Neferti~ wrote: ↑Tue Jun 04, 2019 4:23 pm
brian ross wrote: ↑Tue Jun 04, 2019 4:01 pm
Really? What "power" would that be, Flektarn. Please explain where in our Constitution the Monarch is named...
She is currently referred to as HER MAJESTY. When our Constitution was drawn up, it was HIS MAJESTY ... as it will be, again, when Charles takes over.
Oh, dearie, dearie, me. Betraying your ignorance yet again, Neferti. Guess who was the ruler of England between 20 June 1837 until their death on 22 January 1901? I'll give you a hint, it wasn't a King. When was the Australian Constitution voted into force? 1900.
In the Constitution, the Monarch is mentioned approximately 20 times. She was however, only named (at the time) three times. The Monarch effectively has little power over Australia and Australians. When she visits, she metaphorically puts on her "Queen of Australia" hat and takes off her "Queen of the UK" hat. When she isn't visiting, the Governor General represents her. The GG is recommended for appointment by the Queen by the Government of the Day.
There have been disputes between the Crown and the Government over who should be appointed, back in the first 40 years of us being a self-governing Dominion. The Government won each one. Isaac Isaacs (GG 1931-1936) was the biggest such dispute. Buckingham Palace didn't like the idea of a Jew being appointed GG. The Australian Government didn't care about his religion and made a point of it. Buckingham Palace gave in.
The GG, with the exception of their "reserve powers" does as they are told by the Prime Minister. The only time the Reserve Powers were exercised, it resulted in a Constitutional crisis which still resounds to this day. When the Monarch is in residence, they do as the Government instructs them, just like the GG.
Nationalism is not to be confused with patriotism. - Eric Blair