Early history The office of the speaker is almost as old as the Parliament itself. The earliest year for which a presiding officer has been identified is 1258, when
Peter de Montfort presided over the Parliament held in Oxford. Early presiding officers were known by the title
parlour or
prolocutor. The continuous history of the office of speaker is held to date from 1376 when
Peter de la Mare spoke for the commons in the "
Good Parliament" as they joined leading magnates in purging the chief ministers of
the Crown and the most unpopular members of the king's household.
Edward III was frail and in seclusion; his prestigious eldest son,
Edward the Black Prince, terminally ill. It was left to the next son, a furious
John of Gaunt, to fight back. He arrested De la Mare and disgraced other leading critics. In the next, "
Bad Parliament", in 1377, a cowed Commons put forward Gaunt's steward,
Thomas Hungerford, as their spokesman in retracting their predecessors' misdeeds of the previous year. Gaunt evidently wanted a "mirror-image" as his form of counter-coup and this notion, born in crisis, of one 'speaker', who quickly also became 'chairman' and organiser of the Commons' business, was recognised as valuable and took immediate root after 1376–1377. On 6 October 1399,
John Cheyne of Beckford (Gloucester) was elected speaker. The powerful
Archbishop of Canterbury,
Thomas Arundel, is said to have voiced his fears of Cheyne's reputation as a critic of the Church. Eight days later, Cheyne resigned on grounds of ill-health, although he remained in favour with the king and active in public life for a further 14 years. Although the officer was elected by the Commons at the start of each Parliament, with at least one contested election known, in 1420 (
Roger Hunt prevailing by a majority of just four votes), in practice the Crown was usually able to get whom it wanted. Whilst the principle of giving this spokesman personal immunity from recrimination as only being the voice of the whole body was quickly adopted and did enhance the Commons' role, the Crown found it useful to have one person with the authority to select and lead the lower house's business and responses to the Crown's agenda, much more often than not in the way the Crown wanted. Thus,
Whig ideas of the Commons growing in authority as against royal power are somewhat simplistic; the Crown used the Commons as and when it found it advantageous to do so, and the speakership was one means to make the Commons a more cohesive, defined and effective instrument of the king's government. Throughout the medieval and early modern period, every speaker was an MP for a county, reflecting the implicit position that such shire representatives were of greater standing in the house than the more numerous burgess (municipality) MPs. Although evidence is almost non-existent, it has been surmised that any vote was by count of head, but by the same token perhaps the lack of evidence of actual votes suggests that most decisions, at least of a general kind, were reached more through persuasion and the weight by status of the county MPs. In such a situation, the influence of the speaker should not be underestimated.
Thomas More was the first speaker to go on to become
Lord Chancellor.
17th to mid-19th century Until the 17th century, members of the House of Commons often continued to view their speaker (correctly) as an agent of the Crown. As Parliament evolved, however, the speaker's position grew to involve more duties to the House than to the Crown; this was definitely true by the time of the
English Civil War. This change is sometimes said to be reflected by an incident in 1642, when
King Charles I entered the House in order to search for and arrest
Five Members for
high treason. When the King asked him if he knew of the location of these members, the speaker,
William Lenthall, replied: "May it please your Majesty, I have neither eyes to see nor tongue to speak in this place but as the House is pleased to direct me, whose servant I am here." The development of
Cabinet government under
King William III in the late 17th century caused further change in the role of the speaker. Speakers were generally associated with the ministry, and often held other government offices. For example,
Robert Harley served simultaneously as Speaker and as a
Secretary of State between 1704 and 1705. The speaker between 1728 and 1761,
Arthur Onslow, reduced ties with the government, though the office remained to a large degree political.
The modern speakership The speakership evolved into its modern form—in which the holder is an impartial and apolitical officer who does not belong to any party—only during the middle of the 19th century. More than 150 individuals have served as Speaker of the House of Commons. Their names are inscribed in gold leaf around the upper walls of Room C of the
House of Commons Library.
Betty Boothroyd, elected in 1992, was the first female speaker (the first woman to sit in the speaker's chair was
Betty Harvie Anderson, a Deputy Speaker from 1970).
Michael Martin, elected in 2000, was the first
Catholic speaker since the
Reformation.
John Bercow, elected in 2009, was the first
Jewish speaker. The speaker has significant influence on legislation, for example by selecting which amendments to a bill may be proposed, and by interpreting and enforcing the rules of Parliament as laid out in the official parliamentary rulebook,
Erskine May. In 2019 Speaker John Bercow had significant influence in selecting which important amendments to legislation affecting
Britain's exit from the European Union could be voted on, and later by not allowing the government to repeat a vote on the terms of exit, as the same motion may not be proposed twice in the same session of Parliament. was addressed as "Madam Deputy Speaker". The speaker has traditionally been offered a
life peerage in the House of Lords upon stepping down – even if ousted following a political scandal. This tradition was broken in 2020 when John Bercow became the first Speaker in 230 years to step down and not be nominated for the Lords by the government. Since the death of Baroness Boothroyd in 2023, it is also the first time in over fifty years that the membership of the Lords has not included a former Speaker. ==Election==