- Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick
The Speaker of the
Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick is the presiding officer of the provincial legislature. Since 1994 the position has been elected by MLAs using a secret ballot. Previously, the Speaker had been appointed by motion of the house, in practice moved by thePremier of New Brunswick usually after consultation with theLeader of the Opposition .Shirley Dysart was the first Speaker to be elected by his or her peers.The Speaker is usually a member of the governing party. The only recent exceptions have been
Robert McCready andMichael Malley . McCready was appointed by motion of PremierRichard Hatfield following the close election of 1978. Hatfield's Progressive Conservative Party had won only 30 seats compared to the 28 seats won by the opposition Liberal Party. McCready was a member of the Liberalcaucus and was appointed over the objection of the Liberal Party. The Liberal opposition argued on apoint of order before theclerk of the assembly that precedent required that the opposition support the motion appointing speaker, but the clerk allowed the motion to be put and carried by the government. Malley was elected in 2006 while sitting as an independent. Malley had left the government caucus following acabinet shuffle that had seen the incumbent speaker,Bev Harrison , join the cabinet leaving the post vacant. Malley argued that he should have been included in the cabinet for regional reasons and left the government caucus in protest; to prevent losing control of the legislature in a tenousminority government situation, the Progressive Conservative caucus supported Malley as speaker. Malley later changed his party affiliation, amid some controversy, back to that of the governing Progressive Conservatives while occupying the speakership.peakers since the creation of the Assembly in 1785
*
Roy Boudreau (2007-present)
*Eugene McGinley (2007)
*Michael Malley (2006)
*Bev Harrison (1999-2006)
*John McKay (1998-1999)
*Danny Gay (1995-1998)
*Shirley Dysart (1994-1995)
*Gerald Clavette (1994)
*Shirley Dysart (1991-1994)
*Frank Branch (1987-1991)
*Charles Gallagher (1986-1987)
*James Tucker (1981-1985)
*Robert McCready (1979-1980)
*William Woodroffe (1973-1978)
*Lawrence Garvie (1971-1973)
*Robert McCready (1968-1970)
*H. H. Williamson (1966-1967)
*Bernard A. Jean (1963-1966)
*Ernest Richard (1960-1963)
*J. Arthur Moore (1955-1960)
*Walter Powers (1954)
*E.T. Kennedy (1953)
*Harry O. Downey (1945-1952)
*Frederic McGrand (1940-04-04 -1944-07-10 )
*Hedley Francis Gregory Bridges (1936-1938)
*F. C. Squires (1931-1935)
*Joseph Leonard O'Brien (August 1925 - June 1930)
*A. Allison Dysart (1921-1925)
*Judson E. Hetherington (1919-1920)
*William Currie (1917-1918)
*Olivier-Maximin Melanson (1916-1917)
*Walter B. Dickson (1914-1916)
*George Johnson Clarke (1909-1914)
*Donald Morrison (1908)
*Charles J. Osman (1907-1908)
*Clifford William Robinson (1901-02-28 -1903-02-05 ) & (1903-03-26 -1907-04-13 )
* J.P. Burchill (1893-1899)
* Albert S. White (1890-1892)
*William Pugsley (1887-1889)
*James E. Lynott (1883-1886)
*Benjamin Robert Stephenson (1879-1882)
* William Wedderburn (1875-1878)
* Edwin Arnold Vail (1871-1874)
*Bliss Botsford (1867-1870)
* John H. Gray (1866-1867)
*Edwin Arnold Vail (1865-1866)
*John Campbell Allen (1863-1865)
*John Mercer Johnson (1859-1863)
* James A. Harding (1857-1858)
* Charles Simonds (1856-1857)
*Daniel Hanington (1853-1856)
* William Crane (1852-1853)
* Charles Simonds (1851)
*John Wesley Weldon (1843-1850)
* Charles Simonds (1835-1841)
*William Crane (1831-1835)
*Charles Simonds (1829-1831)
*Richard Simonds (1828)
*Harry Peters (1826-1827)
*Ward Chipman, Jr. (1824-1825)
*William Botsford (1817-1823)
* John Robinson (1813-1816)
*Amos Botsford (1786-1812)References
* [http://www.parl.gc.ca/Infoparl/english/issue.htm?param=67&art=97 The Evolving Speakership, Canadian Parliamentary Review]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.