Running for the
Labour Party, Boothroyd contested several seats –
Leicester South East in
1957,
Peterborough in
1959,
Nelson and Colne in
1968, and
Rossendale in
1970 – before being elected
Member of Parliament (MP) for
West Bromwich in a
by-election in 1973. She represented the constituency for 27 years. In 1974, Boothroyd was appointed an assistant Government
Whip. In 1975, she became a Government-appointed member of the then European
Common Assembly (ECSC) until she was discharged in 1977. In 1979, she became a member of the
Select committee on Foreign Affairs, until 1981, and of the Speaker's Panel of Chairmen, until 1 January 2000. She was a member of the Labour Party
National Executive Committee (NEC) from 1981 to 1987,
Deputy Speaker and Speaker Following the
1987 general election Boothroyd became a Deputy Speaker to the Speaker
Bernard Weatherill. She was the second female Deputy Speaker in British history after
Betty Harvie Anderson. In
1992 she was elected Speaker, becoming the first woman to hold the position. There was debate about whether Boothroyd should wear the traditional Speaker's Wig. She chose not to but stated that any subsequent Speakers would be free to choose to wear the wig or not; none have since done so. In answer to the debate as to how she should be addressed as Speaker, Boothroyd said: "Call me Madam". In 1993, the Government won a vote on the
Social Chapter of the
Maastricht Treaty due to her
casting vote (exercised in accordance with
Speaker Denison's rule). It was subsequently discovered that her casting vote had not been required, as the votes had been miscounted, and the Government had won by one vote. She was keen to get young people interested in politics, and in the 1990s appeared as a special guest on the BBC's Saturday morning children's programme
Live & Kicking. Her signature catchphrase in closing
Prime Minister's Questions each week was "Time's up!" She stepped down as Speaker and
resigned as an MP on 23 October 2000.
Life peerage and later activity Boothroyd was awarded an honorary
Doctor of Civil Law (Hon DCL) degree by
City University London in 1993. She was
chancellor of the
Open University from 1994 until October 2006 and donated some of her personal papers to the University's archives. In March 1995, she was awarded an honorary degree from The Open University as
Doctor of the University (DUniv). In 1999 she was made an Honorary Fellow of
St Hugh's College, Oxford. Two portraits of Boothroyd have been part of the parliamentary art collection since 1994 and 1999, respectively. On 15 January 2001, she was created a
life peer, taking as her title
Baroness Boothroyd, of
Sandwell in the County of West Midlands. Her autobiography was published in the same year. In April 2005, she was appointed a Member of the
Order of Merit (OM), an honour in the personal gift of the Queen. Boothroyd was made an Honorary Fellow of the
Society of Light and Lighting (Hon. FSLL) in 2009, and she was an Honorary Fellow of St Hugh's College, Oxford, and of
St Edmund's College, Cambridge. She was Patron of the
Jo Richardson Community School in
Dagenham, East London, and President of NBFA Assisting the Elderly. She was, for a period, Vice President of the
Industry and Parliament Trust. In January 2011, Boothroyd posited that Deputy Prime Minister
Nick Clegg's plans for some members of the upper house to be directly elected could leave Britain in constitutional disarray: "It is wantonly destructive. It is destruction that has not been thought through properly." She was concerned that an elected Lords would rival the Commons, risking power-struggles between the two. ==Personal life and death==