Quote: east hull FC fan "You are deluded, there is no other explanation for your irrational thought on this matter.
Does it not say British CITIZEN on your passport? Who classes you as a subject? Except yourself on some ancient technicality.
Still waiting for you to present some evidence to Standee to back up this claim that the Royals influence government.'"
I'm neither deluded nor irrational. Regardless of the wording on my passport (dictated by international protocol) I am a subject, as is every other British national except the Monarch. Research it for yourself if you don't believe me. It's not an ancient technicality, it's built in to our unwritten constitution.
On top of that, just about everyone who wields any power in this country is required to swear a personal oath of allegiance to the Monarch and his/her heirs in perpetuity - not to the country, people, or Parliament. All MPs swear to serve the Queen and her heirs, not the people who elected them. I don't happen to think that's appropriate in a modern democracy.
All power in this country devolves from the Crown rather than Parliament. Even when the Monarch stays out of the picture the Prime Minister and Privy Council wield this power on their behalf without any constitutional restraint. That includes such minor issues as taking the country to war without being required to consult Parliament as just one example.
On two separate occasions (1957 and 1963) our current Queen directly chose who would become Prime Minster when the Tory Party were in power and the choice of Party Leader (and hence Prime Minister) was proving difficult to resolve. In 1910 the King insisted on a dissolution of Parliament before he would enact legislation passed by Parliament because he disagreed with it. A full constitutional crisis was only averted by his death and replacement by a more reasonable successor.
There's a fair amount of interesting information
rlhererl. It's a campaign site for a Republic so clearly not impartial, but they do attempt to address all the common arguments in favour of continuing with the Monarchy. I don't agree with everything they say - they seem to have a far more personal dislike of the Royal Family than I do, and some of their PR ideas don't sit well with me - but I agree with the fundamental principles and arguments.