The New Zealand Herald

Nats and Speaker in open warfare

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Opposition says its confidence in Trevor Mallard ‘significan­tly shaken’ over his conduct and comments

that did not appear to have been heard by anybody else and could not be heard on Parliament TV.

Mallard has now confirmed to the Herald he did tell a journalist he had heard that comment. “I was asked by a journalist what the comment was. I answered.”

On May 9, when the “stupid little girl” comment was said to have been made in Parliament, Mallard had called for a National MP to apologise for a “very sexist remark” but nobody owned up and Mallard would not repeat the comment when Brownlee asked what it was.

Newshub reported on May 15 that a source had told it the remark was “stupid little girl” but it could not be heard on Parliament TV.

Brownlee said if Mallard had passed on such informatio­n it was unacceptab­le.

No National MPs had heard the comment in question and all denied saying it. “If the source is the Speaker that is unacceptab­le. The Speaker cannot go briefing the media against the Opposition.”

Brownlee has asked for an explanatio­n by 2pm today and said National would decide what other steps it would take after considerin­g the response.

“We are not rushing to any position like [a motion of no confidence].

“All Speakers at times get Parliament a little bit aggravated. It’s a very difficult job. But when a Speaker gets to a position where it’s abundantly clear that perhaps their neutrality is not as strong as it should be then I think that’s a difficult situation.”

The criticism came on the same day National’s deputy leader, Paula Bennett, walked out of Parliament after the Speaker docked five questions from National because he took offence at a comment made by Brownlee while Bennett was asking questions of the Prime Minister.

Bennett later said she had walked out as a result of frustratio­n at Mallard’s system of docking questions when he was displeased with an MP, because it was arbitrary and unpredicta­ble and made it hard for the Opposition to do its job.

In his letter, Brownlee National was concerned said about Mallard’s running of Parliament.

“Your arbitrary taking of questions from the Opposition and the disruption to proceeding­s are seriously limiting our ability to do our job of holding the Government to account.”

Brownlee told media that system effectivel­y meant the Speaker was determinin­g the level of accountabi­lity the Government faced. “That’s not acceptable.”

National MPs are not the only ones who have been upset by the Speaker. Police Minister Stuart Nash objected when he was likened to a “naughty child” by Mallard, another episode Brownlee referred to in his letter. And New Zealand First MP Shane Jones objected when the Speaker docked three questions for laughing.

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