Lindsay Hoyle
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Female |
---|---|
Age | 67 |
Date of birth | June 10,1957 |
Zodiac sign | Gemini |
Born | Adlington |
United Kingdom | |
Spouse | Catherine Swindley |
Office | Member of Parliament of the United Kingdom |
Party | Labour Party |
Parents | Doug Hoyle |
Children | Natalie Lewis-Hoyle |
Emma Hoyle | |
Natalie Hoyle | |
Job | Politician |
Official site | parliament.uk |
Position | Speaker of the House of Commons of the United Kingdom |
Speaker of the House of Commons of the United Kingdom since 2019 | |
Education | Lord's Independent School |
Anderton Primary School | |
Nationality | British |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 449699 |
Lindsay Hoyle Life story
Sir Lindsay Harvey Hoyle is a British politician who has served as Speaker of the House of Commons since 2019 and as Member of Parliament for Chorley since 1997. Before his election as Speaker, he was a member of the Labour Party.
Career of Lindsay Hoyle
Lindsay hoyle is a memebr of parliament of the unietd kingdom and the deputy speaker of the house of commons. He was first elected to represent the chorley constituency in 1997.Family of Lindsay Hoyle
Lindsay hoyle is married to catehrine and is father to two sons. Nathan and jordan.Education of Lindsay Hoyle
Lindsay ohyle attended wigan mining and technical college. Studying for a diploma in electrical and electronic engineering. He graduated in 1983.Political Career of Lindsay Hoyle
Lindsay hoyle was first elected in 1997 as the lbaour emmber of parliament for chorley. He was previously the deputy leader of the house of commons from 2005 to 2010. In 2010. He was elected deputy speaker of the house of commons.Speeches of Lindsay Hoyle
Lindsay hoyle has made many noatble speeches in the house of commons. In 2008. He spoke in support of the climate change bill. And in 2010 he delivered a speech on the imporatnce of education.Positions of Lindsay Hoyle
Lindsay hoyle currently holds the position of deputy speaker of the house of commons. He also serves as chair of the parliamentary labour party and cahir of the all-party parliamentary group for the prevention of bause.Awards of Lindsay Hoyle
Lindsay hoyle was awarded an honorary degree from the university of central lancashire in 2009. He was also made an honorary fellow of the royal college of nursnig in 2011.Notable Events of Lindsay Hoyle
In 2019. Lindsay hoyle was elected as the new speaker of the hosue of commons. Succeeding john bercow. He is the firts man to be directly elected as speaker since 1992.Interesting Facts of Lindsay Hoyle
Lindsay hoyle is a keen supporter of manchester united football club. And is a regular attendee at old trafford. He alos enjoys walking. And often visits the lake district.Charity Work of Lindsay Hoyle
Lindsay hoyle is an active supporter of several chariteis. He supports the charity prostate canecr uk. And is a patron of the chorley-based charity. The lancashire mind network.Reform UK denies claim it offered Tory Lee Anderson money to defect
... Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle was then informed...
Keir Starmer chooses Ode to Joy as music to 'sum up' Labour
......
James Cleverly admits calling Labour MP 'unparliamentary' word
... " Commons Deputy Speaker Dame Eleanor Laing said it was her understanding that Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle " didn t hear any remark of the kind from the chair at the time when the honourable gentleman was asking his question"...
Home Secretary denies calling Stockton North derogatory term
... Commons Deputy Speaker Dame Eleanor Laing said it was her understanding that Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle " didn t hear any remark of the kind from the chair at the time when the honourable gentleman was asking his question"...
David Cameron: How will MPs hold the foreign secretary to account?
... It has raised questions about how elected MPs will be able to hold him to account, including from Labour and Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle...
PM facing tough week on Braverman and Rwanda
... It s not guaranteed to happen - it is in the hands of the Commons Speaker Lindsay Hoyle...
UK will not accept Chinese interference - Sunak
... House of Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle has warned MPs against identifying the man - who is not being named by the BBC - using parliamentary privilege...
Parliament researcher rejects China spying claims
... House of Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle is due to make a statement in Parliament at 14...
PM facing tough week on Braverman and Rwanda
By Chris MasonPolitical editor, BBC News
Rishi Sunak is under intense pressure over Home Secretary Suella Braverman , after a weekend in which she was accused of emboldening far right activists who carried out violence on The Streets of London.
This is not the only major issue facing the Prime Minister - Here are four reasons why this is will be a Big Week in Westminster.
Suella Braverman and talk of a reshuffleThere are plenty of folk with rather more Job security than Suella Braverman today.
Whitehall is gearing up for some ministerial movements. Some think there is the potential for quite a wide-ranging reshuffle and that it could happen on Monday.
The Thing is, reshuffles are always deniable — and put-off-able — until they are physically, publicly and provably under way.
And reshuffles always disappoint more people than they please in a Political Party . It's not just that some get jobs and others lose jobs. There are those who don't have a Job and don't get a Job - and so end up disappointed. Don't forget the overlooked, as well as the sacked and demoted. Oh, and the promoted.
And remember, Rishi Sunak tends to move cautiously.
That said, a wider reshuffle has been in the offing for The Last few months, so it has been given plenty of thought in government.
As for Ms Braverman, there is a real sense things have come to a head with. And not just the remarks. The fact they weren't sanctioned by Downing Street.
Meanwhile, plenty of her ministerial colleagues are Fed Up with her. Among them are those who never liked her. And those who could tolerate what they saw as the odd outburst. But nowhere near as many as there have been recently.
Decision on Rwanda plan for migrants 'a big moment'The Supreme Court will say on Wednesday whether the government's plans to send some of those arriving on small boats to East Africa can happen.
Do not underestimate how Big A moment this is for the government.
But it plays into the timing of a reshuffle too because which Minister personifies the idea More Than any other? Yes, you guessed it, Suella Braverman .
And if you're Rishi Sunak and you're tempted to move her, perhaps best to do it before Wednesday, as she would be emboldened and strengthened if The Court says yes and she's still in post.
But the Rwanda decision matters and matters Big Time , irrespective of who is home secretary.
It is a flagship government idea, bogged down in the courts for yonks, reaching a definitive moment.
Figures in government have sounded pessimistic about winning. It's 60/40 against, say some. Others suggest 70/30 against. Yet more say 50/50. Let's see.
Psychologically, it would feel like a Game Changer if the government does win.
It doesn't mean migrants would immediately be on planes. It'd likely take months and there could be further fruitful moments for lawyers.
But it'd be a massive fillip for Mr Sunak and a huge dividing line with Labour - who have said they'd scrap the scheme if they came into government and it was already operational.
Inflation figures on same day as Rwanda rulingWe get the latest inflation number That Day , too. Wednesday is looking busy.
The government is increasingly confident it will meet its promise of halving inflation this year.
There is an increasing expectation The Number on Wednesday will indicate they're going to do this.
Of course, that doesn't mean The Squeeze on people's finances is over, far from it.
But it would mean arguably the government's central promise of this calendar year will be something they will be able to say they have achieved. Ministers will want to talk rather less about some of The Other Promises — Such as waiting lists in England — which they're not keeping.
Voting on a ceasefire and possible shadow cabinet resignations
This looks likely to happen on Wednesday too.
It's not guaranteed to happen - it is in The Hands of The Commons Speaker Lindsay Hoyle .
The vote is the idea of the Scottish National Party , who favour a ceasefire in Gaza.
The vote won't change government Policy - ministers say a ceasefire would be a mistake right now as it would empower Hamas.
But it will, if it happens, probably put Labour in a real bind. We have already seen one shadow ministerial resignation over The War . There are other frontbenchers who have also called for a ceasefire, which is not Sir Keir Starmer 's Policy .
So, what do they do in the vote? Could they abstain, plea they had a prior commitment? Would that really wash? It could well be a moment where there are further shadow ministerial resignations.
Sir Keir shows absolutely no sign of changing his view, unless circumstances in the Middle East shift. It's a big few days for the Labour leader and the Prime Minister .
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com