Royal Prerogative The
British monarch is the
head of state and the
sovereign, but not the
head of government. In practice, the monarch conventionally takes little direct part in governing the country and remains neutral in political affairs. However, the authority of the state that is vested in the sovereign, known as
the Crown, remains the source of executive power exercised by the government. In addition to
explicit statutory authority, the Crown also possesses a body of powers in certain matters collectively known as the
royal prerogative. These powers range from the authority to issue or withdraw passports to declarations of war. By long-standing convention, most of these powers are delegated from the sovereign to various ministers or other officers of the Crown, who may use them without having to obtain the consent of Parliament. The prime minister also has weekly meetings with the monarch. What is said in these meetings is strictly private; however, they generally involve government and political matters which the monarch has a "right and a duty" to comment on. Such comments are non-binding however and the King must ultimately abide by decisions of the government. Royal prerogative powers include, but are not limited to, the following:
Domestic powers receiving Prime Minister
Tony Blair after he won a third term in office on 6 May 2005 • The power to appoint and dismiss a
prime minister. This power is exercised by the monarch personally. However, the last time the monarch used their own discretion when exercising this power was 1834, with the modern convention that they appoint (and are expected to appoint) the individual most likely to be capable of commanding a majority in the House of Commons. • The power to appoint and dismiss other
ministers. This power is exercised by the monarch on the advice of the prime minister. • The power to assent to and enact laws by giving
royal assent to
bills passed by Parliament, which is required for a law to become effective (an
act). This is exercised by the monarch, who also theoretically has the power to refuse assent, although no monarch has refused assent to a bill passed by Parliament since
Queen Anne in 1708. • The power to give and to issue commissions to
commissioned officers in the
Armed Forces. • The power to command the Armed Forces. This power is exercised by the
Defence Council in the King's name. • The power to appoint members to the
Privy Council. • The power to issue, suspend, cancel, recall, impound, withdraw, or revoke British passports and the general power to provide or deny British passport facilities to British citizens and British nationals. This is exercised in the United Kingdom (but not necessarily in the
Isle of Man,
Channel Islands or
British Overseas Territories) by the
home secretary. • The power to pardon any conviction (the
royal prerogative of mercy). • The power to grant, cancel and annul any
honours. • The power to create corporations (including the status of being a city, with its corporation) by
royal charter, and to amend, replace and revoke existing charters.
Foreign powers • The power to make and ratify
treaties. • The power to
declare war and
conclude peace with other nations. • The power to deploy the Armed Forces overseas. • The power to
recognise states. • The credit power and receive diplomats. While no formal documents set out the prerogatives, the government published the above list in October 2003 to increase transparency, as some of the powers exercised in the name of the monarch are part of the
royal prerogative. However, the complete extent of the royal prerogative powers has never been fully set out, as many of them originated in ancient custom and the period of
absolute monarchy, or were modified by later constitutional practice. ==Ministers and departments==