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Windsor wealth

Rule According to Higher Law | LANGUAGE PRACTICE AND COMPREHENSION CHECK | Unlimited power is apt to corrupt the minds of those who possess it. | Financing the monarchy | Crown-in-Parliament | Defender of the Faith | LANGUAGE PRACTICE AND COMPREHENSION CHECK | Private law powers | The Power to … Assent to Legislation | PREROGATIVE POWERS |


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Estimates of the Queen's wealth range from under £50m to over £7bn, depending on which way her income and assets are calculated. The Queen's personal possessions include her racing stables, her Balmoral and Sandringham homes and her investments. Windsor Castle, Buckingham Palace and the Crown jewels are "inalienable" property, that is, they can not be sold but must be passed on to her successor. The Economist reckons that the extent of the Queen's wealth has been exaggerated, because a lot of her money is ploughed back into helping other members of the royal family. But Phillip Hall, who has written a study of royal fortunes which calls for the Queen to be taxed, estimates that the Queen's investments are worth at least £341m, and that she is "without doubt the wealthiest person in Britain".

LANGUAGE PRACTICE AND COMPREHENSION CHECK:

TASK I Explain the meaning of the verb to raise in the following word combinations:

To raise armies, to raise money/funds, to raise a question/ an issue, to raise a chair, to raise one's hat, to raise prices/taxes, to raise a monument, to raise one's voice,
to raise children, to raise a siege/blockade, to raise an embargo, to raise awareness/fears.

 

 

TASK II Match the verbs with the nouns:

a) to levy 1) Parliament

b) to declare 2) prime ministers

c) to dissolve 3) the monarchy

d) to prevent 4) the right

e) to restore 5) the powers

f) to give up 6) taxes

g) to exercise 7) wars

h) to appoint 8) criticism

TASK III Use the following expressions to describe changes in Britain’s system of government:

The power has been eroded;

• Separation between the power of the monarch and the power of the state;

• To use one's power;

• The unrestricted powers;

Power is transferred;

• To limit the powers;

• Sovereign power is vested in;

• The right to absolute power;

• To give greater powers;

The powers traditionally exercised by the Crown;

• The monarch's remaining constitutional powers;

• Token political power;

• Dwindling power.

TASK IV Find the following expressions in the text and use them to begin your own sentences:

a) Britain's system of government...

b) The oldest British institution of government...

c) King Egbert...

d) King George VI...

e) "Constitutional" monarchies...

f) The English Civil War...

g) Oliver Cromwell...

h) The "Glorious Revolution"...

i) The football pools...

j) The problems of the unemployed and homeless...

k) Prime ministers and peers...

l) The extent of the royal wealth and privilege...

TASK V Use the text to add events to the following dates:

1952

1642-1649

1660-1685

1685-1688

1689

1913-1914

1931

1837

1877

1001

 

TEXT 6 A right royal argument*

Both monarchists and republicans have strong arguments to back up their case for tradition or change in Britain.


ALTHOUGH other countries in Europe — Denmark, Holland and Spain, for example — have monarchies, the lifestyle of continental kings and queens has less pomp and ceremony than their British counter­parts. The Swedish royal family, for example, sends its children to state schools.

However, most of the world's nations exist without a monarchy at all — the majority are republics. These are states in which there is no monarch and the role of a national figurehead is filled by an elected or nominated representative. In the Republic of Ireland, the president is elected by the people for a period of seven years. In Italy, the president is elected by an electoral college made up of two houses of parliament and dele­gates from the different regions.

Some supporters of this form of government, known as "republicans", argue that, apart from being more democratic, it is also cheaper to run. One writer on the finances of British royalty, Phillip Hall, has estimated that the cost to the public of running the royal family is more than five times that of the German presidency.

Modern republicanism dates back to the American (1775-83) and French (1789) revolutions. The idea is strongly associated with the democratic ideals of Thomas Paine (1737-1809), author of The Rights of Man. Although there has been a long republican tradition in this country, it had largely died out by the end of the last century.

Critics of the monarchy say it is out of keeping with modern democratic principles. But in general, the institu­tion of the royal family is accepted in Britain today with only limited criti­cism and has rarely faced serious challenges.

Supporters of the monarchy, known as "monarchists", argue that it has been an important source of stabil­ity and political continuity in Britain. They say that the pageantry associated with the royal family brightens people's lives and — at worst — causes no harm. Its defenders also emphasise that the royal family indirectly gener­ate tourism and trade, so giving the nation "value for money".

The main objection made by repub­licans to the monarchy is not so much financial as political. According to Tony Benn. the Labour MP and former cabinet minister, the monarchy "is actually an elaborate cover for a struc­ture of unaccountable executive power which is absolutely contrary to all the principles of democracy." The Royal Prerogative, he argues, enables prime ministers to go to war, make treaties, appoint peers, bishops and judges "without even pretending to consult Parliament". In 1991, Mr Benn present­ed a Bill to Parliament that advocated the abolition of the monarchy, the first such attempt in Parliament since Cromwell's time.

Supporters of the monarchy argue that a ceremonial head of state is preferable to an elected, and potential­ly dictatorial, politician. However, republicans argue that the hereditary system (by which the monarchy passes down through the royal family) does not guarantee individual merit.

Alternatives to the monarchy include different forms of elected presi­dency. Proposals have also been put forward in Britain (by the Labour party, for example), for an elected sec­ond chamber to replace the House of Lords. Yet few politicians voice anti-monarchist views today, and the main parties broadly support the institution.

Given the strength of royal tradi­tion in Britain it is unlikely that such ideas will be included in any party manifesto in the immediate future.


 


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