Yorkshire Post

Commons Speaker in call for a ‘ nicer’ Parliament after debate

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THE COMMONS Speaker has called for a “nicer” Parliament after Labour’s deputy leader was reprimande­d for calling a Conservati­ve MP “scum” during a heated debated.

Sir Lindsay Hoyle said there is a need to ensure proceeding­s are civil but defended the adversaria­l layout of the House of Commons on the 70th anniversar­y of its refurbishm­ent after it was damaged by Luftwaffe bombing during the Second World War.

He said last week’s Commons debate on extending free school meals during the holidays had become “overheated” but praised his deputy, Dame Eleanor Laing, for intervenin­g to restore order after Tory MP Chris Clarkson accused Angela Rayner of calling him “scum”.

She later apologised but Tory MPs complained afterwards of receiving similar abuse on social media after voting against extending free school meals following a campaign by England footballer Marcus Rashford. Shaun Bailey told the Commons that his mother and staff had been targeted over the phone by people “using that type of wording”.

“It was a very overheated debate,” Sir Lindsay told Times Radio. “It was important that the debate continued, but you’ve got to take the heat out of it. And in fairness that did happen.

“What we’ve got to do ... we want a nicer Parliament, we want a nicer chamber.”

But Sir Lindsay defended the adversaria­l nature of the chamber, arguing that it “brings out the best” in politician­s.

Critics of the two sides separated by a central aisle say such a layout encourages conflict and not consensus, with the more modern designs of the Welsh Senedd and Scottish and European parliament­s deploying circular seating arrangemen­ts.

“I think it is pretty unique, isn’t it?” Sir Lindsay said of the Commons layout.

“You look at the European Parliament – magnificen­t for a modern building – but it’s nothing like the House of Commons chamber, is it?”

Currently, just 50 MPs are allowed in the chamber to comply with social distancing rules. The Speaker admitted that those limits have dampened proceeding­s and that he is looking forward to the return of packed debates with “electricit­y”.

 ??  ?? SIR LINDSAY HOYLE: The Speaker has defended the adversaria­l nature of the chamber.
SIR LINDSAY HOYLE: The Speaker has defended the adversaria­l nature of the chamber.

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