Gender Males born after 28 October 2011 no longer precede their elder sisters in the line of succession. There has not yet been a monarch's succession affected by the new rule. The first people in the line of succession to be affected by the changes on the date they came into force were the children of
Lady Davina Lewis, her son Tāne (born 2012) and her daughter Senna (born 2010), who were reversed in the order of succession, becoming 29th and 28th in line respectively. The current first affected successor in line is
Princess Charlotte of Wales, who would otherwise be preceded by
Prince Louis of Wales.
Princess Anne, however, would succeed after her younger brothers because she was born before the commencement of the Succession Act. As a result, her brothers, their children and grandchildren precede her in the line of succession. When the act came into force in May 2013, the Duchess of Cambridge was expecting her first child, and its provisions would have had significant effect had the child been a girl, with media commentary focusing on the potential for the birth to make history. In the event it was a boy (as it was,
Prince George of Wales) the act would have no practical effect. However, it has since taken on significance for his younger siblings. Princess Charlotte of Wales was from her birth on 2 May 2015 fourth in line to the throne, after Prince George and ahead of
Prince Harry, just as she would have been had the act not been passed. However, due to the provisions of the act, she has retained her place in the succession ahead of her younger brother
Prince Louis of Wales, who was born on 23 April 2018.
Marriage to Roman Catholics Marrying a Roman Catholic no longer disqualifies a person from succeeding to the Crown. The explanation published when the bill was introduced mentioned that those who had lost their places in the line of succession by marrying a Roman Catholic would regain their places, but that no one "with a realistic prospect of succeeding to the Throne" would be affected. The highest-ranked person to be affected by this change was
George Windsor, Earl of St Andrews, who had married a Roman Catholic in 1988 and was restored to the line of succession in 34th place, after his father
Prince Edward, Duke of Kent.
Consent to marriages The
Royal Marriages Act 1772 is repealed. Instead, only the
first six persons in line to the throne require the Sovereign's approval to marry. For these six, marriage without the Sovereign's consent would disqualify the person and the person's descendants from succeeding to the Crown. However, the marriage would still be legally valid. Marriages legally void under the Royal Marriages Act 1772 will be treated as never having been void, except for purposes relating to the succession to the Crown, provided all the following conditions are met: • Neither party to the marriage was one of the six persons next in the line of succession to the Crown at the time of the marriage. • No consent was sought under section 1 of that Act, or notice given under section 2 of that Act, in respect of the marriage. • In all the circumstances it was reasonable for the person concerned not to have been aware at the time of the marriage that the act applied to it. • No person acted before the coming into force of the 2013 Act on the basis that the marriage was void.
Consequential amendments Provisions in the
Acts of Union 1707, between England and Scotland, and in the
Acts of Union 1800, between Great Britain and Ireland, that involve the Crown are "subject to provisions of" the act. Several sections in the
Bill of Rights 1689 and the
Act of Settlement 1701 involving marriages with "
papists" (Catholics) were repealed. Any references to provisions relating to "the succession to, or possession of, the Crown" also include, by reference, the provisions of this act. However, the sections that ban Catholic succession were not repealed. Catholics are still officially termed as being "naturally dead and deemed to be dead" in terms of succession. This distinction was first legislated in the Bill of Rights 1689.
Jacob Rees-Mogg (
Con) also confirmed "the act of Settlement deems somebody who has been a Catholic for a minute to be 'dead' in terms of the succession, and it passes over them 'as if they were dead'. It is an absolute. If at any moment in their whole life they were in communion with Rome, they are excluded from the throne, deemed to be dead."
Mark Durkan (
SDLP) made a comparison of this with
McCarthyism, "In effect, it is the McCarthyite question: 'Are you now or have you ever been a Catholic?'". He then went on with a summary of the proviso saying, "For anybody who has ever been a Catholic in any shape or form, that is it, they are out; they count as dead for these purposes." The ban continues. A person who has never been a Catholic but who is not Protestant is permitted to succeed if they convert to a Protestant communion, since a Protestant monarch is required by the
Acts of Union 1707. As the monarch's eldest son will no longer automatically be
heir apparent, the
Treason Act 1351 was also amended, so that encompassing the death of the monarch's eldest son is now extended to murdering the heir apparent, whatever the sex. Another amendment to the Treason Act is that, whereas it had been treason to "violate" the monarch's eldest son's wife, it is now only treason if the eldest son is also the eldest child. The
Regency Act 1937 (
1 Edw. 8 & 1 Geo. 6. c. 16) was amended to require the
regent to be a person who had not been disqualified from the succession by marrying without the monarch's permission under the 2013 act. When publishing the bill the government had announced that it was expecting to bring the provisions into force at the same time as the other realms would be bringing into force any changes to their legislation or other changes necessary for them to implement the Perth Agreement. This was done on 26 March 2015. ==External reference==