The Great Britain’s House of Commons
Category: PoliticsThe Lords and Commons began to meget, separately some five centuries ago and the Commons were allotted St Stephen’s Chapel of the Palace of Westminster, built on a marshy island in the Thames. MPs sat in the,choir stalls facing each other, with the Speaker’s, chair on a dais’‘in front of the altar. Some MPs sat in pews situated crosswise.
This seating arrangement is the same today. The practice of MPs making a bow in the direction of the Speaker on entering or leaving the Chamber is a gesture of respect from the days when the altar stood there. At the time when MPs. Carried swords the two opposing sides in the Chamber were kept two sword lengths apart, marked, even now on the floor of the House by red bands in the woven cafpet. Should a member while addressing the House accidentally put a foot across this red line, he is at once greeted with cries of “Order, order’’.
The day’s work in the Commons begins with prayers the one ceremony visitors are never permitted to witness. Alter brief prayers by the Chaplain he retires and an attendant calls out “Speaker in the Chairl’’ The great Mace, symbol of the authority of the House of Commons, is placed on the table facing the Speaker, the House is then in session and its daily work begins. Almost immediately follows one of the most important of rcutines in the Commons. For about an hour any MP may, with due notice, ask a question of any Minister of the Crown who must answer. No stranger is allowed to enter the Chamber beyond the Bar of the House, and the Sovereign, by established custom, is never permitted to enter the House when it is in session.
By an unwritten law the House of Lords is never referred to in the Commons otherwise than as “another place’’, for the Commons theoretically do not admit the existence of the House of Lords. MPs are always addressed in the Commons as “Sir’’, irrespective of sex, the reason being that all remarks uttered within the Chamber are supposed to be directed at the Speaker. Consequently MPs are always spoken of in the Chamber in the third person — “the honourable member for’’. A political opponent is described as “honourable gentleman’’ and a member of thesame party as “my honoureble friend’’.
At the end of the day’s sitting the Speaker or his deputy, declares: “This House now, stands adjourned’. The lantern above Big Ben is extinguished. As a reminder of the days when London streets were unsafe at night, and the MPs went to their homes in groups, Westminster Palace police still cry out loudly in the corridors of the House: “Who goes home?’’