Royal Prerogative
The Royal Prerogative is a body of customary authority, privilege, and immunity, recognised in common law jurisdictions possessing a monarchy as belonging to the Crown alone. It is the means by which some of the executive powers of government are possessed by and vested in a monarch with regard to the process of governance of their state are carried out. It is not subject to parliamentary scrutiny but an individual prerogative can be abolished by legislative enactment. Though originally exercised at the will of the monarch, in modern constitutional monarchies the Royal Prerogative is exercised by the monarch on the advice of the prime minister and cabinet. There are still situations in which the monarch may choose to exercise his or her Royal Prerogative independently from the elected politicians. Such situations are extremely rare, and only occur in emergencies. Not all constitutional monarchs have royal prerogative that can be exercised independently however. For example, the King of Sweden and the Emperor of Japan have specific government duties that cannot be exercised with any degree of individual discretion, no matter what the circumstance. Though some republican heads of state possess similar powers they are not coterminous, containing a number of fundamental differences, not the least of which being that they do not operate in common law systems in which common law courts can impose limits on their exercise.
The Royal Prerogative in the United Kingdom
In the Kingdom of England (up to 1707), the Kingdom of Great Britain (1707–1800) and the United Kingdom (since 1801), the Royal Prerogative historically was one of the central features of the realm's governance. Some key areas of British system of government are still carried out by means of the Royal Prerogative. However the usage of the Royal Prerogative has been diminishing. Contrary to widespread belief, the Royal Prerogative is not unlimited. In the Case of Proclamations (1611) during the reign of King James I/VI, English common law courts judges emphatically asserted that they possessed the right to determine the limits of the Royal Prerogative. Since the Glorious Revolution (1688), which brought co-monarchs Queen Mary II and King William III to power, this judicial interpretation has not been challenged by the Crown. Among the powers theoretically possessed by the monarch in the United Kingdom under the Royal Prerogative are:- The appointment and dismissal of ministers;
- The dissolution of parliament and the calling of elections;
- Clemency and pardon;
- The awarding of dignities and honours;
- The declaration of war;
- The declaration of an emergency;
- The granting of Charters of Incorporation;
- The collection of tolls;
- The issuance and revocation of passports;
- The expulsion of a foreign national from the United Kingdom;
- The creation of new common law courts;
- The creation of new universities;
- The appointment of bishops and archbishops in the Church of England;
- The printing of the authorised Church of England version of The Bible;
- The publication of all statutes, legislative instruments and Orders-in-Council.
- The accreditation of diplomats;
- The granting of Sovereign Immunity;
- The negotiation of treaties.
- The power to order a subject not to leave the realm;
- Royal ownership of swans.
See Also
- Order-in-Council
- Queen-in-Council
- Queen-in-Parliament
- Statutory Instrument
- Arrete Royale
- Letters patent
- Executive Privilege
Additional Reading
- Walter Bagehot, The English Constitution
- Joseph Chitty, The Prerogatives of the Crown (monograph from 1820)
- Stanley de Smith and Rodney Brazier, Constitutional and Administrative Law
- A.B. Keith, The King and the Imperial Crown (1936)
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