, First female Speaker of Parliament of Ghana The office of the Speaker was first created in the then Gold Coast, under the Gold Coast(Constitution) Order in Council, 1950. Subsequent constitutions have provided for the election of the Speaker of the Parliament of Ghana. The first speaker of the Parliament of Ghana was Sir
Emmanuel Charles Quist who was Speaker of the National Assembly in 1951. He stayed at post till December 1957, a few months after Ghana gained independence. Prior to Ghana's independence, the Governor of Ghana presided over the legislative council. This changed in 1949 when Emmanuel Quist became its first African president. The Legislative Council elected Quist as its first speaker in 1951. Under the fourth republic, the longest serving speaker of parliament is
Daniel Francis Annan who served from 7 January 1993 to 6 January 2001. In January 2009,
Joyce Adeline Bamford-Addo became the first female speaker of the Ghanaian parliament.
Alban Bagbin became only the second speaker to serve two terms in the fourth republic when he was elected on 7 January 2025 for a second term. Daniel Annan was the only other Speaker who got to serve for two terms. ==Appointment and Tenure of Office==