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What, historically, are the duties of a reigning monarch?

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What, historically, are the duties of a reigning monarch?

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  1. Currently - the Queen must agree to all laws that are passed (if she doesn't sign them, they aren't legal), she is Supreme Governor of the Church of England (she runs it, basically). Also, the BBC runs under a Royal Charter, which she and the gov. can remove (which would mean the BBC would be a commercial station).

    She is also an ambassador for the UK, and can meet foreign dignatories when the Foreign Secretary needs her to.

    She is also head of the armed forces, and owns all of the swans in Britian.


  2. and they once ruled until Cromwell came on the scene

  3. from http://www.royal.gov/uk/output/Page4682....

    "Constitutional monarchy is a form of government in which a king or queen acts as Head of State, while the ability to make and pass legislation resides with an elected Parliament.

    The Sovereign governs according to the constitution - that is, according to rules, rather than according to his or her own free will.

    Although the United Kingdom does not have a written constitution which sets out the rights and duties of the Sovereign, they are established by conventions. These are non-statutory rules which can bind just as much as formal constitutional rules.

    As a constitutional monarch, The Queen cannot make or pass legislation, and must remain politically neutral. On almost all matters The Queen acts on the advice of ministers.

    However, the Sovereign retains an important political role as Head of State, formally appointing prime ministers, approving certain legislation and bestowing honours.

    The Queen also has official roles to play in other organisations, such as the Armed Forces and the Church of England.

    As a system of government, constitutional monarchy has many strengths. One is that it separates out the ceremonial and official duties of the Head of State from party politics.

    Another is that it provides stability, continuity and a national focus, since the Head of State remains the same even as governments come and go.  

      The origins of constitutional monarchy in Britain go back a long way. Until the end of the seventeenth century, British monarchs were executive monarchs, which means that they had the right to make and pass legislation.

    But even in early times there were occasions when the Sovereign had to act in accordance with the law and take into account the will of his people.

    With the signing of the Magna Carta in 1215, for example, the leading noblemen of England succeeded in forcing King John to accept that they and other freemen had rights against the Crown.

    In the seventeenth century, the Stuart kings propagated the theory of the divine right of kings, claiming that the Sovereign was subject only to God and not to the law.

    Widespread unrest against their rule led to civil war in the second half of the seventeenth century. In 1688-9 Parliamentarians drew up a Bill of Rights, which established basic tenets such as the supremacy of Parliament.

    The constitutional monarchy we know today really developed in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, as day-to-day power came to be exercised by Ministers in Cabinet, and by Parliaments elected by a steadily-widening electorate.

    One of the most important writers on the subject of constitutional monarchy was a Victorian economist and writer called Walter Bagehot (1826-77).  

    His book, 'The English Constitution', first published in 1867, provided an analysis of the role of monarchy which remains relevant today.

    For example, Bagehot describes the way in which monarchy symbolises the unity of the national community.

    He wrote: "The nation is divided into parties, but the crown is of no party. Its apparent separation from business is that which removes it both from enmities and from desecration, which preserves its mystery, which enables it to combine the affection of conflicting parties ...."

    Bagehot also noticed the importance of the Royal Family. "A family on the throne is an interesting idea also. It brings down the pride of sovereignty to the level of petty life."  

    From the point of view of political power, according to Bagehot, the main influence of the Sovereign was during a political ministry, for the Sovereign had three rights: "the right to be consulted, the right to encourage, the right to warn".

    According to Bagehot, a Sovereign would, over the course of a long reign, accumulate far more knowledge and experience than any minister.  

    Bagehot's views of how monarchy works proved influential, and by the reign of King George V, the principle of constitutional monarchy was firmly established in Britain."

    You can read more at the website listed above.

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