Full list of MPs who have signed early day motion calling for Speaker to go
Speaker #Speaker
The number of MPs calling for Sir Lindsay Hoyle to go has now passed 55.
Dozens of parliamentarians have signed a motion of no confidence in the Speaker over his handling of yesterday’s Gaza ceasefire debate.
It leaves Sir Lindsay fighting for his job, with one Government minister describing his position as “difficult”.
The no-confidence motion is non-binding and not part of any formal process.
However, in this case, that does not matter. The fact that MPs are signing it is enough to pile the pressure on Sir Lindsay because it shows in plain and simple terms the scale of the revolt against him.
ANTI-HOYLE
SNP Westminster leader Stephen Flynn – who hasn’t signed the motion – said yesterday that he would take significant convincing that the Speaker’s position was “not now intolerable”.
Danny Kruger said his decision to sign was not “personal”, aiming primarily at Sir Keir Starmer. He claimed both Sir Lindsay and the Labour leader had shown “weakness and partisanship yesterday”.
Lee Anderson, who has signed the motion, said Sir Lindsay had “let himself down”. “I think, personally, he’s probably been bullied and cajoled into this, had too much pressure,” he said.
Minister Maria Caulfield said Sir Lindsay’s handling of yesterday’s debate had “dented” her confidence in him, describing his position as Commons Speaker as “difficult”. She has not signed the motion.
PRO-HOYLE
Labour frontbencher Pat McFadden said there was “no reason” why Sir Lindsay’s position should be under threat, as he “acted in good faith”.
Ben Wallace, the former defence secretary, said Sir Lindsay has his “full support”.
Former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith said he was against removing Sir Lindsay from his role as Commons Speaker. “Personally, I am not after getting the Speaker out and his apology showed just how much pressure he had been under,” he said.
Here is the full list of MPs who have signed a motion of no confidence in the Speaker:
Conservative (33)
William Wragg, Hazel Grove
Gary Sambrook, Birmingham Northfield
Jill Mortimer, Hartlepool
John Stevenson, Carlisle
Kieran Mullan, Crewe and Nantwich
Anthony Mangnall, Totnes
Sir James Duddridge, Rochford and Southend East
Jo Gideon, Stoke-on-Trent Central
Chris Green, Bolton West
Bob Blackman, Harrow East
Tom Randall, Gedling
Jonathan Lord, Woking
Karl McCartney, Lincoln
Derek Thomas, St Ives
Jack Brereton, Stoke-on-Trent South
Tom Hunt, Ipswich
James Grundy, Leigh
Brendan Clarke-Smith, Bassetlaw
Lee Anderson, Ashfield
Sir Graham Brady, Altrincham and Sale West
Eddie Hughes, Walsall North
Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown, The Cotswolds
Marco Longhi, Dudley North
Simon Baynes, Clwyd South
Shaun Bailey, West Bromwich West
Matt Warman, Boston and Skegness
Steve Double, St Austell and Newquay
Danny Kruger, Devizes
Miriam Cates, Penistone and Stocksbridge
Sir Robert Goodwill, Scarborough and Whitby
Lia Nici, Great Grimsby
Jonathan Gullis, Stoke-on-Trent North
Kelly Tolhurst, Rochester and Strood
SNP (23)
David Linden, Glasgow East
Stewart McDonald, Glasgow South
Chris Law, Dundee West
John McNally, Falkirk
Gavin Newland, Paisley and Renfrewshire North
Pete Wishart, Perth and North Perthshire
Martyn Day, Linlithgow and East Falkirk
Joanna Cherry, Edinburgh South West
Patricia Gibson, North Ayrshire and Arran
Alison Thewliss, Glasgow Central
Anum Qaisar, Airdrie and Shotts
Douglas Chapman, Dunfermline and West Fife
Carol Monaghan, Glasgow North West
Drew Hendry, Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey
Anne McLaughlin, Glasgow North East
John Nicholson, Orchil and South Perthshire
Alyn Smith, Stirling
Kirsty Blackman, Aberdeen North
Ronnie Cowan, Inverclyde
Dave Doogan, Angus
Amy Callaghan, East Dunbartonshire
Brendan O’Hara, Argyll and Bute
Alan Brown, Kilmarnock and Loudoun
Independent (1)
Rob Roberts, Delyn
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