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Speaker of the National Assembly of Mauritius

Presiding officer of the National Assembly of Mauritius


Presiding officer of the National Assembly of Mauritius

FieldValue
postSpeaker of the National Assembly of Mauritius
imageShirin Aumeeruddy-Cziffra.jpg
incumbentShirin Aumeeruddy-Cziffra
incumbentsince29 November 2024
departmentNational Assembly of Mauritius
styleThe Honourable
typePresiding officer
appointerNational Assembly
firstSir Robert Stanley
formation1957 (Legislative Council)
deputyDeputy Speaker
websitemauritiusassembly.govmu.org

The Speaker of the National Assembly is the presiding officer in the National Assembly of Mauritius. The speaker is elected by the members of the National Assembly and does not have to be a member of the National Assembly.

The position has existed since the Legislative Council, as it was known at the time in the 1950s, decided to choose a separate presiding officer for the Council (the Colonial Governor served as the presiding officer before). Sir Robert Stanley was chosen as the first speaker of the Legislative Council in 1957. Stanley was followed by Sir Harilal Vaghjee, who became the first Mauritian to hold the speakership in 1960. Vaghjee remains the longest-serving holder of the office.

Since the opening of the 8th National Assembly on 29 November 2024, Shirin Aumeeruddy-Cziffra is the incumbent speaker of the National Assembly. She is the second female speaker and the first female Muslim woman to serve within the role. Aumeeruddy-Cziffra was elected unanimously by the house.

Election and term

Following a general election to elect the members of the National Assembly, the first business to be conducted after the swearing-in of members is the election of the Speaker and Deputy Speaker. Traditionally, candidates chosen to the speakership are agreed beforehand between the government and the opposition and thus, the candidate is elected unanimously. However, in the instance that more than one candidate is proposed and seconded, the election proceeds to secret ballot.

Under section 32 of the constitution, the Speaker may or may not be a member of the house itself. Before the amendment of the section in 1996, it was a requirement that the person chosen as a candidate for the position be a member of the house itself.

Role

The Speaker is the main representative of the House and the main spokesperson to the Preisdent, who also composes the other part of the parliament. The authority of the parliament is symbolised by the holder of the speakership. They are expected to be impartial and above party politics as the Speaker swears their loyalty to the dignity of parliament.

As typical with other Westminster model of governance, the Speaker ensures that the rules and standing orders of the Assembly are followed and complied. They have the power to interpret and enforce such rulings in accordance to precedence, typically following Erskine May's Parliamentary Practice. Any ruling made by the Speaker may not be challenged, with exception to a substantive motion, and criticism made towards his actions outside of parliament may count as contempt to the Assembly.

During debates, the Speaker is responsible for setting the choice of speakers and admissibility of questions towards ministers when Question Time arises. They must ensure that government backbenchers and opposition members are allocated evenly in their questions. In addition, the Speaker is most importantly responsible for ensuring order and discipline during debates. They may call any member into order and if a member persists on being unruly, the Speaker may ask the member to withdraw from the chamber for the remainder of the day's sitting. If a member continues to flout the authority of the chair or willfully obstructs the business of the house, the Speaker has the power to name any member.

Under section 53 of the constitution, the Speaker, Deputy Speaker or any person presiding over the house, provided that they are members of the Aseembly itself, are not prevented from having a vote in any question posed to the Assembly. Thus, a speaker elected outside the membership of the assembly is only allowed to have a vote when a tie exists during a question posed to the house.

List of speakers

PortraitName
(birth–death)Term of officePartyLegislatureTook officeLeft officeTime in office
Sir Robert Stanley26 February
195721 March
1960None2nd
3rd
Sir Harilal Vaghjee
(1912–1979)22 March
196025 May
1979Labour Party (Mauritius)}};"PTr
4th
5th
1stLegislative Assembly
2nd
Sir Ramesh Jeewoolall
5 June
197917 June
1982Labour Party (Mauritius)}};"PTr
[[File:Alan Ganoo, 2013.jpg95px]]Alan Ganoo
(born 1951)18 June
19825 September
1983Mauritian Militant Movement}};"MMM3rd
Ajay Daby
(born 1955)6 September
19834 December
1990Militant Socialist Movement}};"MSM4th
5th
6th
Iswardeo Seetaram
(1944–2024)4 December
199011 January
1996Militant Socialist Movement}};"MSM
1stNational Assembly
[[File:Alan Ganoo, 2013.jpg95px]]Alan Ganoo
(born 1951)12 January
199617 January
1996Mauritian Militant Movement}};"MMM2nd
Sir Ramesh Jeewoolall
(1941–2019)23 January
19962 October
2000Labour Party (Mauritius)}};"PTr
[[File:Dev Ramnah, 2005.jpg95px]]Dev Ramnah3 October
200027 April
2005Mauritian Militant Movement}};"MMM3rd
[[File:Kailash Purryag, 2013.jpg95px]]Kailash Purryag
(1947–2025)12 July
200523 July
2012Labour Party (Mauritius)}};"PTr4th
5th
[[File:Razack Peeroo, 2013.jpg95px]]Razack Peeroo
(born 1945)24 July
20128 November
2014Labour Party (Mauritius)}};"PTr
[[File:Mrs. Santi Bai Hanoomanjee 2018 (cropped).jpg95px]]Maya Hanoomanjee
(born 1952)22 December
201421 November
2019Militant Socialist Movement}};"MSM6th
[[File:Sooroojdev Phokeer, 2024.jpg95px]]Sooroojdev Phokeer
(born 1951)21 November
201916 July
2024Militant Socialist Movement}};"MSM7th
[[File:Adrien Duval, 2024.jpg95px]]Adrien Duval
(born 1990)18 July
20245 October
2024Parti Mauricien Social Démocrate}};"PMSD
[[File:Shirin Aumeeruddy-Cziffra.jpg95px]]Shirin Aumeeruddy-Cziffra
(born 1948)29 November
2024IncumbentMauritian Militant Movement}};"MMM8th

References

References

  1. (10 August 2020). "National Assembly - The Speaker".
  2. "The Speaker - Mauritius National Assembly". [[National Assembly (Mauritius).
  3. "The Constitution". Government of Mauritius.
  4. (11 January 2019). "National Assembly - Former Speakers". National Assembly of Mauritius.
  5. (9 April 2017). "Vaghjee, cousines, cuisine". [[L'Express (Mauritius).
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