Posted on 04/29/2011 12:22:43 AM PDT by naturalman1975
A very handsome couple, all the best to them and my ancestors’ home country: England!
Charles has always struck me as more of a lounge lizard than a liege...
No. It's in the control of Parliament - laid down in Acts of Parliament. The most important of these is the Act of Settlement of 1701, but the Act of Union of 1800, and His Majesty's Declaration of Abdication Act 1936 (this last is now irrelevant, as Edward VIII/the Duke of Windsor died without heirs but it reflects the fact that even when a King abdicated, Parliament had to alter the succession because the King could not do so himself).
I hope you’re having a good time.......I’m still waiting for local news coverage and the short term weather forecast.......
Given Charles despicable behaviour as it pertains to Camilla one would think people in glass coaches would have more heart when it comes to Fergie.
LOL
Cannot the Queen dissolve the parliament at any time?
Who is commander in chief of the military?
Is the Royal Guard part of the military or a separate entity?
PS: Thanks for the answers, I don’t know squat about Dukes and Lords and all that stuff...
;-)
Hope you enjoyed the wedding, naturalman! I certainly enjoyed watching it here in the States.
Your new Duchess looked absolutely stunning today. (And William looked awfully smart as well!) Good luck to the happy couple.
Regards,
There’s been chatter for years (search engine: charles skipped in royal succession) that Charles would not be acceptable as King.
He’s an outspoken politically (alienating half of Parliament), was divorced, has a controversial business empire, and may have converted to Islam.
The Queen has informal influence, but only Parliament can make the decision.
“Cannot the Queen dissolve the parliament at any time?
Who is commander in chief of the military?
Is the Royal Guard part of the military or a separate entity?”
I’m not British but I believe the answers are that no, she cannot dissolve parliament any time she likes. Only on the advice of the Prime Minister. In theory should a PM need to dissolve parliament and not ask her to do so, she could act but that would be a very unique situation.
The Monarch is comander in chief so in theory the military take their orders from her not the PM, but then she relies on the PM’s advise on this as other issues.
The Royal Guards are a part of the army.
I’ve been a fan of the Royals since my teen years. I got up at 2:30 am in California to watch he and Diana’s wedding. I thought only good things of him until the morning of his wedding when some Fleet Street reporter guy said to Joan Lunden of Good Morning America, that he hoped Diana could deal with Charles’ long time mistress Camila Parker-Bowles. In the American press, their courtship had seemed like a fairy tale. Joan was as shocked by the comment as I was. I read every scrap I could find on both he and Diana for years. After the comment about the monarchy I hoped and still hope that Elizabeth II will abdicate in favor of William, not that I get ANY say in the matter. I also wish William and his bride a long and happy marriage.
Indeed, if she lives to be as old as her mother (nearly 102), she could be on the throne another 17 years (a whopping 76 years, which will probably set the all-time record).
Technically, yes - but the last time a King tried to do it when he shouldn't, Parliament eventually chopped his head off.
There are constitutional conventions that state under what conditions the Queen should do this. Basically, only if the Prime Minister asks her to, or a constitutional crisis has arisen.
Back in 1975, in Australia - which shares basically the same system of government and also shares the Monarch - a constitutional crisis of that nature did develop. But even in that case, the Governor-General (the Queen's appointed representative) dismissed the Prime Minister and appointed the Leader of the Opposition in his place, on the condition that the Leader of the Opposition would ask for an election. Dissolving Parliament simply on their own authority would only occur in a emergency - say, if there was a Prime Minister and government who refused to accept a vote of no confidence.
Who is commander in chief of the military?
The Monarch - the King or Queen.
Is the Royal Guard part of the military or a separate entity?
The Queen's Guard can be drawn from any unit of the British forces, or those of the other Commonwealth Realms (such as Australia). Most commonly, it is done by the one of five Army regigments - the Grenadier Guards, the Coldstream Guards, the Scots Guards, the Irish Guards, or the Welsh Guards (these are the regiments that wear the traditional bearskin hats and red coats) but there is always one other Regiment in the rotation, normally for a two year period - currently that is the The Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment (Queen's and Royal Hampshires). And on occasion, other regiments - British and Commonwealth - are given the task as a special honour - for example, 1988 was Australia's Bicentenniel, and in that year, the Royal Australian Regiment of the Australian Army mounted a guard.
The Cavalry Guard is the Queen's Life Guard, and is normally provided by the Household Cavalry Mounted Regiment (the Life Guards and the Blues and Royals - these were both seen escorting the carriages today) occasionally relieved by the Royal Horse Artillery but again, on a couple of occasions, other units have done it.
Beats the Duke of Dolphins.
Perhaps he possesses an oversized schvanschtupper.
I prefer Sir Loin of Beef...
I have deemed my cat Sir Poopsalot.
Thanks for the detailed reply to my question.
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