Betty Boothroyd obituary: formidable parliamentarian who became Madam Speaker

First female Speaker of the House gained international fame for her brisk, good-humoured style

black and white photo of young Boothroyd with her hand in her hair in front of Big Ben
Boothroyd outside Parliament in 1959

Betty Boothroyd, who died last month aged 93, “overturned more than 700 years of parliamentary tradition in 1992 when she became the first woman to be elected Speaker of the House of Commons”, said The Guardian. Over the next eight years, she would gain “international fame for her brisk, good-humoured style and for the warmth and wit she exuded – along with a whiff of glamour”.

She’d first made headlines for declining to wear the Speaker’s full-bottomed wig, said The Scotsman – a break with tradition that did nothing to dent her authority. One of the “outstanding” occupants of the Speaker’s green chair, and also one of the most popular, she was a formidable and imposing presence, who could quieten a bunch of rowdy MPs with a raucous shout, and defuse tense or dangerous situations in the Chamber with a broad Yorkshire quip.

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