tory commitments that the party has stuck to, giggling at the Speaker as he said ‘plenty of time!’ to mock Bercow’s habit of pompously telling MPs that the session will take as long as it needs to. It was also the way MPs were heckling, laughing and talking throughout most of the exchanges.

Confirmed: Inside the Commons will reveal ‘rift’ between John Bercow and Robert Rogers

From our UK edition

Speculation has been rife that John Bercow's decision to let cameras into the commons for a BBC documentary will backfire on him. Reports have claimed that the Speaker of the Commons is to be depicted in a negative light in the series, Inside the Commons. Given this, Bercow has so far got off remarkably lightly in the first two episodes. However, Mr S hears that this should all change by next week, with the documentary maker Michael Cockerell confirming that Bercow's 'rift' with Sir Robert Rogers will be explored in depth. 'You will have to watch the series, but you wouldn't expect me as a journalist not to deal with a fascinating story that happened on our watch.