MR. SPEAKER
DIFFICULTY OF POSITION IN ELECTION CAMPAIGN. "JUSTICE AND FAIR PLAY." The diffieulty experienced by him in fighting an election was mentioned by the Speaker of the House of Representatives (the Hon. Sir Charles Statham) in an address at Dunedin. Sir Charles said that in view of the -fact that the Speaker should not take any part in party politics, and that he should at all times observe the strictest impartiality, it had become the established custom in England for the Speaker of the House of Commons to be returned unopposed by his constituency. It was considered unfair and ungenerous to put him in the position of having to contest an election, with tied hands. He admitted that this salutary rule had not been observed in the past in New Zealand, or, so far as he lcnew, in Australia. In his own case, he had already had to contest two elections since his first elction to the Chair in 1923. He felt the handicap of having to contest his seat with his hands tied in the way he had mentioned, but it was a free country, and if others did not have what hd believed to he a proper conception of the position he could not help it. He was at least doing his part towards establishing in the Dominion the tradition and custom followed in England, which were founded on common sense and courtesy and British justice and fair play. bir Charles went on to say that as he believed he would be duly returned to Parliament and re-elected to the Chair, he could not, for the reasons he had given, ' take part in any political controversy. He therefore proposed to repeat the promise he had made to the electors at the last election, which was as follows. — "I am fighting this election on the assumption that I will be re-elected to the Speakership. If, through any unforeseen contingency, I should not be reelected to that office, or being reelected relinguish it, I will resign my seat and submit myself again to the electors. The electors would then have the opportunity of hearing me spealc untrammelled by the restrietions imposed on me at the present time by my. inability to express my views on party politics." (Applause.) Finally, Sir Charles reminded his audience that as Speaker he was the servant of the whole House and not of the Government or any other political party. He had no connection whatsoever with any political parties or groups in the House. His duty was jto give fair play to all and to do his best to see that the business of the House was conducted in a manner worthy of the fair name of the Dowinion.
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/RMPOST19311130.2.46
Bibliographic details
Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 1, Issue 84, 30 November 1931, Page 6
Word Count
455MR. SPEAKER Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 1, Issue 84, 30 November 1931, Page 6
Using This Item
NZME is the copyright owner for the Rotorua Morning Post. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of NZME. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.