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House of Keys

Lower house of the Isle of Man parliament


Summary

Lower house of the Isle of Man parliament

FieldValue
nameHouse of Keys
native_nameYn Kiare as Feed
native_name_langgv
coa_pic[[File:House of Keys Seal .jpg200px]]
coa_res10px
house_typeLower house
bodyHigh Court of Tynwald
leader1_typeSpeaker
leader1Juan Watterson
election127 September 2016
members24
structure12021 Isle of Man House of Keys Composition.svg
structure1_res200px
*bordersilver}} Independent (1)}}
* {{Color box#DDDDDDborderdarkgray}} Independent (9)
* {{Color box#DDDDDDborderdarkgray}} Independent (11)
* {{Color box#D00C27borderdarkgray}} Manx Labour (2)
* {{Color box#FA8000borderdarkgray}} Liberal Vannin Party (1)
voting_system1Multiple non-transferable vote
last_election123 September 2021
next_election1September 2026
session_roomThe Wedding Cake - geograph.org.uk - 566474.jpg
meeting_placeChamber of the House of Keys, Legislative Buildings, Douglas
website

| coa-pic = | coa-res = Speaker (1)

Council of Ministers (9)

  • Independent (9) Others (14)
  • Independent (11)
  • Manx Labour (2)
  • Liberal Vannin Party (1)

The House of Keys () is the directly elected lower house of Tynwald, the parliament of the Isle of Man, the other branch being the Legislative Council.

History

The oldest known reference to the name is in a document of 1417, written in Latin by an English scholar, which refers to Claves Mann[iae] (the "Keys of Man") and Claves Legis (the "Keys of Law"). There is a dispute, however, over the origin of the name. The word keys is thought by some to be an English corruption of a form of the Norse verb ("to choose"). However, a more likely explanation is that it is a mishearing of the Manx-language term for "four and twenty": kiare as feed , the House having always had 24 members. The Manx-language name of the House remains Yn Kiare as Feed ("The Four and Twenty").

Governance

Members are known as Members of the House of Keys (MHKs). Citizens over the age of 16 may vote, while one must be at least 18 years old and a resident of the island for three years to be elected an MHK. There are 12 constituencies, mainly based on the sheadings and on local government units. (A few local government units are split between two constituencies.) Each sends two members to the House of Keys, elected by plurality voting (each elector can vote for up to two candidates). The term of the House of Keys is normally fixed at five years, but provisions exist for dissolution before the expiration of the term.

The Speaker of the House of Keys (SHK) is an MHK elected by the Keys as the presiding officer. The Speaker votes in the House of Keys, but, unlike other members, may abstain; however, when the vote is tied the Speaker must cast the deciding vote. The Speaker also acts as Deputy President of Tynwald Court.

The House of Keys elects 8 of the 11 members of the Legislative Council. Legislation does not usually originate in the council. (There are exceptions: for example the Equality Bill was introduced in the Legislative Council in late 2016.) Thus, the Keys have much more power than the council, which performs the function of a revising chamber.

The House of Keys meets about once each month together with the Legislative Council in a joint session called Tynwald Court. During the COVID pandemic, these meetings were more frequent. The President of Tynwald, elected by both branches, presides over Tynwald Court and over the Legislative Council. Once each year, however, on Tynwald Day, the Isle of Man's national day, the Lieutenant Governor (or a member of the Royal Family) presides.

Meeting place

The House of Keys usually meets in their chamber in the Legislative Buildings in Douglas. Seating is allocated in alphabetical order by constituency name (in English) and organised into two rows. Members who received the highest number of votes in their constituency sit in the front row. On 14 March 2017 the Keys met in the Old House of Keys in Castletown, for the first time since 1874, to commemorate the sesquicentenary of the first elected House of Keys. During the COVID pandemic, these meetings were sometimes held remotely (or partly remotely).

Elections

Main article: Manx general election, 2001, Manx general election, 2006, Manx general election, 2011, Manx general election, 2016, 2021 Manx general election

Membership

ConstituencyMHKs
Arbory, Castletown & MalewJason Moorhouse
Tim Glover
Ayre & MichaelAlfred Cannan
Tim Johnston
Douglas CentralAnne Corlett
Chris Thomas
Douglas EastJoney Faragher
Clare Barber
Douglas NorthDavid Ashford
John Wannenburgh
Douglas SouthClaire Christian
Sarah Maltby
GarffDaphne Caine
Andrew Smith
Glenfaba & PeelKate Lord-Brennan
Tim Crookall
MiddleJane Poole-Wilson
Stu Peters
OnchanJulie Edge
Rob Callister
RamseyAlex Allinson
Lawrie Hooper
RushenJuan Watterson
Michelle Haywood

References

References

  1. "Tynwald – Parliament of the Isle of Man – WATTERSON Juan Paul, BA FCA CMGR FCMI FRSA SHK".
  2. "ELECTION RESULTS – Manx Radio".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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