Andrew Pierce takes a look at Speaker John Bercow’s list of many indiscretions

When John Bercow broke his promise about quitting after nine years as the Speaker, his officials said he wanted to stay on to ‘see through Brexit’.

While he didn’t address the subject publicly himself, his friends wanted it known that he was not trying to thwart Britain’s departure from the EU, but simply felt ‘very strongly that there must be parliamentary scrutiny’ of the process.

However, it was universally recognised by long-time Bercow-watchers that he was on a one-man mission to delay or scupper Brexit altogether.

House of Commons Speaker John Bercow ruled on Monday that Theresa May’s Brexit deal cannot come before parliament again in its current state 

For the Speaker has made no secret of his disdain for Brexit and flaunted his contempt for it.

Most notoriously, a bright-yellow ‘Bo***cks to Brexit’ sticker was spotted on the windscreen of a car parked outside his official residence – which he said belonged to his wife.

Most people in Westminster believed he sympathised with the slogan, particularly since he was recorded at about the same time last year telling students: ‘I thought it was better to stay in the EU than not.’ To the same audience at Reading University, he spoke about what he called ‘untruths’ about the pro-Brexit campaign and ‘promises that were made that could not be kept’.

A car parked outside Bercow's residence displayed a ‘Bo***cks to Brexit’ sticker in March 2018

A car parked outside Bercow’s residence displayed a ‘Bo***cks to Brexit’ sticker in March 2018 

By convention going back centuries, the Speaker is supposed to stay above the party political fray.

But, most notably, he has chided Labour for not doing more to win the referendum and for not ‘striking a very clear resonant Remain note’.

The truth is that during his almost ten years as Speaker, the 56-year-old taxi driver’s son has shamefully degraded the reputation of the Commons.

He was elected in the wake of the MPs’ expenses scandal and it was hoped that there would be a new era of rectitude in the Commons.

Bercow after being elected to the position of Speaker of the House of Commons in 2009

Bercow after being elected to the position of Speaker of the House of Commons in 2009 

But, to many, the wrong message had been sent to voters because Bercow himself had repaid £6,500 to the tax authorities after it was disclosed that he had ‘flipped’ the designation of his second home between London and his Buckingham constituency.

The charge sheet against him is long. He has been consistently partisan. He has used his position as the highest authority of the Commons and as the Lower House’s representative to the Queen, to build a power base to promote his private agendas and interests.

His criticism of Labour for not having a strong Brexit voice came despite parliamentary rules stating: ‘The Speaker is the chief officer and highest authority of the House of Commons and must remain politically impartial at all times.’ This is contained in Erskine May – the same bible of Parliamentary procedure that Bercow quoted from extensively yesterday to justify denying the Commons a third meaningful vote on the Government’s EU withdrawal deal.

The Speaker has consistently flouted his status as a remainer, according to Andrew Pierce

The Speaker has consistently flouted his status as a remainer, according to Andrew Pierce

But then Bercow is a stickler for tradition when it suits him personally. In January, he said: ‘I am not in the business of invoking precedent, nor am I under any obligation to do so. If we were guided only by precedent, manifestly nothing in our procedures would ever change.’ 

Just two months later, he has surely contradicted himself with his guidance about precedents dating back hundreds of years to stop Theresa May returning to the Commons for a third vote. Such has been the Tories’ unhappiness with Bercow that it is thought that only three fellow Tory MPs voted for him when he was elected Speaker in 2009.

His Conservative critics felt justified when he later became embroiled in a bullying scandal.

After allegations of sexual harassment were made against Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein, Bercow pledged: ‘There must be zero tolerance of sexual harassment or bullying here at Westminster.’

Bercow allegedly called Leader of the House Andrea Leadsom (pictured) a ‘stupid woman’

Bercow allegedly called Leader of the House Andrea Leadsom (pictured) a ‘stupid woman’

A year later, these pious words sounded hollow after the publication of a devastating report by Dame Laura Cox QC into the culture of bullying at Westminster.

She said instances of bullying and harassment in the Commons had been brushed under the carpet as part of a culture of ‘acquiescence and silence’. The report concluded that ‘levers of change are regarded as part of the change that is needed’ and individuals should consider their positions.

Not surprisingly, the report was interpreted as a clear call for Bercow to quit – which he didn’t do. 

Subsequently, BBC2’s Newsnight reported that he had bullied a senior Commons clerk, Kate Emms. The bullying was allegedly so sustained that Miss Emms eventually quit with post-traumatic stress disorder. Bercow denied the allegations.

Another former private secretary, Angus Sinclair, told the BBC that Bercow had bullied and intimidated him. Bercow rejected these claims, too.

Cabinet ministers have complained about being abused by Bercow. He is said to have called Leader of the House Andrea Leadsom a ‘stupid woman’ and ‘f****** useless’ in the Commons chamber. Bercow tried to defuse the row by admitting he muttered the word ‘stupid’ during a disagreement with her about the time-tabling of legislation, but denied insulting her personally.

Bercow was an officer of the now banned Conservative Monday Club in his younger years

Bercow was an officer of the now banned Conservative Monday Club in his younger years 

But this was just one of several worrying stories about Bercow.

They started when, as a young man, he joined a Conservative youth group that produced ‘Hang Nelson Mandela’ posters. He was an officer of the now-banned Monday Club, which backed repatriation for black people.

This was the same organisation that, in 1969, had launched a campaign to make the anti-immigration Tory MP, Enoch Powell, Conservative leader.

Interestingly, when he joined the youth group, like Powell, Bercow was a staunch Eurosceptic.

Over the following years, he proceeded to go on a remarkable political journey from Right to Left. He resigned from the Tory frontbench over the party’s refusal to back gay adoption in 2002. It is clear, though, that he had already targeted being Speaker.

Having won election to the green leather ‘throne’, he spent £45,000 on the refurbishment of his official residence, despite being warned by officials it might be seen as excessive. The work included £7,524 on a new sofa and window seat cushions for the drawing room.

Seemingly oblivious to the contradiction, he also spent £367 of taxpayers’ money on a car journey to Luton to deliver a speech on how MPs were restoring their reputation after the expenses scandal. A train fare would have been less than £30.

Such is the anger of ministers with John Bercow this morning, they would happily pay £367,000 out of their own pockets to buy him a single ticket to Timbuktu.

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