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Beckett joins race to be Speaker Beckett joins race to be Speaker
(20 minutes later)
Former Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett is to join the race to become House of Commons Speaker.Former Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett is to join the race to become House of Commons Speaker.
Mrs Beckett, one of Labour's most experienced MPs, confirmed earlier that she would join the growing list of MPs hoping to replace Michael Martin.Mrs Beckett, one of Labour's most experienced MPs, confirmed earlier that she would join the growing list of MPs hoping to replace Michael Martin.
She believes she has the experience to deal with problems facing Parliament in the wake of the expenses scandal.She believes she has the experience to deal with problems facing Parliament in the wake of the expenses scandal.
On Monday nine MPs are to take part in hustings for the Speaker job organised by the Hansard Society.On Monday nine MPs are to take part in hustings for the Speaker job organised by the Hansard Society.
Mrs Beckett is the third MP on Wednesday to announce she is standing for the job - her Labour colleague Parmjit Dhanda and the Conservative deputy Speaker Sir Michael Lord announced earlier they were standing.
Speaker pressure
She was the first woman to serve as deputy leader of the Labour Party and the first woman foreign secretary under Tony Blair.
She was replaced by David Miliband in Gordon Brown's first reshuffle but returned to the government as a housing minister the following year.
Michael Martin's decision to stand down as Speaker in May after nearly nine years in the role, came amidst pressure over his handling of the MPs' expenses furore.
Several MPs stood up to tell him he had to make way for a Speaker who could help the Commons reform itself.
Mrs Beckett has faced some questions about her own expenses - she claimed second home allowances of £72,537 from 2004 to 2008, despite having no mortgage or rent to pay on her constituency home and living in a grace and favour flat for part of the time.
She has defended them, saying grace and favour homes are not rent free and said MPs incur "extra costs that people even in comparable jobs do not have".
Among people taking part in hustings for the role are the Conservative chairman of the Commons standards and privileges committee Sir George Young, Lib Dem Sir Alan Beith and Labour's Frank Field.
Tory MP Sir Alan Haselhurst, veteran Tory Sir Patrick Cormack and Tory backbenchers Richard Shepherd and John Bercow, will also take part in the hustings.
Conservative Ann Widdecombe has said she would be prepared to do it on an interim basis.