By Royal Appointment Tales from the Privy Council - the unknown arm of Government
David Rogers - Biteback Publishing, 2015
We have no written constitution and, therefore, no easy answers to
these questions. There are people who would argue that it has no power
at all. Others might disagree. Particularly if you had been sentenced to
death in a former British overseas territory that still used the Privy
Council as its court of appeal, for example, or if you were a student
having a row with your college examiners where the University
Chancellor, or the Official Visitor, was a member of the royal family.
Perhaps a priest who had been defrocked by the Church of England’s Court
of Arches, or, for that matter, a Prime Minister trying to establish a
Royal Charter to control the press.
The Privy Council meets several times a year when five or six members
of the Cabinet – who are all Privy Counsellors – are summoned to attend
on the Queen and, among other business, Acts of Parliament receive the
royal assent. Much of the work of the Council is done by standing or
ad-hoc committees and sometimes politicians are made Privy Counsellors
so that they can serve on such committees. For centuries, Privy
Counsellors were sworn to secrecy by the Privy Council Oath and until
1999 to break that oath was regarded as an act of treason.
Traditionally, the Council has always existed to advise the Sovereign
on the exercise of the Royal Prerogative, to make laws, to condemn to
death and to go to war. Nowadays, most of its power has been devolved,
yet it cannot simply be dismissed as having a purely ceremonial role.
Its tentacles spread to every area of parliamentary and public life.
Brides, battleships and burial plots are all affected by the current
workings of the Privy Council, as is the governance of both the Channel
Islands and the Isle of Man.
By Royal Appointment takes us on an anecdote-filled odyssey
through the history of one of England’s oldest and most secretive
institutions, its history spanning our history from King Cnut, through
the Middle Ages, up to its modern embodiment and functions.