Who Is John Bercow’s Wife?
His wife is Sally Bercow (m. 2002)
How old?, Bio details and Wiki
John Bercow (John Simon Bercow) grew up on 19 January, 1963 in Edgware, is a British politician and former Speaker of the House of Commons (2009–2019). Find John Bercow’s Bio details, How old?, How tall, Physical Stats, Romance/Affairs, Family and career upbeen in a relationship with?s. Know net worth is He in this year and how He do with money?? Know how He earned most of networth at the age of 57 years of age.
Famous for | John Simon Bercow |
Business | N/A |
How old? | 58 years of age. |
Zodiac Sign | Capricorn |
Born | 19 January 1963 |
Born day | 19 January |
Birthplace | Edgware |
Nationality |
Famous people list on 19 January.
He is a member of famous Former with the age 58 years of age./b> group.
John Bercow How tall, Weight & Measurements
At 58 years of age. John Bercow height is 1.68 m .
BIO | |
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How tall | 1.68 m |
Weight | Not Available |
Body Size | Not Available |
Color of the eyes | Not Available |
Color of hair | Not Available |
Who Is John Bercow’s Wife?
His wife is Sally Bercow (m. 2002)
Family | |
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Parents | Not Available |
Wife | Sally Bercow (m. 2002) |
Sibling | Not Available |
Children | Oliver Bercow, Jemima Bercow, Freddie Bercow |
John Bercow income
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2021-2021. So, how much is John Bercow worth at the age of 58 years of age. John Bercow’s income source is mostly from being a successful Former. Born and raised in . We have estimated John Bercow’s net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
income in 2021 | $1 Million – $5 Million |
Wage in 2021 | Reviewing |
income in 2019 | Pending |
Wage in 2019 | Reviewing |
House | Not Available |
Cars | Not Available |
Source of Net Worth | Former |
John Bercow Social Network
IG username | |
Twitter Account name | |
FB account name | John Bercow FB account name |
On wiki | John Bercow On wiki |
Imdb |
Life time
His autolife story, Unspeakable, was published in 2021.
Following the resignation of Speaker Michael Martin in June 2009, Bercow stood in the election to replace him and was successful. He went on to be re-elected Speaker unopposed at the start of the new Parliaments in 2010, 2015 and 2017. This made him the first Speaker since the Second World War to have been elected four times, as well as the first since then to have served alongside four Prime Ministers. In September 2019, Bercow declared that he would stand down as Commons Speaker and MP on 31 October; he remained Speaker until being appointed to the Manor of Northstead on 4 November 2019. Having served 10 years as Speaker, Bercow became the longest-serving Speaker since Edward FitzRoy, who served nearly 15 years in post between 1928 and 1943.
In January 2019, Bercow broke with convention, allowing a vote on an amendment to a government business motion. The amendment, tabled by Dominic Grieve MP, required the Prime Minister (Theresa May) to table a motion within three days on proposed alternative plans if her Brexit deal was rejected by Parliament.
On 18 March 2019, Bercow, in a statement to the House, pre-empted a move by the Government to bring the UK/EU Withdrawal Agreement for a third vote. Citing a convention which been in a relationship with?s back to 1604, Bercow stated that he would not allow a vote on a motion which was “substantially the same” as a previously rejected motion.
In October 2018, it was reported that Bercow intended to step down as Speaker in the summer of 2019, but in January 2019 it was reported that he planned to stay as Speaker until the end of the parliament, in 2022. On 9 September 2019, amid debates about Brexit and parliament being prorogued, Bercow declared to the House of Commons that he would stand down on 31 October, or at the next general election, whichever was sooner; the former applied.
On 4 November 2019, Bercow was appointed by Chancellor of the Exchequer Sajid Javid as Steward and Bailiff of the Manor of Northstead, immediately ceasing to be an MP.
On 6 November 2019, Bercow gave a speech in London to the Foreign Press Association stating that he “think[s] that Brexit is the biggest foreign policy mistake in the post-war period, and that is my honest view.” This led to further questions about Bercow’s impartiality during the Brexit parliamentary debates. He maintained that he was fair in treating Remainers and Leavers during the debates, and only made his views clear once he didn’t need to be impartial anymore.
In May 2018, Bercow’s former private secretary Angus Sinclair alleged on the BBC’s Newsnight programme that Bercow had repeatedly bullied him while at work. Sinclair said that he was told to sign a non-disclosure agreement when he left his post, to prevent him revealing Bercow’s bullying. Bercow denied the claims. In January 2021, Lord Lisvane, who served as Clerk of the House of Commons under Bercow, submitted a formal complaint to the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards. The submission is understood by The Times and the BBC to allege that Bercow bullied his staff. The same month, Lisvane’s complaint was followed up by a further accusation of bullying, made by the former Black Rod, Lieutenant-General David Leakey.
In October 2018, Bercow had called for an independent body to be set up to investigate allegations of harassment and bullying in Parliament, after facing calls to quit after a report said harassment had been tolerated and concealed for years which he denies. On 23 October 2018, three Conservative MPs, Will Quince, Mims Davies and Anne Milton, resigned from the Commons Reference Group on Representation and Inclusion, which is chaired by Bercow, and cited Bercow’s handling of bullying and sexual harassment allegations in Parliament as the reason for doing so.
In February 2017, Bercow said he had supported continued membership of the European Union in the 2016 referendum.
On 6 February 2017, Bercow said in the house that he would be “strongly opposed” to US President Donald Trump addressing the Houses of Parliament during his planned state visit to the UK, and told MPs that “opposition to racism and sexism” were “hugely important considerations”. The comments proved controversial and made the headlines in many UK newspapers the following day, with some such as Guardian columnist Owen Jones, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, Labour MP Dennis Skinner and Liberal Democrat leader Tim Farron supporting this intervention. His comments were criticised even by some opponents of Trump (such as Conservative MP Nadhim Zahawi), however, for being hypocritical and undermining the Speaker’s neutrality, and some in the government reportedly felt that Bercow had overstepped his role. John Whittingdale, the Conservative MP for Maldon and a former Culture Secretary, dismissed Bercow’s remarks as “playing to the gallery for as much publicity as possible”, and Bercow himself apologised to the Lord Speaker Lord Fowler over a lack of consultation over his remarks.
Following the 2017 general election, John Bercow was unanimously re-elected as Speaker of the House by members of parliament on 13 June 2017.
In July 2015, Bercow was again criticised for the amount of his expenses, including a claim of £172 for a 0.7-mile chauffeur-driven journey. Andy Silvester, campaign director at the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said: “This is an obscene waste of money and shows appalling judgment from whoever made the arrangements.”
Bercow was returned as an MP in the 2015 general election. The election was notable for the 1,289 spoilt ballot papers, an issue he addressed in his victory speech.
On 26 March 2015, the House of Commons defeated a government motion (introduced by former Conservative party leader and then leader of the House of Commons William Hague) to require there to be a secret ballot vote on whether Bercow remain speaker after the 2015 general election. A number of MPs described it as an underhand plot to oust Bercow, largely based on the timing of the motion just before the dissolution of Parliament, when some Labour MPs expected to oppose it had already returned to their constituencies. In the event, Bercow was re-elected unopposed as Speaker following the general election.
In 2014, Bercow was appointed Chancellor of the University of Bedfordshire, and in July 2017 he was appointed Chancellor of the University of Essex. In January 2021, he became part-time professor of politics at Royal Holloway, University of London.
It was revealed in 2014 that the House of Commons authorities had destroyed all evidence of MPs’ expenses claims prior to 2010. Bercow faced accusations that he had presided over what had been dubbed a “fresh cover-up” of the expenses scandal.
In the first round of the election on 22 June, Bercow received 179 votes – more than any other candibeen in a relationship with?, but short of the majority required for victory. In the third and final round of voting later that day, he defeated George Young by 322 votes to 271, and was approved by the Queen at 10 pm that night as the 157th Speaker. In accordance with convention, he rescinded his Conservative party membership.
Bercow won the Stonewall award for Politician of the Year in 2010 for his work to support equality for lesbian, gay and bisexual people. He was given a score of 100% in favour of lesbian, gay and bisexual equality by Stonewall.
The Speaker of the House of Commons is traditionally seen as outside party politics, and is often not challenged by the main parties at general elections, including the 2010 general election. In September 2009, Nigel Farage resigned his leadership of the UK Independence Party (UKIP) to stand for Bercow’s Buckingham seat, asserting, “This man represents all that is wrong with British politics today. He was embroiled in the expenses saga and he presides over a Parliament that virtually does nothing.” John Stevens, another candibeen in a relationship with?, found support for his campaign from the former Independent MP Martin Bell. Bercow also faced opposition from the British National Party and the Christian Party.
During the 2009 expenses scandal, it was revealed that Bercow changed the designation of his second home on more than one occasion – meaning that he avoided paying capital gains tax on the sale of two properties. He also claimed just under £1,000 to hire an accountant to fill in his tax returns. Bercow denied any wrongdoing, but agreed to pay £6,508 to cover any tax that he may have had to pay to HM Revenue and Customs.
Bercow had long campaigned quietly to become Speaker and was touted as a successor to Michael Martin. On 20 May 2009, he officially declared to stand in the Speakership election, which had been triggered by Martin’s resignation, and launched his manifesto for the job. In reference to his decision to stand, Bercow said: “I wanted it because I felt that there was a task to be undertaken and that’s about strengthening backbench involvement and opportunity in parliament, and helping parliament get off its knees and recognise that it isn’t just there as a rubber-stamping operation for the government of the day, and as necessary and appropriate to contradict and expose the government of the day.”
In October 2009, Bercow chaired the United Kingdom Youth Parliament’s first annual sitting in the House of Commons, making them the only group except members of parliament to sit in the chamber. He chaired every subsequent sitting and attended every annual conference until his resignation in 2019, addressing and supporting Members of Youth Parliament from across the UK.
In 2008, Bercow was asked by Labour cabinet members Ed Balls and Alan Johnson to produce a substantial review of children and families affected by speech, language and communication needs (SLCN). After the report, the government pledged £52 million to raise the profile of SLCN within the education field.
Until 2008/09 Bercow usually claimed the maximum available amount for the ‘Additional Costs Allowance’ to pay for the cost of staying away from his main home. In 2007/08 and 2008/09 his total expenses were amongst the lowest claimed by MPs (coming 631st and 640th, respectively, out of 645 and 647).
Following the defection of Conservative MP Quentin Davies to the Labour Party in June 2007, there were persistent rumours that Bercow was likely to be the next Conservative MP to leave the party.
Bercow did not defect to Labour, but in September 2007, accepted an advisory post on Gordon Brown’s government’s review of support for children with speech, language and communication special needs. The Conservative Party chairman, Caroline Spelman, confirmed that this appointment was with the consent of the Conservative Party. Bercow had a long-term interest in this topic, as his son Oliver has been diagnosed with autism.
In 2005, Bercow won the Channel Four/Hansard Society Political Award for ‘Opposition MP of the Year’. He said:
In November 2003, the new Conservative leader Michael Howard appointed Bercow as Shadow Secretary of State for International Development. However, he went on to clash with Howard over taxes, immigration and Iraq, and was sacked from the front bench in September 2004 after telling Howard that Ann Widdecombe was right to have said that there was “something of the night about him”. Bercow has a long-standing interest in Burma and frequently raised issues of democracy and genocide in the country. In 2006 he was made a patron of the Tory Reform Group. In 2001, he supported the ban on MPs becoming members of the Monday Club.
Bercow married Sally Illman in 2002 after 13 years of an “on-off” relationship, and they have three children. Their elder son, Oliver, has autism. His wife, who used to be a Conservative, switched to supporting the Labour Party, campaigning for both her husband individually and Labour in the wider election in 1997. Bercow and those close to him reject the view that she was especially influential in changing his political views. Bercow has spoken of “periods of turbulence” in the marriage—Sally left him for a time and had an affair with his cousin Alan Bercow, after which he made preparations to Separation from spouse her—but described his wife as “a rock”. Both he and his wife are teetotal.
Bercow rose quickly through the opposition’s junior offices. He was appointed a frontbench spokesman for Education and Employment in June 1999, and then a frontbench spokesman for Home Affairs in July 2000, before being brought into the shadow cabinet in 2001 by the Conservative leader Iain Duncan Smith. He served as Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury from September 2001 to July 2002, and as Shadow Minister for Work and Pensions from July to November 2002. During this first spell on the front benches, Bercow publicly said that he did not think he was ruthless enough to reach the top of politics. In November 2002, when the Labour government introduced the Adoption and Children Act, which would allow unmarried gay and heterosexual couples to adopt children, Duncan Smith imposed a three-line whip requiring Conservative MPs to vote against the bill, rather than allowing a free vote. Arguing that it should be a free vote, Bercow defied the whips and voted with Labour, then resigned from the front bench. As a backbencher he was openly critical of Duncan Smith’s leadership.
Bercow was first elected to parliament in the 1997 general election as the MP for Buckingham with a majority of 12,386. He then increased his majority at the 2001 general election being elected by a margin of 18,129 votes. He was re-elected at the 2005 general election, but with a reduced majority of 12,529.
In 1995, Bercow was appointed as a special adviser to the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Jonathan Aitken. After Aitken’s resignation to fight a libel action, Bercow served as a special adviser to the Secretary of State for National Heritage, Virginia Bottomley.
After a spell in merchant banking, Bercow joined the lobbying firm Rowland Sallingbury Casey (part of Saatchi & Saatchi) in 1988, becoming a board director within five years. With fellow Conservative Julian Lewis, Bercow ran an advanced speaking and campaigning course for over 10 years, which trained over 600 Conservatives (including several current MPs) in campaigning and communication techniques. He has also lectured in the US to students of the Leadership Institute.
Bercow was an unsuccessful Conservative candibeen in a relationship with? in the 1987 general election in Motherwell South, and again at the 1992 general election in Bristol South. In 1996 he paid £1,000 to charter a helicopter so that he could attend the selection meetings for two safe Conservative parliamentary seats on the same day – Buckingham and Surrey Heath – and was selected as the candibeen in a relationship with? for Buckingham. He has referred to the hiring of the helicopter as “the best £1,000 I have ever spent”.
He served as a councillor in the London Borough of Lambeth from 1986 to 1990 and unsuccessfully contested parliamentary seats in the 1987 and 1992 general elections, before being elected for Buckingham in 1997. Promoted to the Shadow Cabinet in 2001, Bercow held posts under Iain Duncan Smith and Michael Howard. In November 2002, he resigned over a dispute concerning his support for same-sex adoption, but returned a year later, only to be dismissed from the Shadow Cabinet in 2004. Having initially been strongly associated with the right-wing faction of his party, his views shifted over time; by 2009 there were rumours that he would defect to the Labour Party, although Bercow denied these.
After graduating from the University of Essex, Bercow was elected as the last national chairman of the Federation of Conservative Students (FCS), 1986–87. The FCS was then broken up by the chairman of the Conservative Party, Norman Tebbit, after one of its members had accused previous Tory PM Harold Macmillan of war crimes in extraditing Cossacks to the Soviet Union. Bercow attracted the attention of the Conservative leadership, and in 1987 he was appointed by Tebbit as vice-chairman of the Conservative Collegiate Forum (the successor organisation of the FCS) to head the campaign for student support in the run-up to the 1987 general election.
In 1986, Bercow was elected as a Conservative councillor in the London Borough of Lambeth, and served for four years representing the Streatham, St Leonard’s ward. In 1987, he was appointed the youngest deputy group leader in the United Kingdom.
Bercow graduated with a first-class honours degree in government from the University of Essex in 1985. Anthony King, a professor at the university, has said about Bercow that “When he was a student here, he was very right-wing, pretty stroppy, and very good. He was an outstanding student.” As a young activist, Bercow was a member of the right-wing Conservative Monday Club. He stood as a candibeen in a relationship with? for the club’s national executive in 1981 with a manifesto calling for a programme of “assisted repatriation” of immigrants, and became secretary of its immigration and repatriation committee. However, at the age of 20 he left the club, citing the views of many of the club’s members as his reason, and has since then called his participation in the club “utter madness” and dismissed his views from that period as “bone headed”.
Bercow grew up in Edgware, Middlesex, the son of Brenda (Bailey) and Charles Bercow, a taxi driver. His father grew up to a Jewish family and his mother converted to Judaism. His paternal grandparents were Jews who arrived in Britain from Romania in the early 20th century. Having settled in the UK, the family anglicised its surname from Berkowitz to Bercow. Bercow attended Frith Manor Primary School in Woodside Park, and Finchley Manorhill, a large comprehensive school in North Finchley. In his youth, Bercow had been a successful junior tennis player, but was too short to go professional. In 1975 he appeared on the UK children’s television series Crackerjack!
Bercow has been a fan of Arsenal F.C. since January 1971 and is a season ticket holder. He always attends games with his son. In 2014 his book Tennis Maestros: The Twenty Greatest Male Tennis Players of All Time was published by Biteback Publishing.
John Simon Bercow (/ˈ b ɜːr k oʊ / ; born 19 January 1963) is a British politician who served as Speaker of the House of Commons from 2009 to 2019, and as Member of Parliament (MP) for Buckingham between 1997 and 2019. He was the first MP who was elected Speaker without previously serving as a Deputy Speaker since Selwyn Lloyd in 1971. Prior to his election as Speaker, he was a Conservative MP.
To mark the centenary of the Parliament Act 1911, Bercow commissioned a series of lectures about the main political figures of the century. The Speaker’s Lectures continue with a variety of topics such as historic parliamentarians and current affairs.