by Workingman » 26 Jul 2013, 23:48
Not true.
The Monarch has three choices:
1. Royal Assent. It is always given. No problem.
2. Royal Assent, reserve powers. This is where the Monarch refuses assent for an undisclosed period of time. To do so would foment a constitutional crisis, probably resulting in the abolition of the Monarchy as a political entity.
3. Royal Assent refused. This would definitely result in the abolition of the Monarchy.
The Monarch will always give assent, making it symbolic and a courtesy, to do otherwise would see the end of the Monarchy.
The Duchies of Cornwall, Gloucester, Lancaster and York, part of the Act of Settlement, could be removed tomorrow by a bill of Parliament of the Commons. It is called evolution.
We are not subjects of the Monarch, but citizens of the country. The Monarch is effectively a subject of the common man.
HM Courts and laws are not the courts and laws of the Monarch, they are courts and laws of the State of the United Kingdom and Northern Ireland.
The Crown = the State.
The Monarch cannot levy taxes, raise an army or go to war. If the cousins fall out the Monarch cannot declare war on Luxembourg, but the State - the Crown - could.