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SOLOMON ISLANDS INDEPENDENCE ORDER 1978

(L.N. NO. 43 OF 1978)

 

THE STANDING ORDERS OF THE NATIONAL PARLIAMENT OF SOLOMON ISLANDS

(Section 62 of the Constitution)

 

In accordance with Section 62 of the Constitution the National Parliament of Solomon Islands hereby makes the following Standing Orders -

Part
A
Title
INTERPRETATION
1. INTERPRETATION
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  1. In these Orders, unless the context otherwise requires -
    • "Clerk" means the Clerk of the Parliament and includes any assistant to the Clerk acting as such on the authority of the Speaker;
    • "the Constitution" means the Constitution of Solomon Islands set out in the Schedule to the Solomon Islands Independence Order 1978;
    • "Mace" means the mace of Parliament;
    • "Member" means a Member of Parliament elected in accordance with section 47 of the Constitution;
    • "Minister" means a member of the Cabinet;
    • "Parliament" means the National Parliament of Solomon Islands;
    • "Speaker" means any person presiding in Parliament in accordance with section 65 of the Constitution;
  2. In these Orders, unless the context otherwise requires, reference to printing shall include all mechanical, electrical and photographic methods of reproducing words in visible form.
  3. Subject to the provisions of paragraph (1) of this order, expressions used in these Orders shall, unless the context otherwise requires, have the same meanings as in the Constitution.
Part
B
Title
MEMBERS AND OFFICERS OF PARLIAMENT
2. OATH OR AFFIRMATION OF ALLEGIANCE
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  1. No Member shall be permitted to take part in the proceedings of Parliament (other than proceedings necessary for the purposes of this order and section 63 of the Constitution) until he has made the oath or affirmation of allegiance prescribed by that section.
  2. On the first day of the first session of a new Parliament the Clerk shall administer the oath or affirmation of allegiance to each Member by calling before him in alphabetical order the Members elected to serve in that Parliament.
  3. The Clerk shall administer the oath or affirmation of allegiance prescribed by section 63 of the Constitution to any Member who has during the course of a session been elected to serve in Parliament at the first sitting at which such Member attends.
3. LANGUAGE
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  1. Subject to paragraph (2) of this order, the proceedings and debates of Parliament shall be in the English language or in pidgin.
  2. Every petition, bill, motion, paper, written question, report, declaration of interest and notice, and every amendment thereof, shall be in the English language.

 

4. PRESIDING IN PARLIAMENT AND IN COMMITTEE OF WHOLE HOUSE
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  1. Any question as to who shall preside at sittings of Parliament and sittings of a Committee of the whole House shall be determined in accordance with section 65 of the Constitution.
  2. The person presiding shall be known and addressed as the Speaker.
  3. Whenever Parliament resolves itself into a Committee of the whole House, the Speaker shall leave his chair and seat himself at the Clerk's table as chairman of the Committee; and when Parliament resumes he shall return to his chair.
  4. The person presiding in Parliament or acting as chairman of a Committee of the whole House shall while so presiding or acting enjoy all the powers conferred by these Orders on the Speaker.
  5. During sittings of Parliament the mace shall be on the Clerk's table and during sittings of a Committee of the whole House it shall be under the Clerk's table.
Part
C
Title
SESSIONS, MEETINGS, SITTINGS AND ADJOURNMENTS OF PARLIAMENT
7. COMMENCEMENT OF SESSIONS AND MEETINGS
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  1. Each session of Parliament shall be held at such place and on such days and shall begin at such time as the Governor-General may appoint in accordance with section 72 of the Constitution.
  2. Written notice of every meeting of Parliament shall be given to Members by the Clerk at least thirteen clear days before the day of the meeting except in the case of the first meeting following the constitution or the re-constitution of Parliament or in a case of emergency where the Governor-General, acting on the advice of the Prime Minister, may dispense with such notice in which event the longest possible notice shall be given.
  3. The Governor-General may, after consultation with the Prime Minister, at any time after he has determined the day and time upon which a meeting is to begin, change the day or time so determined to a later day or time, or in cases of emergency to an earlier day or time.
  4. At the first sitting of any meeting the Governor-General, on the invitation of the Prime Minister, may deliver a speech to Parliament.
  5. Immediately after the Governor-General has delivered such a speech, the sitting may be suspended for such period or Parliament may be adjourned until such day as the Speaker may determine.
  6. At the resumption of the sitting, or on the day to which Parliament is adjourned under paragraph (5) of this order, a motion may be moved without notice for an address of thanks to the Governor-General for his speech.
  7. A motion under paragraph (6) of this order shall be moved in the following form-
    • That an address be presented to His Excellency the Governor-General as follows -
    • "We, the National Parliament of Solomon Islands here assembled, beg leave to offer thanks for the speech which has been addressed by you to Parliament.”
  8. Amendments may be moved to the motion described in paragraph (7) of this order only by way of adding words at the end of the motion.
8. CONCLUSION OF SESSIONS AND MEETINGS
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  1. A session shall be concluded when Parliament is prorogued by the Governor-General in accordance with section 73(1) of the Constitution.
  2. A meeting shall be concluded by the adjournment of Parliament for the conclusion of the meeting.
  3. A motion to determine the day for the conclusion of a session or meeting shall only be moved by a Minister and in the following terms-
    • "That at the adjournment of Parliament on (here the date for conclusion of the meeting shall be entered) the present meeting shall be concluded and Parliament shall then stand adjourned sine die.”
  4. No amendment to the motion described in the foregoing paragraph shall be in order save only an amendment to substitute another date for the date mentioned in the motion and any debate on the motion shall be confined to the substance of the motion.
9. DAYS OF SITTING
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  1. During the course of a meeting, unless it has been previously decided otherwise on a motion moved by a Minister, Parliament shall sit on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays, other than public holidays.
  2. A motion moved under paragraph (1) of this order may provide that-
    1. Parliament shall sit on any Saturday, Sunday or public holiday named in the motion;
    2. Parliament shall not sit on any day or days named in the motion.
  3. Whenever Parliament adjourned to the next sitting day as determined by paragraphs (1) and (2) of this order, unless adjourned under the provisions of order 8 is adjourned, it shall stand.
10. HOURS OF SITTING
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  1. Every sitting other than the first sitting of a meeting shall begin at 9.30 a.m.
  2. At 4.30 p.m. the proceedings on any business under consideration shall be interrupted, any motion which has been moved in pursuance of order 35 shall lapse and if Parliament is in committee the Speaker shall return to his chair:
    • Provided that if the Speaker is of opinion that the proceedings on which Parliament is engaged could be concluded by a short deferment of the moment of interruption, he may in his discretion defer interrupting the business.
  3. If a division is in progress at 4.30 p.m. the business shall not be interrupted until after the declaration of the result of the division.
  4. Save as provided in paragraph (4) of order 11, no further business shall be entered upon after the interruption of business under paragraph (2) of this order.
  5. The Speaker may at any time suspend a sitting or adjourn Parliament and if he shall adjourn Parliament, Parliament shall stand adjourned in accordance with order 9.
  6. A motion moved with the consent of the Speaker to suspend this order in accordance with order 81, and passed shall permit the continuation of the business of the House until adjourned by the Speaker under the foregoing paragraph of this order or, where such motion so states, shall permit the commencement of a specified sitting before 9.30 a.m.
11. MOTIONS FOR THE ADJOURNMENT OF PARLIAMENT
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  1. When for any sufficient reason it is not desired to formulate a motion in express terms for the purpose of debating a matter or matters, a motion that Parliament do now adjourn may be moved for the purpose of such debate.
  2. Such a motion shall not require notice but shall not be moved except between two items of business and then only by a Minister.
  3. If such a motion shall be agreed to, Parliament shall stand adjourned in accordance with order 9.
  4. After the interruption of business under paragraph (2) of order 10 or at the conclusion of all the business on the Order Paper, whichever is the earlier, a Minister may move that Parliament do now adjourn.
  5. On a motion moved under paragraph (4) of this order a Member who is not a Minister and who has obtained the right to do so, may raise any public matter for which the Government is responsible with a view to eliciting a reply from a Minister.
  6. A Member who wishes to raise a matter under the provisions of paragraph (5) of this order shall give notice of the matter in writing to the Speaker not less than one clear day before the sitting at which he wishes to do so:
    • Provided that the Speaker may in his discretion dispense with such notice.
  7. If at the expiration of twenty minutes from the moving of the motion under paragraph (4) of this order a Minister has not yet been called upon to reply, the Speaker shall direct the Member then speaking to resume his seat and shall call upon a Minister to reply.
  8. If at the expiration of thirty minutes from the moving of the motion under paragraph (4) of this order such motion has not been agreed to, the Speaker shall adjourn Parliament without putting any question.
12. QUORUM
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  1. Any question as to the quorum of Parliament and of a committee of the whole House shall be determined in accordance with section 67 of the Constitution as supplemented by this order.
  2. For the purpose of section 67 of the Constitution, the interval after which the Speaker may ascertain the number of Members present shall be fifteen minutes (during which the Speaker may leave the chair) and if the Speaker adjourns Parliament is pursuance of section 67, he shall do so without the question being put and Parliament shall then stand adjourned to the next sitting day in accordance with order 9.
  3. If objections are taken under section 67 of the Constitution in committee of the whole House, paragraph (2) of this order shall apply, save that if the Speaker is satisfied that a quorum is not then present he shall leave the chair of the committee and Parliament shall be resumed prior to being adjourned in accordance with paragraph (2) of this order.
Part
D
Title
ARRANGEMENT OF BUSINESS
13. ORDER OF BUSINESS AT SITTING
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  1. The business of each sitting other than the first sitting of a meeting shall be transacted in the following order-
    1. Prayers
    2. Administration of oaths or affirmations
    3. Reading by the Speaker of messages and announcements
    4. Presentation of petitions
    5. Presentation of papers and of reports of Select Committees by laying them on the Table
    6. Asking and answering of questions put to Government
    7. Statements by Ministers
    8. Statements on business by or on behalf of the Prime Minister or Chairman of the Business Committee
    9. Personal explanations
    10. Obituary and other ceremonial speeches
    11. Raising of matters of privilege
    12. Proceedings on motions and bills.
  2. The items of business mentioned in sub-paragraphs (b), (c), (d), (e), (g), (h), (i), (j) and (k) of paragraph (1) of this order shall not require notice; but with the exception of sub-paragraphs (b) and (c) they shall not be entered upon save with the previous leave of the Speaker.
14. THE ORDER PAPER
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  1. All items of business of which notice has been given shall be placed on the Order Paper in the order required by order 13.
  2. Oral questions to the Government shall be placed on the Order Paper in accordance with the provisions of paragraph (1) of order 23.
  3. Proceedings on motions and on Bills shall be placed on the Order Paper in accordance with the provisions of order 15.
15. ARRANGEMENT OF MOTIONS AND BILLS
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  1. Subject to the provisions of these Orders, the motions and Bills to be considered by Parliament on any day shall be determined as laid down in this order.
  2. The Prime Minister shall determine the motions or Bills to be considered on any day except Friday or any other day allocated by him and the order in which they shall be set down upon the Order Paper.
  3. On Fridays or any other day allocated under the provisions of paragraph (2) of this order the Business Committee[i] shall determine the motions proposed to be made by and the Bills in charge of Members who are not Ministers to be considered and the order in which these shall be set down upon the Order Paper:
      Provided that-
    1. the number of motions to be moved on any one day be limited to not more than twelve;
    2. when the number of motions of which notice has been given exceeds twelve in number the Business Committee may decide which motions should be deferred to a subsequent day in the same meeting, what priority should be given to such deferred motions for later debate, or that time should not be allocated for debate on any motion during a particular meeting in which case the said motion shall lapse unless further notice is given by the Member concerned to the Clerk that he wishes to move the motion at a subsequent meeting;
    3. if in the opinion of the Business Committee there are insufficient such motions or Bills to occupy the time of Parliament on any Friday, the Business Committee may direct that there be set down to follow such motions or Bills upon the Order Paper such other motions or Bills as the Prime Minister may request.
  4. At the beginning of each meeting and on Friday of each week, statements shall be made by or on behalf of the Prime Minister and the Chairman of the Business Committee informing Parliament, so far as is practicable, of the motions and Bills arranged to be considered on each day of the following week.
  5. The Prime Minister may on any day make a further statement informing Parliament of any changes in, or additions to, the arrangement of motions and Bills already announced in accordance with paragraph (4) of this order.
Part
E
Title
PETITIONS AND PAPERS
16. PRESENTATION OF PETITIONS
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  1. A petition may be presented to Parliament only by a Member.
  2. A Member who wishes to present a petition to Parliament shall inform the Speaker not later than the day before the sitting at which he wishes to present it. When so informing the Speaker he shall certify in writing to the Speaker that the petition is respectful and in his opinion deserving of presentation.
  3. Except on the recommendation of the Cabinet the Speaker shall not permit a petition to be received, if in his opinion the petition requests that provision be made for any of the purposes set out in section 60 of the Constitution.
  4. The signification of the Cabinet's recommendation shall be recorded in the minutes of proceedings.
  5. No speech shall be made by a Member when presenting a petition other than a brief statement of the number and description of the petitioners and the substance of the petition.
  6. If immediately after the petition has been presented a Member rises in his place and requests that the petition be referred to a Special Select Committee, the Speaker shall call upon those Members who support the request to rise in their places. If the total number, including the Member who first rose, who have then risen is not less than half the Members the petition shall stand referred to a Special Select Committee.
17. PRESENTATION OF PAPERS
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  1. In this order "paper" means any account, paper, return, order, statement or other document which is ordinarily laid upon the Table at the time appointed by order 13.
  2. A paper may be presented to Parliament by either-
    1. a Minister;
    2. any other Member authorised so to do by the House; or
    3. any other person authorised or required by law so to do.
  3. Whenever a Minister or other Member or person authorised or required by law so to do wishes to present a paper he shall send a copy of it to the Clerk who shall lay it on the only by cable at the opening of the next sitting and shall record its presentation in the minutes of proceedings of that sitting.
18. DEBATE UPON PAPERS PRESENTED
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  1. At any time after the recording of the presentation of a paper as mentioned in sub-paragraphs (a) and (b) of paragraph (2) of order 17 the Minister or other Member who presented the paper or, in the case of a paper presented as mentioned in subparagraph (c) of that paragraph, any Member may give notice of a motion that Parliament resolve itself into a committee of the whole House to consider the paper. Debate upon such motion shall be confined to the general principles set forth in the paper.
  2. If a motion under paragraph (1) of this order be agreed to, Parliament shall resolve itself into committee. Debate in committee may extend over all the details contained in the paper, which shall be discussed paragraph by paragraph unless otherwise decided by the Speaker having regard to the convenience of the committee. No question shall be put on, nor any amendment proposed to, any part of the paper and at the conclusion of the debate no question shall be put save that the Minister or other Member who moved the motion do report to Parliament that the committee has considered the paper.
  3. As soon as the Minister or other Member who moved the motion has reported that the committee has considered the paper, a motion may be made forthwith, or on a later day after notice, that Parliament agrees to the proposals contained in the paper.
  4. Any Member may, if the Minister or other Member who presented the paper has not given notice of a motion in accordance with paragraph (1) of this order, ask a question or move a motion relating thereto in accordance with these Orders.
Part
F
Title
QUESTIONS TO THE GOVERNMENT
19. NATURE OF QUESTIONS
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Any Member who is not a Minister may address a question to the Government relating to a public matter for which the Government is responsible, either seeking information on such matter or asking for official action with regard to it.

20. QUESTION DAYS
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  1. Questions may be asked on any sitting day other than at the first sitting of a meeting and on Fridays.
  2. On any question day not more than twelve questions may be asked and so far as practicable Members shall be afforded equal opportunity of asking questions.
  3. Notwithstanding paragraph (2) of this order a questions which the Speaker has permitted to be asked in accordance wide paragraph (4) of order 21 may be asked on any sitting day.
21. NOTICE OF QUESTIONS
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  1. A question shall not be asked without notice except as provided in paragraph (4) of this order.
  2. A Member shall give notice of a question by delivering to the office of the Clerk a copy thereof signed by him.
  3. A Member may not ask more than two questions of which notice has been given on any one question day.
  4. If a Member asks the permission of the Speaker to ask a question without notice on the ground that it is of an urgent character and relates to a matter of public importance or to the arrangement of business, the Speaker may permit the question to be asked without notice, if he is satisfied that it is of that nature and that sufficient private notice of the question has been or is to be given by the Member concerned to the Government to enable the question to be answered.
  5. Notice of a question may specify that the answer thereto may be given in writing.
22. CONTENT OF QUESTIONS
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  1. A question shall conform to the following rules-
    1. A question shall not include the names of persons or any statement other than those necessary to make the question intelligible.
    2. A question shall not contain a statement which the Member who asks the question is not prepared to substantiate.
    3. A question shall not contain arguments, inferences, expressions of opinion, imputations, epithets or tendentious, ironical or offensive expressions.
    4. A question shall not refer to debates or answers to questions in the current meeting.
    5. A question shall not refer to proceedings in a Select Committee before that Committee has made its report to Parliament.
    6. A question shall not seek information about a matter which is of its nature secret.
    7. A question shall not reflect on the decision of a court of law or be so framed as to be likely to prejudice a case pending in a court of law.
    8. A question shall not be asked for the purpose of obtaining an expression of opinion, the solution of an abstract legal question, or the answer to a hypothetical proposition.
    9. A question shall not be asked whether statements in the press or of private individuals or private concerns are accurate.
    10. A question shall not be asked about the character or conduct of any person mentioned in paragraphs (7) and (8) of order 36 and a question shall not be asked about the character or conduct of any other person except in his official or public capacity.
    11. A question shall not be asked seeking information which can be found in accessible documents or ordinary works of reference.
    12. A question which has already been set down or has been fully answered shall not be asked again during the same meeting.
  2. If the Speaker is of the opinion that a question of which a Member has given notice to the Clerk, or which a Member has sought to ask without notice, infringes any of the provisions of order 19 or of this order he may direct-
    1. that it be placed on the Order Paper with such alterations as he may direct; or
    2. in the case of a question which a Member has sought to ask without notice, that it may be so asked with such alterations as he may direct; or
    3. that the Member concerned be informed that the question is out of order.
23. ASKING AND ANSWERING OF QUESTIONS
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  1. Every question in respect of which a Member has given due notice under the provisions of order 21 and which complies with the provisions of order 19 and order 22 shall be put on the Order Paper for a question day not being earlier than four clear days during which the House sits after the question has appeared on the Notice Paper.
  2. The questions to be asked on each question day shall, subject to the provisions of paragraph (2) of order 20, be placed on the Order Paper by the Clerk in the order in which they appear on the Notice Paper, and in the order indicated by the Member:  Provided that questions which specify that the answer may be given in writing shall be placed after questions which do not so specify.
  3. Subject to paragraph (4) of this order when each question is reached on the Order Paper the Speaker shall call on the Member in whose name the question stands. The Member called shall then rise in his place and ask the question by reference to its number on the Order Paper and the Minister who is to answer it shall give his reply.
  4. When any question specifies that the answer may be given in writing it shall be sufficient reply for the Minister to state that the question has been so answered prior to the commencement of proceedings on the day of sitting at which the question is reached and thereupon the answer in writing shall be deemed to be read into the minutes of proceedings.
  5. After the Minister has given an answer to a question any Member may put supplementary questions to him for the purpose of elucidating his answer but the Speaker shall refuse to allow a supplementary question to be answered, if in his opinion it introduces matter which is not related to the original question or answer or which infringes any of the provisions of order 19 or order 22.
  6. A Member shall not address Parliament on a question and a question shall not be made a pretext for a debate.
  7. If a Member is not present to ask his question when his name is called, the question shall be postponed until the next question day.
Part
G
Title
STATEMENTS AND RAISING OF MATTERS OF PRIVILEGE
24. STATEMENTS BY MINISTERS
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  1. A Minister who wishes to make a statement on some public matter for which the Government is responsible shall inform the Speaker of his wish before the beginning of the sitting at which he wishes to make the statement.
  2. No debate may arise on such statement but the Speaker may in his discretion allow short questions to be put to the Minister making the statement for the purpose of elucidating it.
25. MATTERS OF PRIVILEGE
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  1. A Member who wishes to raise a matter which he believes affects the privileges of Parliament may, not later than the day before the sitting at which he wishes to raise the matter, inform the Speaker of his wish, stating the facts to which he wishes to draw attention.
  2. When a Member is called by the Speaker to raise a matter of privilege he shall briefly state the facts to which he wishes to draw the attention of Parliament and the grounds on which he believes that those facts affect the privilege of parliament.
  3. The Speaker shall then state whether in his opinion the matter may or may not affect the privilege of Parliament.
  4. If the opinion of the Speaker is that the matter raised may affect the privilege of Parliament a Member may without notice move a motion based on that matter of privilege and the motion shall be debated forthwith and in priority to any business arranged in accordance with the provisions of order 15.
Part
H
Title
MOTIONS
26. NOTICE OF MOTIONS AND AMENDMENTS
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  1. Except as otherwise provided in these Orders or with the prior permission of the Speaker on grounds of public urgency no Member shall move a motion in Parliament unless such motion has appeared in the Notice Paper three clear days before the day on which it is to be considered by Parliament or a committee thereof.
  2. Except as otherwise provided in these Orders no amendment shall be moved to a motion unless either
    1. notice of the amendment has been given not later than one clear day before the day on which the motion concerned is to be considered by Parliament; or
    2. the Speaker gives leave to dispense with notice of the amendment.
  3. A Member may not, on any day upon which the Business Committee have determined that motions may be moved under paragraph (3) of order 15, move more than two motions in respect of which he shall have given notice or have received the prior permission of the Speaker under paragraph (1) of this order.
27. MANNER OF GIVING NOTICE OF MOTIONS AND AMENDMENTS
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  1. Notice of a motion or an amendment shall be given by the delivery of a copy of the proposed motion or amendment in writing signed by the Member to the Clerk who shall thereupon submit a copy to the Speaker.
  2. Subject to paragraph (3) of this order the Speaker may direct that the motion or amendment be printed in the terms in which it was submitted to him or subject to such correction of spelling, punctuation and grammatical errors as he may specify.
  3. If the Speaker is of the opinion that the proposed motion or amendment-
    1. is one which infringes, or the debate on which is likely to infringe, any of the provisions of these Orders; or
    2. is contrary to the Constitution; or
    3. is too long; or
    4. embraces more than one substantive motion or amendment; or
    5. is framed in terms which are inconsistent with the dignity of Parliament; or
    6. contains or implies allegations which in the Speaker's opinion cannot be substantiated by the Member; or
    7. contains matter which is inconsistent with paragraphs (2), (3), (4), (5), (7) or (8) of order 36; or
    8. anticipates a matter already appointed for consideration in Parliament; or
    9. is ambiguous or cannot or may not be understood, he may direct either that the motion or amendment be returned to the Member as inadmissible or that it be printed with such alterations as may be agreed with the Member.
28. MOTIONS AND AMENDMENTS REQUIRING RECOMMENDATION
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  1. In the case of a motion or amendment to a motion, the effect of which, in the opinion of the Speaker, is that provision should be made for any of the purposes set out in section 60 of the Constitution (that is to say, that such motion if carried, would require the introduction of a bill to make provision for imposing or increasing any tax, for imposing or increasing any charge on the Consolidated Fund or other funds of Solomon Islands, including aid funds which have been or might be made available to Solomon Islands or for altering any such charge otherwise than by reducing it, or for compounding or reducing any debt due to Solomon Islands), the Speaker shall first transmit the motion or amendment to the Cabinet with a request that a Minister signify whether or not he will give a recommendation for the purposes of section 60 of the Constitution, and unless the Minister so signifies, the motion or amendment shall neither be printed nor included in any Notice or Order Paper.
  2. Except upon the recommendation of the Cabinet signified by a Minister and recorded in the minutes of the proceedings, Parliament shall not proceed upon such a motion or amendment as is referred to in the preceding paragraph.
29. MANNER OF DEBATING MOTIONS
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  1. A Member called upon by the Speaker to move a motion shall rise in his place and, after making such remarks as he may wish to make, shall move the motion, stating its terms.
  2. When a motion has been moved, the Speaker shall propose the question thereon to Parliament or the committee in the same terms as the motion; debate may then take place on that question.
  3. Amendments of which notice has been given or dispensed with in accordance with paragraphs (2)(a) or (2)(b) of order 26 may be moved to a motion at any time after the question has been proposed on that motion by the Speaker; and after all the amendments have been disposed of the Speaker shall again propose the question on the motion or shall propose the question on the motion as amended, as the case may require, and a further debate may take place.
  4. When no more Members wish to speak, the Speaker shall put the question on the motion or on the motion as amended to Parliament or to the committee for its decision.
30. MANNER OF DEBATING AMENDMENTS TO MOTIONS
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  1. A Member called upon by the Speaker to move an amendment to a motion shall rise in his place and after making such remarks as he may wish to make shall move the amendment stating its terms.
  2. An amendment to a motion shall take one of the following forms -
    1. leaving out one or more of the words of the motion;
    2. inserting or adding one or more words in the motion or at the end of the motion;
    3. leaving out one or more words of the motion and inserting or adding one or more words instead.
  3. When an amendment has been moved, the Speaker shall thereupon propose the question on the amendment to Parliament or the committee and a debate may then take place on that question.
  4.  
    1. On an amendment to leave out any of the words of a motion the question proposed by the Speaker shall be that the words proposed to be left out, be left out.
    2. On an amendment to insert words in or to add words at the end of a motion, the question proposed by the Speaker shall be that those words be inserted or added.
    3. On an amendment to leave out words and insert or add other words instead, the Speaker shall propose one question only on the amendment.
    4. When two or more amendments are moved to the same motion the Speaker shall call on the movers in the order in which their amendments relate to the text of the motion, or in case of doubt, in such order as he may determine.
    5. Once the Speaker has proposed a question to leave out words of a motion, no amendment to leave out part only of those words may be proposed unless the earlier amendment is first withdrawn.
       
31. WITHDRAWAL OF MOTIONS AND AMENDMENTS
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  1. A motion or an amendment may be withdrawn at the request of the mover by leave of Parliament or the committee before the question is fully put thereon if there is no dissenting voice. A motion or amendment which has been so withdrawn may be proposed again if, in the case of a motion, notice required by these Orders is given.
  2. A notice of motion or an amendment may be withdrawn from the Notice Paper at any time before it is moved, if the Member in whose name the motion or amendment stands gives instructions to that effect to the Clerk.
Part
I
Title
RULES OF DEBATE
32. TIME AND MANNER OF SPEAKING
Text
  1. A Member shall speak standing and shall address his observations to the Speaker.
  2. When the Speaker rises, during proceedings in Parliament or in committee of the whole House, every other Member shall be seated.
  3. If two or more Members rise at the same time to speak the Speaker shall select a Member and call on him to speak.
  4. When a Member has finished speaking he shall resume his seat and any other Member wishing to speak shall then rise.
  5. A Member shall whenever possible avoid referring to another Member by name.
33. OCCASIONS WHEN A MEMBER MAY SPEAK MORE THAN ONCE
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  1. Save with the leave of the Speaker a Member may not speak more than once on a question except -
    1. in committee; or
    2. in explanation as provided in paragraph (2) of this order; or.
    3. in the case of the mover of a motion, in reply in accordance with paragraph (3) of this order.
  2. A Member who has spoken on a question may again be heard if the Speaker so permits, to explain some material part of his speech which has been misquoted or misunderstood but when speaking he shall not introduce any new matter.
  3. In Parliament the mover of a motion may reply after all the other Members present have had an opportunity of speaking and before the question is put.
  4. A Member who has spoken on a question may speak again on an amendment proposed to that question and on a motion that the debate be now adjourned, moved during the debate on that question.
  5. No Member may speak on a question after it has been fully put by the Speaker to Parliament or a committee for decision.
34. INTERRUPTIONS
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  1. A Member shall not interrupt another Member except-
    1. by rising to call attention to a point of order whereupon the Member speaking shall resume his seat and the Member interrupting shall concisely state the point which he wishes to bring to notice and submit it to the Speaker for decision; or
    2. to elucidate some matter raised by that Member in the course of his speech, if the Member speaking is willing to give way and resume his seat and the Member wishing to interrupt is called by the Speaker.
  2. The debate on a question may be interrupted-
    1. by a matter of privilege suddenly arising;
    2. by the Speaker intervening to restrain words of heat between Members;
    3. by questions of order;
    4. by a message from the Governor-General;
    5. by a Member presenting himself to take the oath of allegiance;
    6. by a motion that strangers withdraw;
    7. by objection being taken under section 67 of the Constitution that there is not a quorum present;
    8. by the making, by leave of the Speaker, of a ministerial statement.
35. ADJOURNMENT OF DEBATE OR OF PROCEEDINGS OF A COMMITTEE
Text
  1. A Member who has risen to speak on a question proposed by the Speaker may without notice move that the debate on that question be now adjourned. Thereupon the Speaker shall propose the question on that motion.
  2. When a motion that the debate be now adjourned has been carried the debate on the question then before Parliament shall stand adjourned and Parliament shall proceed to the next item of business.
  3. When a motion that the debate be now adjourned has been negatived, the debate on the question then before Parliament shall be continued and no further motion that the debate be now adjourned shall be moved during that debate except by a Minister.
  4. When Parliament is in committee a Member may without notice move that further proceedings of the committee be now adjourned. Thereupon the Speaker shall propose the question on that motion. If the motion is carried the Speaker shall leave the chair of the committee and Parliament shall resume but if the motion is negatived the committee shall continue its proceedings.
  5. It shall not be in order to move an amendment to a motion under the provisions of this order.
36. CONTENT OF SPEECHES
Text
  1. A Member shall restrict his observations to the subject under discussion and shall not introduce matters irrelevant to that subject and without prejudice to the generality of the fore going shall not introduce into his speech personal references which have no direct relevance to the subject under discussion.
  2. Reference shall not be made to a case pending in a court of law in such a way as, in the opinion of the Speaker, might prejudice that case.
  3. It shall be out of order to attempt to reconsider a specific question on which Parliament has taken a decision during the current or preceding two meetings of that Parliament except on a substantive motion to rescind that decision moved with the permission of the Speaker.
  4. It shall be out of order to use offensive and insulting language.
  5. A Member shall not impute improper motive to another Member or make unbecoming references to his private affairs.
  6. The name of Her Majesty or of the Governor-General shall not be used disrespectfully or to influence Parliament.
  7. The conduct of Her Majesty and members of the Royal Family shall not be called in question.
  8. The conduct of the Governor-General, Ministers and Members and Judges or other persons performing judicial functions shall not be raised.
37. BEHAVIOUR OF MEMBERS NOT SPEAKING
Text

During a sitting-

  1. all Members shall enter or leave Parliament with decorum;
  2. no Member shall cross the floor of Parliament unnecessarily;
  3. Members shall not read newspapers, books, letters, or other documents except such matters therein as may be directly connected with the business of Parliament; and
  4. while a Member is speaking all other Members shall be silent and shall not make unseemly interruptions.
Part
J
Title
RULES OF ORDER
38. DECISION OF SPEAKER FINAL
Text

The Speaker shall be responsible for the observance of the rules of order in Parliament and in committee. His decision on a point of order shall be final.

39. ORDER IN PARLIAMENT AND COMMITTEE
Text
  1. The Speaker, after having called the attention of Parliament or the committee to the conduct of a Member who persists in irrelevance or tedious repetition of his own or other Member's arguments in the debate, may direct him to discontinue his speech and if the Member does not immediately comply his conduct shall be deemed grossly disorderly.
  2. The Speaker, in any case where he considers that a Member has deliberately made a remark or statement defamatory of another Member or which contains a personal reference to any person which has no direct relevance to the subject under discussion, may require him to withdraw that remark or statement, and order that such remark or statement be not included in any record of the meeting. If the Member refuses to withdraw his remark or statement, his conduct shall be deemed to be grossly disorderly.
  3. Where any Member has conducted himself in a manner which is grossly disorderly the Speaker may, after giving the Member an opportunity to be heard, either -
    1. reprimand the Member; or
    2. order that a sum not exceeding one hundred dollars be deducted from any salary or allowance which may be due or become due to the Member by virtue of his Membership and paid into the Consolidated Fund; or
    3. suspend the Member for a period not exceeding fourteen sitting days; or
    4. impose two or more of the foregoing penalties.
  4. Any Member may raise the matter of the grossly disorderly behaviour of another Member as though it were a matter of privilege under order 25 and, if it is the opinion of the Speaker that the conduct complained of is capable of being found to be grossly disorderly the Speaker shall express the opinion for the purposes of order 25(4) that the matter raised may affect the privilege of Parliament.
  5. On a motion moved under order 25(4) for the purposes of this order it may be moved that the Member suffer any one or more of the penalties set out in paragraph (2) of this order and if passed such motion shall take effect immediately.
  6. Where any Member is suspended, he shall withdraw immediately from the House and shall not return until his period of suspension has expired and the Sergeant-at-Arms shall act on behalf of the House to ensure compliance with this order.
Part
K
Title
VOTING
40. DECISION ON QUESTIONS
Text

All questions proposed for decision committee shall be determined in accordance with section 71 of the Constitution.

41. COLLECTION OF VOICES
Text
  1. When the debate upon a question is concluded the Speaker shall put the question to Parliament or the committee and, if it shall not have been heard, shall again put it to Parliament or to the committee.
  2. Every Member present in the House when the question is put is required to vote and in case he shall not have heard the question put, the Speaker shall again put the question.
  3. Having put the question the Speaker shall call upon those Members in favour to say "Aye" and immediately thereafter call upon those Members who are against the question to say "No".
  4. As soon as the Speaker has collected the voices of the Ayes and of the Noes, the question being then fully put no other Member may speak on it.
  5. The Speaker may, according to his judgment of the number of voices on either side, then state that he thinks the Ayes have it or that he thinks the Noes have it, as the case may be; and if no Member challenges his statement as provided in the next succeeding paragraph he shall declare the question to have been decided.
  6. If a Member challenges the statement of the Speaker that he thinks the Ayes or the Noes have it by claiming a division, then the Speaker shall order Parliament or the committee, as the case may be, to proceed to a division and the division shall be held forthwith in the manner prescribed in order 42.
  7. Notwithstanding paragraph (4) of this order the Speaker may if in his opinion the division is unnecessarily claimed, take the vote of Parliament or the committee by calling upon the Members who support or who challenge his decision successively to rise in their places and he shall thereupon, as he sees fit, either declare the determination of Parliament or the committee or order a division.
42. DIVISIONS
Text
  1. When a division has been ordered a bell shall be rung for two minutes unless all Members be sooner present. On the conclusion of that time the votes shall be taken by the Clerk who shall ask each Member seated in the House by the time the bell has ceased to ring separately how he wished to vote. A Member shall upon his name being called give his vote by saying "Aye" or "No" or by expressly stating that he abstains from voting.
  2. As soon as the Clerk has taken the votes the Speaker shall state the numbers voting for the Ayes and for the Noes respectively and shall also state the number of abstentions and then declare the result of the division.
  3. No Member shall be entitled to speak while a division is being taken except to a point of order which, if raised, shall immediately be dealt with by the Speaker without debate.
  4. If a Member states that he voted in error or that his vote has been counted wrongly, he may claim to have his vote altered if his statement is made before the Speaker has declared the result of the division.
Part
L
Title
PROCEDURE ON BILLS
43. FORM OF BILLS
Text
  1. A Bill submitted for presentation shall conform with the requirements of this order.
  2. The Bill shall be given a short title corresponding to the title by which it is to be cited if it becomes law.
  3. The Bill shall be given a long title setting out the purposes of the Bill in general terms:
    • Provided that a Bill to amend those provisions of the Provincial Government Act 1981 referred to in section 43(1) of that Act shall in the long title show that it is intended to amend such provisions.
  4. The clauses of the Bill shall be preceded by the enacting formula prescribed by law.
  5. The Bill shall be divided into clauses numbered consecutively and having a descriptive note in the margin or at the head of each clause:
    • Provided that matters of detail dependent upon the provisions of the Bill may be annexed to the Bill in the form of a schedule or schedules.
  6. An explanatory memorandum stating the contents and objects of the Bill in non-technical language shall be attached to the Bill.
  7. In the case of a Bill involving the expenditure of public money, the explanatory memorandum shall set out briefly the financial effect of the Bill and contain estimates, where possible, of the amount of money involved.
  8. In the case of any Bill amending an existing Act by reference to part only of individual sections of that Act, the Speaker may require that the Bill include as an annexure the whole of those sections of the existing Act indicating clearly the amendments that are proposed to be made by the Bill.
     
44. NOTICE OF PRESENTATION OF BILLS
Text
  1. Subject to paragraph (2) of this order and section 61(4) of the Constitution a Member may at any time give notice of his intention to present a Bill; such notice shall be accompanied by a copy of the Bill and memorandum required by order 43 for submission to the Speaker.
  2. A Member who is not a Minister shall, not less than twelve clear days before the first reading of the Bill, give notice of his intention to present a Bill.
  3. In the case of a Bill having any effect such as is described in paragraph (1) of order 28, the notice shall be accompanied by a certificate signed by a Minister stating that Cabinet's recommendation shall be signified to the Bill on second reading.
  4. In the case of a Bill which includes any provision-
    1. relating to a matter that is within the legislative competence of a Provincial Assembly; or
    2. affecting the functions of a Provincial Executive the notice shall be accompanied either by a certificate signed by the Speaker of each Provincial Assembly or a member of each provincial Executive affected by the Bill stating the date on which a copy of the Bill was received by the Provincial Assembly or Provincial Executive as the case may be or by such other evidence that a copy of the Bill has been sent to the Provincial Assembly or Provincial Executive as the Speaker may in his discretion deem satisfactory.
  5. A Member submitting such a Bill for presentation shall be known throughout the subsequent proceedings on the Bill as the Member in charge of the Bill.
45. EXAMINATION OF BILLS BY THE SPEAKER
Text
  1. The Speaker shall examine every Bill submitted for presentation and shall satisfy himself that it complies with the requirements of orders 43 and 44.
  2. If the Speaker is not satisfied that the Bill complies with the requirements as aforesaid, he shall instruct the Clerk so to inform the Member in charge of the Bill and no further proceedings shall be taken in respect of the Bill.
46. PRESENTATION AND PUBLICATION OF BILLS
Text
  1. If the Speaker is satisfied that the Bill complies with the requirements of orders 43 and 44 he shall endorse the Bill to that effect; the Bill shall then be deemed to have been presented to Parliament.
  2. As soon as may be after presentation of a Bill the Clerk shall cause the text of the Bill as contained in the copy submitted to the Speaker and the explanatory memorandum required by order 43 to be published in such manner as the Speaker may direct and copies of the text of the Bill and memorandum as so published shall be sent to every Member.
47. FIRST READING OF BILLS
Text
  1. The short title of every Bill presented in accordance with order 46 shall be placed upon the Order Paper for first reading on the next sitting day after it shall have been published.
  2. No debate shall be allowed upon the first reading of a Bill and the Bill shall be deemed to have been read the first time upon the Clerk reading the short title.
  3. When a Bill has been read the first time Parliament shall be deemed to have ordered the Bill to be set down for second reading in accordance with the provisions of order 15 and the order of Parliament shall be so recorded in the minutes of proceedings and notice of motion for second reading shall not be required to be given by the Member in charge of the Bill.
48. SECOND READING OF BILLS
Text
  1. In the case of a Bill having any effect such as is described in paragraph (1) of order 28 the Speaker shall call for the signification of the recommendation of the Cabinet by a Minister before Parliament enters upon consideration of the second reading of the Bill and the motion that the Bill be now read a second time shall not be moved unless such recommendation has been signified.
  2. The signification of the Cabinet's recommendation shall be recorded in the minutes of proceedings.
  3. A Bill to amend those provisions of the Provincial Government Act referred to in section 43(1) of that Act shall not be read a second time until 28 days have elapsed since the first reading.[ii]
  4. A Bill including the provisions referred to in paragraph (4) of order 44 shall not be read a second time until the Speaker is satisfied that adequate notice of such provisions has been given to each Provincial Assembly or Provincial Executive concerned.[iii]
  5. Parliament shall proceed to the second reading of a Bill on a motion that the Bill be now read a second time and on this motion a debate may arise confined to the general merits and principles of the Bill.
  6. No amendment may be proposed to the question that the Bill is now read a second time.
  7. When a motion for the second reading of a Bill has been negatived no further proceedings shall be taken on that Bill.
49. COMMITTAL OF BILLS
Text
  1. When a Bill has been read a second time it shall stand committed to a committee of the whole House unless -
    1. Parliament, on a motion which may be moved without notice by any Member immediately after the Bill has been read a second time, commits the Bill to a Select Committee; or
    2. the Speaker is of the opinion that the Bill would specially benefit or otherwise specially affect some particular person or association or corporate body, in which case he shall direct that the Bill be committed to a Select Committee.
  2. Proceedings on a Bill in committee of the whole House shall be begun upon a day appointed in accordance with the provisions of order 15 and notice of the committal shall not be required to be given by the Member in charge of the Bill.
  3. Proceedings upon a Bill in Select Committee shall be begun upon a day appointed in accordance with paragraph (2) of order 72.
50. FUNCTIONS OF COMMITTEES ON BILLS
Text
  1. Any committee to which a Bill is committed shall not discuss the principles of the Bill but only its details.
  2. Any such committee shall have power to make such amendments therein as they shall think fit, provided that the amendments, including new clauses and new schedules, are relevant to the subject-matter of the Bill and are otherwise in conformity with these Orders; but if any amendment shall not be within the title of the Bill the committee shall amend the title accordingly and report the same specially to Parliament.
51. AMENDMENTS TO BILLS
Text
  1. The provisions of this order shall apply to amendments proposed to be moved to Bills in committee of the whole House in a Select Committee and on re-committal.
  2. Notice of amendments proposed to be moved to a Bill shall be given not later than one clear day before that on which the Bill is to be considered in committee and except with the leave of the Speaker no amendment of which notice has not been so given may be moved to a Bill.
  3. The provisions of order 27 shall apply to notices of amendments to Bills.
  4. The following additional provisions shall apply to amendments relating to Bills -
    1. an amendment must be relevant to the subject-matter of the Bill and to the subject-matter of the clause to which it relates;
    2. an amendment must not be inconsistent with any clause already agreed to or with any previous decision of the committee upon the Bill;
    3. an amendment must not be such as to make the clause which it proposes to amend unintelligible or ungrammatical;
    4. an amendment which is in the opinion of the Speaker or in the case of a Select Committee the Chairman, frivolous or meaningless may not be moved.
  5. If an amendment refers to, or is not intelligible without a subsequent amendment or schedule, notice of the subsequent amendment or schedule must be given before the first amendment is moved so as to make the series of amendments intelligible as a whole.
  6. Except upon the recommendation of the Cabinet signified by a Minister and recorded in the minutes of proceedings, the committee shall not proceed upon any amendment to which the provisions of order 28 apply.
  7. The Speaker or in the case of a Select Committee, the Chairman may at any time during the discussion of a proposed amendment withdraw it from the consideration of the committee if, in his opinion the discussion shall have shown that the amendment violates the provisions of this order.
52. PROCEDURE IN COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE HOUSE ON A BILL
Text
  1. The Speaker in committee of the whole House shall call the number of each clause in succession. If no amendment is proposed thereto, or when all proposed amendments have been disposed of, he shall propose the question "That the clause (or the clause as amended) stand part of the Bill" and when all Members who wish to speak thereon have spoken, he shall put the question to the committee for its decision.
  2. Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph (1) of this order, the Speaker may, if no member objects or has given notice of any amendment to any clause affected, call the numbers of more than one clause or group of clauses, in which case he shall propose the question "That the clauses (or group of clauses) stand part of the Bill".
  3. In order to save time and repetition or arguments, the Speaker may allow a single discussion to cover a series of interdependent amendments.
  4. The provisions of order 30 shall apply to the discussion of amendments to Bills with the substitution of the word "clause" for the word "motion".
  5. Consideration of a clause may be postponed, unless a decision has already been taken upon an amendment thereto. Postponed clauses shall be called again after the remaining clauses of the Bill have been considered.
  6. A clause may be replaced or a new clause inserted at the proper and logical stage during the course of consideration of the clauses of the Bill.
  7. The Speaker shall call on the Member in whose name the clause stands and upon such Member moving "That clause.... be replaced by the following clause" or "That the following clause be inserted immediately after clause ........ The Speaker shall propose the question thereon and debate may then take place on that question and any amendments to the clause may be proposed. Thereafter the final question shall be proposed and if this is agreed to the Bill shall be amended accordingly without any further question, and any renumbering or other minor consequential amendment may be carried out by the Clerk.
  8. Schedules shall be disposed of and a schedule may be replaced or a new schedule inserted in the same way as clauses.
  9. When every clause and schedule and proposed new clause or schedule has been dealt with, the preamble, if there is one, shall be considered and the question put "That this be the preamble to the Bill". No amendment to the preamble shall be considered which is not made necessary by a previous amendment to the Bill.
  10. If any amendment to the title of the Bill is made necessary by amendment to the Bill, it shall be made at the conclusion of the proceedings detailed above but no question shall be put that the title (as amended) stand part of the Bill; nor shall any question be put upon the enacting formula.
  11. An amendment, proposed new clause or proposed new schedule, upon which a question has been proposed, may be withdrawn at the request of the mover by leave of the committee before the question has been fully put on it, if no Member objects.
  12. When all the proceedings upon the Bill have been concluded in committee the Speaker shall return to his chair and the Member in charge of the Bill shall report the bill to Parliament with or without amendment as the case may be.
53. PROCEDURE ON REPORTING OF BILL FROM COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE HOUSE
Text
  1. When a Bill has been reported from a committee of the whole House, Parliament shall be deemed to have ordered the Bill to be set down for third reading in accordance with the pro visions of order 15 and the order of Parliament shall be so recorded in the minutes of proceedings and notice of motion for third reading shall not be required to be given by the Member in charge of the Bill.
  2. If any Member desires to propose further amendments to a Bill as reported from a committee of the whole House, he shall give notice of such further amendments and may, not later than the day before that on which the Bill is set down for third reading upon the Order Paper, give notice of a motion that the Bill be recommitted, either as a whole or in respect only of some specified clause or clauses or schedule or schedules or some proposed new clause or new schedule. Such a motion shall be placed on the Order Paper immediately before the motion for the third reading of the Bill.
  3. When a motion for recommittal has been moved no amendments may be proposed to it except amendments to widen the scope of the proposed recommittal.
  4. When a motion for recommittal is agreed to, the Bill shall stand recommitted as required by the motion and Parliament shall immediately resolve itself into a committee of the whole House to consider it.
  5. When a motion for recommittal is negatived Parliament shall forthwith proceed to the third reading of the Bill.
54. PROCEEDINGS ON RECOMMITTAL OF BILL REPORTED FROM COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE HOUSE
Text
  1. When the whole of a Bill has been recommitted the committee shall go through the Bill as provided in order 52.
  2. When a Bill has been recommitted in respect only of some specified clause or clauses or schedule or schedules of the Bill, or some proposed new clause or new schedule, the committee shall consider only the matter or matters in respect of which the Bill has been so recommitted and shall proceed on every such clause or schedule in the manner provided in order 52 and if necessary may thereafter consider amendment of the long or short title of the Bill:
    • Provided that if the Speaker considers it necessary or desirable he may require the whole Bill to be recommitted as in paragraph (1) of this order.
  3. When all proceedings in committee of the whole House on a recommitted Bill have been completed the Speaker shall return to his chair and the Member in charge of the Bill shall report the Bill as amended (or as not amended) on recommittal to Parliament.
  4. When the Bill has been so reported after recommittal Parliament shall forthwith proceed to the third reading of the Bill unless the Member in charge states that he wishes the third reading to be postponed and in the latter event the provisions of paragraph (1) of order 53 shall apply but no further motion to recommit the Bill shall be allowed.
55. PROCEDURE IN SELECT COMMITTEE ON A BILL
Text
  1. A Select Committee considering a Bill shall conform with the provisions of order 72 but before reporting the Bill to Parliament it shall go through the Bill in the same manner as a committee of the whole House as prescribed in order 52.
  2. When a Bill has been amended in a Select Committee, the whole text of the Bill as amended shall, if practicable, be printed as part of the report of the Select Committee but if this is not practicable the text of every clause or schedule amended, and of every new clause or new schedule added, shall be so printed.
  3. When all the proceedings upon the Bill have been concluded in a Select Committee and the committee has agreed to its `report, the Chairman shall, at the next sitting of Parliament, report the Bill, with or without amendment as the case may be, to Parliament and shall lay a copy of the report of the committee upon the Table.
56. PROCEDURE ON REPORTING OF BILL FROM SELECT COMMITTEE
Text
  1. When a Bill has been reported from a Select Committee Parliament may consider the Bill as reported on a motion that the report of the Select Committee on the Bill be adopted.
  2. If that motion is carried without amendment Parliament shall be deemed to have ordered the Bill to be set down for third reading in accordance with the provisions of order 15 and the order of Parliament shall be so recorded in the minutes of proceedings, and notice of third reading shall not be required to be given by the Member in charge of the Bill.
  3. On a motion to adopt the report of a Select Committee on a Bill moved under paragraph (1) of this order, a Member may propose an amendment to add at the end of the motion the words "subject to the recommittal of the Bill (either wholly or in respect only of some particular part or parts of the Bill or of some proposed new clause or new schedule) to a committee of the whole House".
  4. If the motion is carried as amended in accordance with paragraph (3) of this order, the Bill shall stand recommitted as required by the motion and Parliament shall immediately resolve itself into a committee of the whole House to consider it.
57. PROCEEDINGS ON RECOMMITTAL OF BILL REPORTED FROM SELECT COMMITTEE
Text
  1. When a Bill reported from a Select Committee has been recommitted, the proceedings on recommittal shall be subject to the provisions of order 54.
58. THIRD READING OF BILLS
Text
  1. Parliament shall proceed to the third reading of a Bill on a motion that the Bill be read the third time and do pass. Debate on that motion shall be confined to the contents of the Bill and no amendment may be moved to the motion.
  2. Amendments for the correction of errors or oversights may, with the Speaker's permission, be made to the Bill before the question for the third reading of the Bill is put by the Speaker, but no amendments of a material character shall be proposed.
  3. When a motion for the third reading of a Bill has been carried the Clerk shall read the short title of the Bill and shall write at the end of the Bill the words "Passed by the National Parliament of Solomon Islands this day" giving the date.
  4. When a motion for the third reading of a Bill has been negatived no further proceedings shall be taken on that Bill.
59. WITHDRAWAL OF BILLS
Text

The Member in charge of a Bill may, at the beginning of the proceedings on a Bill at a sitting, announce that he withdraws the Bill. And such Bill shall thereupon stand withdrawn and no further proceedings shall be taken on it.

60. PRESENTATION OF BILLS FOR ASSENT BY THE GOVERNOR-GENERAL
Text

A copy of every Bill passed by Parliament, certified as a true copy by the Clerk, shall be submitted by the Clerk to the Governor-General for his assent.

Part
M
Title
FINANCIAL PROCEDURE
61. PRESENTATION AND SECOND READING OF APPROPRIATION BILL
Text
  1. Any Appropriation Bill for the purposes of section 102 of the Constitution presented to Parliament shall be accompanied by the estimates of revenue and expenditure referred to in subsection (1) of that section.
  2. After the motion for the second reading of an Appropriation Bill has been proposed the debate thereon shall be adjourned and shall be resumed not earlier than the day following, after which three further days shall be allotted for the second reading of the Bill. The debate upon second reading when resumed, shall be confined to the financial and economic state of Solomon Islands and the general principles of Government policy and administration as indicated by the Bill and estimates. Unless the debate is concluded earlier, the Speaker shall at 4.30 p.m. on the last day allocated for the second reading put any question necessary to bring the proceedings thereon to a conclusion.
  3. For the purposes of this order and order 63 an allotted day shall be any day on which the consideration of the Appropriation Bill whether by Parliament or in the Committee of Supply, stands as the only motion or Bill set down by the Prime Minister upon the Order Paper in accordance with the provisions of order 15.
62. THE COMMITTEE OF SUPPLY
Text
  1. There shall be a Committee of the whole House to be called the Committee of Supply. Subject to the provisions of order 79 the deliberations of the Committee of Supply shall be in public.
  2. The estimates shall upon presentation to Parliament stand referred to the Committee of Supply and the Appropriation Bill upon being read a second time shall stand committed to that committee.
63. ALLOTMENT OF TIME IN COMMITTEE OF SUPPLY
Text
  1. A maximum of four days shall be allotted for discussion of the Appropriation Bill in Committee of Supply.
  2. This period may be extended if the question on the second reading of the Bill was carried on a day earlier than the last day allotted for the debate on second reading as the day or days thus saved may be added to the days allotted under this paragraph.
  3. The Speaker may name the hour upon any day allotted under paragraph (1) of this order as being the time at which proceedings upon any head in the schedules to the Bill, on any schedule of, or on the clauses of the Bill shall be concluded. If in the case of any head or schedule or of the clauses the hour so named is reached before the business concerned is disposed of the Speaker shall thereupon put any question necessary to dispose of that business.
  4. If in the case of any head or schedule the proceedings thereon are concluded before the hour named in accordance with paragraph (3) of this order, the Committee of Supply may forthwith proceed to the next business.
64. PROCEDURE IN COMMITTEE OF SUPPLY
Text
  1. On the consideration of the Appropriation Bill in Committee of Supply the clauses of the Bill shall stand postponed until after consideration of the schedule or schedules.
  2. On consideration of the schedules each head shall be considered with the appropriate estimate and any reference in these Orders to a subhead or an item means a subhead or an item in the estimates for the head then under discussion.
  3. On the consideration of a schedule, the Speaker shall call the title of each head in turn and shall propose the question "That the sum of $........... for head …….. stand part of the schedule" and unless an amendment is proposed under the provisions of the next succeeding order, a debate may take place on that question. Any such debate shall be confined to the policy of the service for which the money is to be provided and shall not deal with the details of any item or subhead but may refer to the details of revenue or funds for which that service is responsible.
  4. When all the heads in a schedule have been disposed of the Speaker shall put forthwith, without amendment or debate, the question "That the schedule (as amended) stand part of the Bill".
  5. When every schedule has been disposed of the Speaker shall call successively each clause of the Bill and shall forthwith propose the question "That the clause stand part of the Bill" and, unless a consequential amendment is moved, that question shall be disposed of without amendment or debate.
  6. No amendment may be moved to any clause except any amendment consequential on an alteration in the total sum appropriated by any schedule. Any such consequential amendment shall be moved by a Minister only and may be moved without notice and the question thereon shall be put forthwith without amendment or debate. When the question on the last of any such amendments to a clause has been decided the Speaker shall forthwith put the question "That the clause as amended stand part of the Bill" and that question shall then be decided without amendment or debate.       
  7. When the question upon every clause of the Bill has been decided, the Speaker shall return to his chair and the Member in charge of the Bill shall report the Bill to Parliament with or without amendment as the case may be.
65. AMENDMENTS TO HEADS IN COMMITTEE OF SUPPLY
Text
  1. Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph (2) of order 51 no amendment shall be moved in the Committee of Supply under this order until one clear day after that on which it was published in the Notice Paper.
  2. Except upon the recommendation of the Cabinet to be signified by a Minister and recorded in the minutes of proceedings, the committee shall not proceed upon any amendment which in the opinion of the Speaker increases the sum allotted to any head whether in respect of any item or subhead or of the head itself; every such amendment shall take the form of a motion "That head …….. be increased by $.......... (in respect of subhead ………………….item …………………………….)".
  3. An amendment to increase a head whether in respect of any item or subhead or of the head itself shall take precedence over an amendment to reduce the head in the same respect and if it is carried no amendment to reduce the head in that respect shall be called.
  4. Except upon the recommendation of the Cabinet to be signified by a Minister and recorded in the minutes of proceedings, the committee shall not proceed upon any amendment which in the opinion of the Speaker has any effect such as is mentioned in paragraph (1) of order 28.
  5. Subject to the provisions of paragraph (4) of this order, an amendment to any head to reduce the sum allotted thereto in respect of any item therein may be moved by any Member, and shall take the form of a motion "That head ….. be reduced by $........ in respect of (or by omitting) subhead ……………item ………..'.
  6. An amendment to reduce a head in respect of any subhead or by omitting a subhead shall only be in order if the subhead is not itemised.
  7. An amendment to reduce a head without reference to a subhead therein shall only be in order if the head is not divided in subheads.
  8. An amendment to omit a head shall not be in order and shall not be placed on the Order Paper.
  9. In the case of each head, amendments in respect of items or subheads in that head shall be placed upon the Order Paper and considered in the order in which the items or subheads to which they refer stand in the head in the estimates.
  10. When notice has been given of two or more amendments to reduce the same item, subhead or head, they shall be placed upon the Order Paper and considered in the order of the magnitude of the reductions proposed, the amendment proposing the largest reduction being placed first in each case.
  11. Debate on every amendment shall be confined to the item, subhead or head to which the amendment refers and after an amendment to an item or subhead has been disposed of, no amendment or debate on a previous item or subhead of that head shall be permitted.
  12. When all amendments standing on the Order Paper in respect of any particular head have been disposed of the Speaker shall again propose the question "That the sum of $.......... for head…….. stand part of the schedule", or shall propose the amended question "That the (increased) (reduced) sum of $....... for head…….. stand part of the schedule", as the case may require. The debate on any such question shall be subject to the same limitations as apply to a debate arising under paragraph (3) of order 62.
66. THIRD READING OF APPROPRIATION BILL
Text

The motion for third reading of the Appropriation Bill shall be decided without amendment or debate.
 

67. SUPPLEMENTARY APPROPRIATION BILLS
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If from time to time, whether in the course of a particular financial year or after its close, a Supplementary Appropriation Bill for the purposes of section 102 of the Constitution is presented, the Bill, after the motion for the second reading has been proposed, shall stand committed to the Committee of Supply and the provisions of orders 64, 65 and 66 shall apply in the same manner as to an Appropriation Bill.

Part
N
Title
SELECT AND SPECIAL COMMITTEES
68. APPOINTMENT, NOMINATION AND FUNCTIONS OF SELECT COMMITTEES
Text
  1. Parliament may appoint, under Standing Orders or by an Order specially made, one or more Select Committees to consider matters or Bills which Parliament may refer to the committee.
  2. A Select Committee appointed under Standing Orders shall be termed a "Standing Select Committee".
  3. A Select Committee appointed under an Order specially made shall be termed a "Special Select Committee".
  4. The Speaker shall decide the size of every Select Committee and shall nominate the chairman and members thereof.
  5. A Standing Select Committee may from time to time report to Parliament concerning the matters referred to it and shall not be dissolved save in accordance with paragraph (7) of this order.
  6. A Special Select Committee shall, as soon as it has completed considering the matter or Bill referred to it, report to Parliament thereon and the committee shall thereupon be dissolved. If the committee is of the opinion that it will not be able to complete consideration of the matter or Bill before the day appointed for the dissolution of Parliament in accordance with section 73 of the Constitution it shall so report to Parliament.
  7. Upon the dissolution of Parliament every Select and Special Committee of Parliament shall be dissolved.
69. PUBLIC ACCOUNTS COMMITTEE
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LN 23/1995

  1. There shall be a Standing Select Committee designated the Public Accounts Committee whose functions shall be -
    1. to examine the accounts prescribed by section 38 of the Public Finance and Audit Act, together with the report of the Auditor-General thereon, and to report the results of such examination to Parliament;
    2. to establish the causes of any excesses over authorised expenditure and to make recommendations to Parliament on any appropriate measures to cater for such excesses of expenditure;
    3. to examine such other accounts laid before Parliament as the Committee may think fit, together with any auditor's report thereon and to report the results of such examination to Parliament;
    4. to summon any public officer to give information on any explanation, or to produce any records or documents which the Committee may require in the performance of its duties;
    5. to consider in detail the Draft Estimates prepared by the Government in support of the Annual Appropriation Bill;
    6. to summon and examine the Accounting Officers and Technical staff of Ministries and Departments and require the production of background information and explanation in relation to draft estimates;
    7. to report to Parliament in such a way that the report may inform Members prior to the Parliamentary debate thereon of the background to the Draft Estimates and draw attention to those matters which the Committee feels should be the subject for such Parliamentary debate; and
    8. to make such recommendations as the Committee sees fit and subsequently receive comments and reports on such recommendations from the Government.
  2. The Auditor-General or his nominee shall be the Secretary to the Committee and shall make available to the Committee the services of his staff and other facilities of his office.
70. PARLIAMENTARY HOUSE COMMITTEE
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LN 23/1995

  1. There shall be a Standing Select Committee designated the Parliamentary House Committee whose functions shall be -
    1. to consider and advise appropriate authorities on such matters that are connected with Members' terms and conditions of service;
    2. to oversee and supervise matters connected with the management and administration of the facilities and property of Parliament which are not provided for in any other specific rules or regulations;
    3. to consider, decide on and advise Parliament on all matters that are connected with Parliamentary business for its meetings and sittings;
    4. to examine and make recommendations on any matters which are connected with the provisions of sections 62 and 69 of the Constitution;
    5. to make rules and guidelines governing the Members' use of Parliament facilities;
    6. to report regularly to Parliament of any action taken pursuant to these Orders.
71. BILLS AND LEGISLATION COMMITTEE
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There shall be a Standing Select Committee designated the Bills and Legislation Committee whose functions, in addition to the provisions of orders 50 and 55, shall be to -

  1. examine such matters as may be referred to it by Parliament or the Government;
  2. review all draft legislation prepared for introduction into Parliament;
  3. examine all subsidiary legislation made under any Act so as to ensure compliance with the Acts under which they are made;
  4. monitor all motions adopted by Parliament which require legislative action;
  5. review current or proposed legislative measures to the extent it deems necessary;
  6. examine such other matters in relation to legislation that, in the opinion of the Committee, require examination; and
  7. make a written report to each meeting of Parliament containing the observations and recommendations arising from the Committee's deliberations.
71A. CONSTITUTION REVIEW COMMITTEE
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There shall be a Standing Select Committee designated the Constitution Review Committee whose functions shall be -

  1. to review the Constitution regularly and advise the Government on any changes as the Committee may deem necessary;
  2. to examine any proposed changes to the Constitution and request submissions of views thereon from individuals or groups;
  3. to deal with and advise on any matters relating to the use, abuse or misuse of constitutional powers, rights or responsibilities;
  4. to report to Parliament in accordance with order 72(11).
71B. FOREIGN RELATIONS COMMITTEE
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There shall be a Standing Select Committee designated the Foreign Relations Committee whose functions shall be to examine and make its observations and recommendations on -

  1. the establishment of new diplomatic and consular relations and the severing of existing ties;
  2. the accession to and signing and ratification of international treaties and conventions;
  3. the appointment of Ambassadors and High Commissioners or other principal representatives of Solomon Islands in any other country or accredited to any international organisations;
  4. the application of the Geneva Convention relating to diplomatic immunities and privileges;
  5. the receiving of foreign assistance and the administration and management thereof;
  6. the regulations, terms and conditions of service of employees of regional bodies of which Solomon Islands is a member;
  7. the Government's conduct of its foreign policy.
71C. EDUCATION AND HUMAN RESOURCES TRAINING COMMITTEE
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There shall be a Standing Select Committee designated the Education and Human Resources Training Committee whose functions shall be to examine and make observations and recommendations on matters relating to education and human resources development as it may consider appropriate or as referred to it by Parliament or the Government.

71D. HEALTH AND MEDICAL SERVICES COMMITTEE
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There shall be a Standing Select Committee designated the Health and Medical Services Committee whose functions shall be to examine and make observations and recommendations on matters relating to health and medical services as it may consider appropriate or as referred to it by Parliament or the Government.

71E. POLICE, NATIONAL SECURITY AND CORRECTIONAL SERVICES COMMITTEE
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There shall be a Standing Select Committee designated the Police, National Security and Correctional Services Committee whose functions shall be to examine and make recommendations on matters relating to police, national security and correctional services as it may consider appropriate or as referred to it by Parliament or the Government.

71F. PUBLIC EXPENDITURE COMMITTEE
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There shall be a Standing Select Committee designated the Public Expenditure Committee whose functions shall be to -

  1. review budget expenditure;
  2. assess whether expenditure performance match policy in line with the Appropriation Act;
  3. undertake value for money assessment of the budget;
  4. ascertain whether the public expenditure meets quality or not; and 46
  5. make such observation or recommendations arising from the Committee’s deliberations.
71G. ENVIRONMENTAL AND CONSERVATION COMMITTEE
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There shall be a Standing Select Committee designated the Environmental and Conservation Committee whose functions shall be -

  1. to examine and make recommendations to the government on measures adopted or required to be adopted to meet the challenges posed by environmental changes;
  2. to monitor and examine measures adopted by the relevant administrative authorities in implementing the objectives of national and provincial environmental legislation; and
  3. such other matters which may be relevant or conducive to meet Solomon Islands international obligations, including the adoption of carbon trading measures.
72. PROCEDURE OF SELECT COMMITTEES
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  1. The deliberations of a Select Committee shall be confined to the matter or matters referred or assigned to it by Parliament or by or under these Orders and in the case of a Select Committee on a Bill its deliberations shall be confined to the Bill committed to it and relevant amendments.
  2. A Select Committee shall sit at the times determined by the Chairman and may continue to sit although Parliament may be adjourned. The sittings of all Select Committees shall be held in private unless the Committee otherwise orders.
  3. The quorum of a Select Committee shall be one-third of the members excluding the Chairman, a fraction of the whole number being discarded.
  4. If the Chairman is unable to be present at a sitting the Committee shall elect a member of the Committee to act as Chairman in his place for the period during which he is absent.
  5. The clerk to the Committee appointed under paragraph (7) of Order 6 shall attend meetings of the Committee and shall keep the minutes of proceedings of the Committee.
  6. Divisions in a Select Committee shall be taken by the clerk to the Committee who shall ask each member of the Committee separately how he wishes to vote and record the votes accordingly.
  7. Neither the Chairman nor any other member acting in his place shall vote, unless the votes of other members are equally divided in which case he shall give a casting vote.
  8.  
    1. A member of a Select Committee may bring a report for its consideration. When all the reports have been brought up the Chairman shall propose the reports in order until one is accepted as a basis for discussion, beginning with his own report and proceeding with the remainder in the order in which they were brought up. The question to be proposed by the Chairman on a report shall be "That the Chairman's (or Mr….'s) report be read a second time paragraph by paragraph". When this question has been agreed to, it shall not be proposed on further reports but portions thereof may be offered as amendments to the report under consideration, if they are relevant to it.
    2. The Committee shall then go through the report paragraph by paragraph and the provisions of order 52 shall apply as if the report were a Bill and the paragraphs were the clauses of the Bill.
    3. When consideration of the report paragraph by paragraph is concluded and when all proposed new paragraphs have been considered the Chairman shall put the question that this report be the report of the Committee to Parliament.
  9. A Select Committee may make a special report relating to the powers, functions and proceedings of the Committee on matters which it thinks fit to bring to the notice of Parliament.
  10. The minutes of proceedings of the Committee shall record all proceedings on consideration of a report or Bill in the Committee and on every amendment proposed to the report or Bill, with a note of divisions, if divisions were taken in the Committee, showing the names of members voting in the divisions or declining to vote.
  11. A report or special report, with the minutes of proceedings of a Select Committee and the minutes of evidence, if evidence was taken, shall be laid on the Table by the chairman of the committee in accordance with order 17 -

Provided that, if a committee has concluded its report at a time when Parliament is not meeting, that report shall be deemed for all purposes to have been laid upon the Table if it is delivered to the office of the Clerk by the Chairman of the Committee; and the Clerk shall record in the minutes of proceedings of the day on which Parliament next sits the date upon which the report was so delivered.

Part
O
Title
MISCELLANEOUS MATTERS
76. Election of Governor-General.
Text

If Parliament shall consider that it be necessary to hold an election before making an address to the Head of State in accordance with section 27 of the Constitution, such election shall be carried out in the manner prescribed by order 5, save only that nomination papers shall be issued to Members not less than three clear days before the date fixed for the election.

77. Employment of Members in Professional Capacity.
Text

No Member shall appear before Parliament or a committee thereof as a legal practitioner acting for or on behalf of any person or otherwise in a capacity for which he is to receive a fee or award.

78. Declaration and Disclosure of Personal Interest
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  1. Every Member shall, not later than the day before he makes his oath of allegiance pursuant to section 63 of the Constitution, submit to the Speaker a written declaration of all shares and interests he may have in any company or business undertaking that has any contract with the Government and of any office of director or manager he may hold in any company or business undertaking (whether or not it has a contract with the Government) and thereafter, upon his acquisition of any such share or interest or appointment to such office, he shall make such a declaration before the next sitting of Parliament he attends following upon the acquisition of that share or interest or appointment to that office.
  2. The Speaker shall maintain a record of all declarations made under paragraph (1) of this order and shall not disclose any of the contents of the same except upon a motion to that effect passed by Parliament, a request made pursuant to any Act of Parliament, or where he considers it fit and proper to do so.
  3. A Member shall not move any motion or amendment relating to a matter in which he has a direct personal pecuniary interest or speak or vote on any such matter, whether in Parliament or in any committee, without disclosing the nature of that interest.
  4. A motion to disallow a Member's vote on the ground of non-disclosure of his personal pecuniary interest may be moved without notice by any Member immediately upon the statement of the numbers voting in a division by the Speaker, but not otherwise.
  5. The Speaker shall have discretion whether or not to propose the question upon such a motion; and in exercising such discretion he shall have regard to the nature of the question upon which the vote was taken and to the consideration whether the interest therein of the Member whose vote is challenged is direct and pecuniary and not an interest in common with the rest of the inhabitants of Solomon Islands or whether his vote was given on a matter of state policy.
  6. If the question for the disallowance of a Member's vote is proposed, the Member concerned may be heard in his place but he shall then withdraw from Parliament or committee for the duration of the debate and any vote on the question.
  7. If a motion for the disallowance of a Member's vote is carried the Speaker shall direct the Clerk to alter the numbers voting in the original division accordingly.
79. Admission of Press and Public
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Subject to such Rules as may be made from time to time by the Speaker, members of the public and of the press shall be admitted as spectators of sittings of Parliament. The Sergeant-at-Arms shall ensure that any such Rules are complied with.

80. Withdrawal of Strangers
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  1. A Member may without notice at any time during a sitting of Parliament or a committee rise and move that strangers do withdraw, specifying whether the withdrawal is to be for the remainder of that day's sitting or during the consideration of certain business. The Speaker shall forthwith put the question on such motion and Parliament or the committee shall dispose of it before proceeding further with the business which was before it when the motion was moved.
  2. The Speaker may at any time order strangers to withdraw and the doors of the House to be closed.
  3. When an order has been made by Parliament or committee, or by the Speaker for the withdrawal of strangers, members of the public and of the press shall forthwith withdraw from the House and the Clerk and the Sergeant-at-Arms shall ensure that the order is complied with.
81. Suspension of Standing Orders
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A motion which has the object or effect of suspending a Standing Order shall not be moved except after notice or with the consent of the Speaker.

82. Procedure in Case of Doubt
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Where any matter arises which is not provided for in these Orders or the resolution of any other matter causes doubt, the usage and practice of the Commons House of Parliament of Great Britain and Northern Ireland shall be followed as far as it is not inconsistent with the Orders or with the practice of Parliament but no restriction which the House of Commons has introduced by standing order shall extend to Parliament or its Members until Parliament has provided by standing order for a similar restriction.

Text

Passed by the Resolution of Parliament on 9th August 1982.
Dated at Honiara this fifteenth day of October, 1982.
SPEAKER