What is Hansard? Hansard is the official report of the debates and proceedings of Parliament and its committees. In Queensland, it is published as Daily Hansard,
Weekly Hansard, the annual bound volumes and on the Internet.
Members of Parliament may revise the transcriptions. Hansard is not a verbatim report of what is said in the Legislative Assembly. Rather, it is an accurate representation of speeches and statements devoid of redundancies, obvious grammatical errors, slips of the tongue and factual errors.
What is the origin of Hansard?
Hansard is commonly regarded as taking its name from Luke Hansard, who in the latter half of the 18th century wrote a newspaper column about the House of Commons titled The Journals of the House. In 1803, William Cobbett commenced the publication of reports, which were reprints of newspaper reports of the debates of the House of Commons.
Thomas Hansard took over from him. It was not until 1909 that the House of Commons first published its own reports of debates that were, strangely enough, called the Official Report and not Hansard. However, in Queensland, because of allegedly unreliable newspaper reports, Hansard was established in 1864, only five years after separation from New South Wales. By 1878, the Queensland Parliament was the first in the world to have a daily official report of the debates without any form of Government censorship.
What is the Record of Proceedings?
The Record of Proceedings integrates the
Votes and Proceedings and Hansard into one document. The
Votes and Proceedings recorded the procedural events of the
House; Hansard recorded the debates of the House. The
Record of Proceedings is the official record of the debates and
procedures of the House; that is, it is a record of what is said in
the House and a record of the procedural events of the House. The
formal production of the Record of Proceedings commenced on
12 February 2008.
The Record of Proceedings is still
commonly referred to as ‘Hansard’.
For general inquiries email: hansard@parliament.qld.gov.au
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