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General information about the political system of the UK
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Great Britain for short, is a constitutional monarchy. This means that the official head of the State is a monarch (a king or queen) who accepts the advice of a parliament and whose power is limited by the constitution. Great Britain is also a parliamentary democracy. That is, it is a country whose government is controlled by a parliament elected by the people. As far as the constitution is concerned, there is no single written document which can be appealed to as the highest law of the land. The constitution is based on customs, traditions and common rules and regulations.
There are three branches of power and its head is the monarch. There you can see a table of the main institutions of each branch of power.
The Queen | ||
The Legislature (makes laws) | The Executive (puts laws into effect and plans policy) | The Judiciary (decides on cases that arise out of the laws) |
Parliament of the United Kingdom | Her Majesty's Government | Supreme Court of the United Kingdom |
Scottish Parliament | Scottish Local Government | The Supreme Courts of Scotland |
National Assembly for Wales | Welsh Local government | Her Majesty's Courts of Justice of England and Wales |
Northern Ireland Assembly | Local government in Northern Ireland | The Court of Judicature of Northern Ireland |
In the further articles I’d like to provide more information about the history of the political system, the monarchy, the government and parliament.
Looking back at the past
The United Kingdom hasn’t been always a constitutional monarchy. The thing is that once Britain wasn’t a monarchy at all!
In this article I’d like to provide you with some information concerning the beginning of the monarchy and parliament.
PS I know that the information may seem a bit boring, but I’m pretty sure you’ve always wanted to know who was the first king of Britain!
Monarchy
When the territory of the present England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland was inhabited by separated tribes, there wasn’t any idea of making a union with the one and only head of it. That’s why at the time of the Neolithic Britons, the “Beaker” people, the Celts (it’s the period which lasted since 3000 BC till 43 AD) there wasn’t a united country. Speaking about the Roman invasion (43-410), it just increased the separation and differences between England, Wales and Scotland, Ireland, but also didn’t give the union to british tribes (as the Romans were mere conquerors, not settlers).
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