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Can he who plays the piper still call the tune?



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Published Date: 08 December 2008
FOR a politician said by his critics to despise the press, the welcome was remarkably warm. Michael Martin exuded bonhomie as guests, including reporters from The Scotsman, Guardian and Daily Telegraph, were invited to enjoy the hospitality and tour his lavish state apartments, recently refurbished at a cost of around £700,000.
The event was a parliamentary awards ceremony for international journalists who had contributed most to the preservation of democracy. The award is named after Speaker Abbott, who 200 years ago ensured that reporters had access to the Commons, having
been unable to gain access to the chamber to hear Pitt the Younger announce the resumption of the war against France.

The current Speaker, perhaps to counter the reputation created for him in the right-wing press, made clear that Westminster's motley crew of hacks were "very welcome", as he chatted to them before retaking the chair in the Commons chamber later that night. But one journalist not present was the Daily Mail sketch-writer Quentin Letts, who famously dubbed Mr Martin "Gorbals Mick" and has long argued that he is a dud as Speaker.

Events of the past fortnight have cast the media spotlight firmly back on Mr Martin. Now MPs of all sides are daring to ask a question considered very bad form in the corridors of power – namely: is it now time for Speaker Martin to stand aside?

At the centre of the furore is Mr Martin's role in the police raid on the parliamentary office of Conservative MP Damian Green. MPs believe the Speaker should have done more to protect them from the law.

Some suspect Mr Martin of delusions of grandeur, a problem magnified by a Sun-day newspaper story yesterday suggesting he was determined to remain Speaker after the general election. Mr Martin's spokesman told The Scotsman that the story was not wholly accurate. She said the Speaker recognised he served two constituencies – the people of Glasgow North East, and his 645 fellow MPs in the House of Commons – and he "would continue as long as his constituents want him to".

But how long do MPs want him to remain? Not much longer, if a BBC poll of MPs yesterday is true. A survey for Radio 4's The World This Weekend found that 32 of the 90 backbench MPs who agreed to answer questions about the Speaker said they had lost confidence in him.

Sir Malcolm Rifkind, the former for-eign secretary, said he was "greatly surprised and very, very disturbed" at Mr Martin's role in the Damian Green affair and he would not "go down as one of the great Speakers of the House of Commons".

Such assessments are familiar of a man whose gruff Glasgow accent is alone enough to attract hostility at Westminster. He entered Parliament in 1979 as Labour MP for Glasgow Springburn, having left school at 15 to become a sheet-metal worker. His first parliamentary job was as a bag-carrier for Denis Healey, the former Labour chancellor.

Mr Martin was a controversial appointment as Speaker in October 2000. He followed another Labour MP, Betty Boothroyd, and his selection ignored the recent tradition of the Speaker being drawn alternately from Labour and Tory benches. The Tories had wanted party grandee Sir George Young, but when Labour made it known that it was prepared to use its substantial majority to impose Speaker Martin, he was selected by 370 votes to eight after 11 other candidates were defeated in "knock-out" rounds.

He became the first Catholic Speaker since the Reformation, and was a teetotaller to boot, having moved on from his days of under-age drinking in Glasgow. "Speaker Martin's malt whisky" – a ten-year-old Macallan featuring a sketch of bagpipes to show his love of piping – was not selected by him, but by 16 friends.

Some Tories have since suspected Mr Martin of favouring his own side in debates, once preventing David Cameron from asking then-PM Tony Blair who he wanted as the next Labour Party leader. Recently Mr Martin called Labour troublemaker Dennis Skinner at Prime Minister's Questions, in what the Tories believe was a move designed to ramp up the pressure on shadow chancellor George Osborne over the Corfu yacht affair. But most whispered comments against the Speaker tend to question his competence, not his class.

One former Labour minister told The Scotsman that he suspected Mr Martin would aim to continue until the general election to secure his seat, renamed Glasgow North East, for his son, the Labour MSP Paul Martin. This timeline would also suit the government. Speakers who retire before the end of a parliament traditionally leave the Commons immediately – which would result in another tricky Glasgow by-election for Gordon Brown.

But the former minister said he believed Mr Martin would be unlikely to be re-elected Speaker if he chose to stand again after the general election. A combination of the Damian Green fiasco and Tory opposition would make the current Deputy Speaker, former Tory MP Sir Alan Haselhurst, the favourite, he said.

The rumpus over the decision to spend around £700,000 of public money refurbishing Speaker's House was typical of how some media outlets love to twist the facts against Mr Martin. Speaker's House is a little-known national treasure, a Grade I listed part of the Palace of Westminster situated at the foot of Big Ben. Essentially, it is a collection of state rooms used for official engagements – not for Mr Martin and his wife, Mary, to live like royalty. It is as much Mr Martin's home as 10 Downing Street is that of the Prime Minister (though he has a personal apartment within the rooms).

Mr Martin also faced criticism when he was found to have claimed £75,000 in parliamentary allowances for his constituency home over the last six years, despite not having a mortgage (though he broke no rules and made one of the smallest claims in Parliament), while Mrs Martin was criticised – but later cleared by an inquiry – after running up a £4,200 taxi bill shopping for receptions at Speaker's House.

Mr Martin has also attracted strong criticism – arguably more fairly directed – over his court battle to prevent full disclosure of MPs' expenses, as required under Freedom of Information legislation.

In his corner, he has union bosses such as Derek Simpson, joint general secretary of Unite, who accused the Tories of mounting a "witch-hunt" on Mr Martin because he was working class. Mr Simpson said: "He is a proud man with strong working-class roots but that has made him a target for the silver-spoon Tories who want a Speaker schooled at Eton rather than a former sheet-metal worker."

Three famous faces who imposed order in the House

ONE was a former member of the Tiller Girls dance troupe; another carried a thimble in his pocket to remind him of his humble upbringing as a tailor; the third was a 1970s colossus with a voice that resonated through the valleys.

Commons speakers Betty Boothroyd, Bernard Weatherill and George Thomas were known throughout the land, each of them invariably respected more than the leaders of the warring front benches over which they tried to keep the peace.

Ms (now Baroness) Boothroyd began her political career as an adviser to Barbara Castle, the formidable Labour Cabinet minister, and contested seats unsuccessfully in 1968 and 1970 before being elected as MP for West Bromwich in 1973. She was Speaker from 1992 to 2000, and won the parliamentarian of the year award in her first year in the chair.

The former dancing girl, with a gravelly voice from a 20-a-day cigarette habit, was often compared to a Coronation Street barmaid with her no-nonsense approach to the job. "Right, time's up," she declared after her first Prime Minister's Questions.

She was preceded by Bernard "Jack" Weatherill, Speaker from 1983-92. It was during this time that Commons proceedings were televised, guaranteeing Speaker Weatherill – the last Speaker to wear a wig – national fame.

He had entered the family firm in Savile Row at the age of 17 and, on the advice of his mother, always carried a thimble to remind him of his humble upbringing and the need for humility. He was highly regarded on all sides of the House for his gentlemanly courtesy.

George Thomas, who became Lord Tonypandy after leaving the Commons, served as Speaker from 1976-83. He was deeply religious, and first elected as an MP, representing Cardiff, in 1945 – the year that brought Clement Attlee's Labour government to power. The son of a miner, he was the only one of his family to enjoy a full education and he became a teacher in London before entering parliament.

But it was Speaker Lenthall who is regarded as the greatest protector of democracy – and whose legacy has been contrasted with the apparent meekness of Speaker Martin. When King Charles I stormed the Commons in 1642 and tried to arrest five MPs for treason, he was met by resistance from Speaker Lenthall, who declared that he had "neither eyes to see, nor tongue to speak" but as he was directed by his fellow MPs – and, as such, would not follow the King's orders.





The full article contains 1555 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 07 December 2008 9:44 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Scunnert,

08/12/2008 00:56:16
I haven't read this article. Why bother. Martin is part of a cabal who are intent on ending democracy in the UK. Will the media in this nation - Scotland - be complicit?
2

One-man-bucket's older twin,

08/12/2008 01:22:58
"he was determined to remain Speaker after the general election. Mr Martin's spokesman told The Scotsman ... the Speaker recognised he served two constituencies – the people of Glasgow North East, and his 645 fellow MPs in the House of Commons – and he "would continue as long as his constituents want him to".

Does Gorbals Mick not realise the speaker's chair is not in the gift of his constituents? Or is this sloppy reporting?
3

Cynicus in Exile,

08/12/2008 01:40:12
"Some Tories have since suspected Mr Martin of favouring his own side in debates, once preventing David Cameron from asking then-PM Tony Blair who he wanted as the next Labour Party leader"-Ross Lydall

Some Tories may be right -but this example does not support their case. The Speaker was correct to rule it out of order since the prime minister is answerable to parliament only for the conduct of his government. His possible successor is irrelevant since that successor will be a member of a different government -one for which Blair is not answerable to parliament.
4

Nevsky,

Moscow 08/12/2008 05:59:28
Martin is doing alright for an ex-socialist.I am not sure many of his constituents spend £700,000 on 'refusrbishments'!

Amazingly how cheap the Scottish socialists have been bought off really, a bit of status, house in London, introduced to a few Sir this and Lady that and a promise of a Lordship and boom...

Just like their Scottish predecessors...bought off!
5

Ju@n Kerr - the ex labour sheep,

08/12/2008 06:42:22
#4 - nevsky - His neighbouring MP , Mr Marshall may have spent and claimed as much as "office decoration...." Has he been seen yet down the barras selling expensive hand printed paper and gold infused paint? Just the thing for a 2 bedroom flat in govan..... Perhaps his daughter/ secretary/ Co director is using it on her property empire?
6

Nevsky,

Moscow 08/12/2008 07:07:01
5 jaun#

I am sure Jimmy Maxton would be proud of them! Not only are they a disgrace to their 'so called'socialism, they are a disgrace to their constituents and to their country!

Thankfully their disgusting ilk may have had it's day.
7

Guga II,

Rockall 08/12/2008 07:20:10
I notice he invited a Hootsmon hack to his wee ceilidh. That'll be as a reward for the Hootsmon's unflinching support of the New Labour Sleaze and Corruption Party.

No doubt Ross Lydall felt like a pet poodle, and was probably rewarded by having his ears rubbed by Gorbals Mick.
8

Ju@n Kerr - the ex labour sheep,

08/12/2008 07:32:53
#6 - I have no doubt as the exit doors approach and all is looking grim, quite a few lordships and quango appointments will be made too members and their families.

As the old saying goes s$%$ allways floats.
9

PC IS RIGHT,

Edinburgh 08/12/2008 08:00:33
Hi there guys,

I just want to say tHAT I hate fat people
10

A True Scot.,

08/12/2008 08:06:30
Has anybody else taken note of how worthless the Scottish unionist cabal in Westminster really is?
Take a look at the track records of Gordon Brown, Alistair Darling, Gorbals Mick, John Reid, Douglas Alexander, Tony Blair? etc eveyone of them a disgrace to this nation and not only because they support the union but because of the sheer idiotic corrupt incompetant manner in which they have tried to perform their duties in Westminster.
This says everything that has to be said regarding Scottish unionism.
11

Nevsky,

Moscow 08/12/2008 08:20:05
10 Scot#

Personally i have never come to terms with the following dilemma:

A lot of these Labour MPs are Irish Catholics who are fervent supporters of the Irish Republic and everything green...witness John Reid for a prime example!

Put them in Scotland and suddenly the are unionists, take the queen's shilling, are monarchists and loathe any idea of Scottish independence.

I have never been able to find an answer to this and the Scottish media stays well away from it!

The unionist establishment quite clearly detest them as the tag 'Gorballs Mick' shows..so why would they of all people be pro-union?
12

Foresight,

By the Water of Leith 08/12/2008 09:17:24

# 11 Easy to answer the question you pose
..............The London TROUGH is big and deep and the dosh and gongs are more important than their religious affiliation.
13

Calum10,

08/12/2008 09:56:18
Michael Martin knows it's over so what he is doing is angling for a peerage and for his son to takeover his constituency seat.

This whole matter higlights how corrupt the Westminster system is.

14

fiferjohn,

08/12/2008 10:17:42
interesting piece in the herald a labour mp say if the current financial state gets worse then they may have to have a national government so labour stays in power without having an election.
15

,

08/12/2008 11:17:07
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
16

Walter Ego,

Durness 08/12/2008 11:18:25
What about some balanced reporting from the Scotsman? What about the Andrew Welsh situation?
17

,

08/12/2008 11:37:16
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
18

Raymond Thomas Brooke,

Leven England 08/12/2008 12:04:27
Any one can turn on the charm when in desperation,he is after all a politician. He may even try kissing babies so mothers keep your children under suoervision
19

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 08/12/2008 13:32:42
After doing some research on Michael Martin I have come to the conclusion that, based on past actions and words, he is a pompous, arrogant, self-aggrandising and self-proclaimed demagogue.

Get rid of him somehow and put him in a council flat!
20

TheTerminator,

08/12/2008 13:51:49
There is certainly one group that pays the piper at Holyrood. No blaze of publicity abou this subject.

http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=C5XBhL6qC2o

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21

Beachcomber,

Edinburgh 08/12/2008 17:22:24
The Piper must be paid..

http://www.augustreview.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=7&Itemid=4
22

Beachcomber,

Edinburgh 08/12/2008 17:23:38
24 - Not the Scottish Piper I hasten to add.
23

Ileach,

08/12/2008 20:06:22
What's wrong with the headline, though - a typing error? "pays the piper" or "plays the piper"? Are there proofreading positions going unfilled?
24

,

08/12/2008 21:08:51
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
25

govanite,

glasgow 08/12/2008 21:17:05
apparently, the son of a senior labour cooncillor in Glasgow is about to defect to the SNP - labour are fighting like ferrets in a sack, being out of power in Scotland, and soon, when out of power in westminster they will fight like ferrets on a UK scale, 1980 all over again.
26

Faux Cul,

08/12/2008 21:42:04
#28
govanite,
glasgow 08/12/2008 21:17:05

That would rule out Steven Purcell then?

 

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