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== Capitalisation ==
 
* [[Talk:Commonwealth Realm/Archive]] - may require summary here.
What is the appropriate capitalization of this phrase? Can we make the title and the first sentence consistant? -- [[User:Zoe|Zoe]]
* [[Talk:Commonwealth Realm/Archive 2]] - Talk beginning shortly after mediation
* [[Talk:Commonwealth Realm/Archive 3]] - Continued
* [[Talk:Commonwealth Realm/AVD]] - Extraneous comments by ArmchairVellixologistDon
=== If this interpretation ===
If this interpretation of Rouleau HAD been agreed on the Canadian page then I would have been perfectly happy with this proposal. However, it is perfectly clear from the Canadian talk page that it has NOT been agreed -- and that you knew that (did you REALLY think I'd just take your word for it??). Therefore you cannot legitimately use that argument to drive the text on this page.
 
What is also clear is that there is no hope of agreement on either page. Therefore I am going to butt out at this point and let you children fight amongst yourselves. I am sure you will continue to do until a real mediator with big guns steps in to bang some sense into your collective heads. But I will ask the mediator offline to comment out the current Rouleau text, since it is certainly wrong. --[[User:Chris Bennett|Chris Bennett]] 22:22, 27 July 2005 (UTC)
:It seems to me that it should be "Commonwealth realm" for the same reason I'd expect an article about European kingdoms to have a lower case "k". [[User:Ben Arnold|Ben Arnold]] 12:23, 23 Mar 2005 (UTC)
 
== Ireland's leaving ==
 
It is interesting that gbambino and Peter are again trying to excise any mention of the "British Crown" even though that is the established legal and constitutional term for the "shared crown" and even though they both have acknowledged this, however grudgingly, elsewhere. The term "British Crown" should be used in the article and as Rouleau's comments affirm the correctness of the usage I think the Rouleau quotation currently in the article should be used. As for whether or not the Crown is "essentially British", there's a strong argument that it is and no, gbambino, it's not a "fringe argument" either. Culturally, historically and constitutionally the crown remains "essentially British". The laws shaping the monarchy are all British laws, they may have been accepted or copied by Commonwealth Realms but that does not change their origin. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 22:06, 27 July 2005 (UTC)
Surely Ireland left in [[1949]] - from recollection the [[1937]] constitution or related law retained the monarchy as an organ for external relations and they remained in the Commonwealth (and relations with the UK went through the Dominions Office, not the Foreign Office). I won't change it without checking here though. [[User:Timrollpickering|Timrollpickering]] 12:02, 11 Dec 2004 (UTC)
 
How about:
== Any chance to consolidate Commonwealth Realm with the Commonwealth? ==
 
:''However, because the [[Balfour Declaration, 1926|Balfour Declaration]], the [[Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act 1927]], the [[Statute of Westminster 1931]], and the patriation of each of the Realms' constitutions, remain little known outside of legal circles, a common misconception prevails that the Crown remains an essentially British institution. This misconception is aided by frequent reference to the shared Crown as the "British Crown" for historical reasons and for convenience. For example, in the Ontario court ruling on the case [[O’Donohue v. Her Majesty the Queen, 2003]], Justice Rouleau states for Canada: "Union under the British Crown together with other Commonwealth countries [is a] constitutional principle."'' --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 22:09, 27 July 2005 (UTC)
Any chance of listing the 'Realms' at the bottom of "The Commonwealth of Nations" simply to be able to consolidate some templates??? [[User:CaribDigita|CaribDigita]] 16:08, 20 Apr 2005 (UTC)
 
No. You are pushing your POV that the crown is not an "essentially British institution". [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 22:12, 27 July 2005 (UTC)
==Powers of the Realms==
 
"and that the Crown is shared equally amongst the Realms,"
I disagree with the statement "Another power the realms hold is the formal approval of any marriage within the royal family that may produce an heir to the throne". The Royal Family are British citizens, therefore they are only subject to British law. Thus if say New Zealand passes a law forbidding marriage, or the government is against the marriage, there is no legal barrier to marriage in the UK. [[User:Astrotrain|Astrotrain]] 20:44, Apr 24, 2005 (UTC)
 
That hasn't been agreed to at all. Please do not embellish, gbambino. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 22:06, 27 July 2005 (UTC)
The obvious problem with this particular scenario is that it would change the succession in right of New Zealand. But I agree that the sentence seems a little strong, and I also doubt that any marriage that passes muster in the UK actually does require Commonwealth consent. The only argument I can imagine is that the Royal Marriages Act now requires permission of each of His Majesty's Governments rather than just the UK government. In fact I suspect it was done as a courtesy, for the avoidance of doubt rather than any other reason. --[[User:Chris Bennett|Chris Bennett]] 02:35, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
If the Crown were shared equally the Queen would not spend the majority of her time in one of her realms and that realm would not have the primary say on matters such as approving royal marriages, initiating royal reforms etc and the succession to the throne would not be designed in such a way as to fit the needs of one realm and no others. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 22:12, 27 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:What on earth are you on about? Firstly, where the Queen spends the majority of her time has nothing to do with constitutional law. Secondly, who says the UK has "primary say" over Royal marriages/reforms? And thirdly, what ''real'' support do you have to your claim that the line of succession is tailored to "fit the needs" of one Realm and no others? --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 22:23, 27 July 2005 (UTC)
== One Crown or several? ==
 
The passage in Monarchy in Canada states the Crown functions independently in each realm; it does not say equally, that is a gbambino interpolation. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 22:15, 27 July 2005 (UTC)
I've moved most of what was in this section to the "interpretation" section of [[O'Donohue v. Canada, 2003]]. Personal opinions about Rouleau's ruling do not belong in this article as they have no effect on the standing theories on the Crown over the Commonwealth Realms, and are relevant only to the ruling itself. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 21:04, 11 July 2005 (UTC)
 
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=== From MiC ===
I have again removed the section as the statement "Some hold that this theory was contradicted, in Canada at least, by a 2003 Ontario Superior Court ruling by Justice Paul S. Rouleau" is [[Wikipedia:No original research|original research]]. Without this unfounded contradiction of the established relationship of the Crown over an in it's Realms, the entire section is pointless. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 19:11, 12 July 2005 (UTC)
:From [[Monarchy in Canada]]:
:"''As a result of the Balfour Declaration of 1926 the dominions acquired '''the right to be considered equal to Britain rather than subordinate'''; an agreement that had the result of, in theory, a shared Crown that operates independently in each realm rather than a unitary British Crown under which all the dominions were subordinate. The subsequent Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act, 1927 was the first indication of this shift in law, further elaborated in the Statute of Westminster, 1931... '''These concepts were reasserted by Justice Rouleau, in a 2003 court ruling'''... in which he wrote that "Union under the British Crown together with other Commonwealth countries" is a "constitutional principle." The Monarchy is thus no longer an exclusively British institution, although it may often be called British for historical reasons and for convenience.''"
:That seems to me to be an affirmation of the equality of the Realms under the Crown. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 22:23, 27 July 2005 (UTC)
 
It is not, however, an affirmation that "the Crown is shared equally amongst the Realms" as you wrongly claimed. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 22:26, 27 July 2005 (UTC)
Given that you saw fit to move the section to another article you cannot now claim it's original research, particularly when it comes with citations from a court ruling. Are you going to argue that Peter's O'Donohue v Queen article be deleted as well? [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]19:25, 12 July 2005 (UTC)
 
If the Realms are equal then it follows that the Crown must be shared equally. If one Realm has more control over the Crown than another then the principal of equality (or symmetry, as Rouleau stated) is negated. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 15:35, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
I've rewritten the passage so that it simply states the facts without any interpretation.[[User:AndyL|AndyL]]19:32, 12 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:"If the Realms are equal then it follows that the Crown must be shared equally."
:I'm sorry, Andy, While Rouleau's ruling may make references to the Crown over the Commonwealth Realms, as well as the Crown within Canada, it does not put into question the established status of the Crown. No matter how you want to word it, the retention of "One Crown or Many?" is your own lone attempt to upset the status quo. Until you have provided ample secondary sources (though, one would be nice at least) to back up your claim that the ruling really raises any questions amongst constitutional scholars, then its still nothing more than [[Wikipedia:No original research|original research]].
That's an agument, not a fact. Please try to set your POV aside.
:As for it's inclusion on [[O'Donohue v. Canada, 2003]]-- I certainly can "claim" it's still original research. But for the time being I think the disease-like spread of your personal theory on this matter needs to be reigned in, and [[O'Donohue v. Canada, 2003]] is the best place to narrow it down to as it is really only relevant to that ruling. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 19:56, 12 July 2005 (UTC)
[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 18:24, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Would you care to explain how a relationship of equals might otherwise be regarded? Or do you have a different definition of equality than everyone else? --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 19:47, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
Citation from an original source is not original research. Let's leave it to the mediator.
 
BTW,You youdon'vet revertedunderstand threethe timesdifference now.between Once morerealm and crown, do you'll? breakOr themaybe 3you revertthink ruleone andis bea bannedmetaphor for 24 hours.the other?[[User:AndyLHOTR|AndyLHomey]] 20:0446, 1228 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Simple concept: one Crown, Realms are equal, all Realms share the Crown equally. I know it's tough for you, but try to wrap your mind around it, as it's quite "relevent". --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 20:51, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
:Stop playing your silly game of hiding behind a direct quote as your defence for its manipulation. What constitutes original research here is '''your theory on the implication of the ruling''' ''not'' the quotations from the ruling itself!
 
Do you not understand that "realm" and "Crown" are different concepts and just because something is said of one doesn't make it true of the other? There are not "multiple crowns" (which you and Peter conceded long ago) so its nonsense to talk about "equal crowns", we're talking about a shared Crown (which is what the Statute of Westminster implies), one that is more British than it is anything else. You disagree and think it's in equal parts British, Canadian, Jamaican etc and that's fine which is why what we are dealing with is two different POVs, the problem is you insist on pushing your POV as a fact and cannot conceive that anyone but a "fringe" element could possibly think any different. This makes any sort of mediation with you difficult if not impossible. [[User:HOTR|Homey]]
:For the assitance of the mediator, from [[Wikipedia:No original research|original research]]:
 
::Simple concept: one Crown, Realms are equal, all Realms share the Crown equally. I know it's tough for you, but try to wrap your mind around it, as it's quite "relevent".
::The phrase "original research" in this context refers to '''untested theories'''; data, statements, concepts and ideas that have '''not been published in a reputable publication'''; or any '''new interpretation, analysis, or synthesis of published data, statements, concepts or ideas''' that, in the words of Wikipedia's founder Jimbo Wales, would amount to a '''"novel narrative or historical interpretation"'''.
 
Just because something is simple doesn't make it true.[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 20:56, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
::Original research is research that produces primary sources or secondary sources. '''Primary sources present information or data, such as''' archeological artifacts; photographs; historical documents such as a diary, census, '''transcript of a public hearing, trial''', or interview; tabulated results of surveys or questionnaires, records of laboratory assays or observations; records of field observations. Secondary sources present a generalization, analysis, synthesis, interpretation, or evaluation of information or data.
 
Yes, silly me. And I suppose those Australian judges, and Constitutional Committee members, and even judges in the UK who assert that the Realms are sovereign entities within which the Crown operates ''seperately'' must be idiots too. We should all be so glad you've come forward to clarify the way things ''really'' are. Imagine, for 70 years we've all been mislead by a bunch of conspiring monarchists. Shame on us. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 21:25, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
::'''Original research that produces primary sources is not allowed'''. However, research that consists of collecting and organizing information from existing primary and secondary sources is strongly encouraged. In fact, all articles on Wikipedia should be based on information collected from primary and secondary sources. This is called source-based research, and it is fundamental to writing an encyclopedia.
 
"Separately" is not a synonym for "equally" (just like "exclusively" is not a synonym for "essentially")[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 14:24, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
::==What is excluded from articles==
::A Wikipedia entry (including any part of an article) counts as ''original'' research if it '''proposes ideas''', that is:
::* '''it introduces a theory''' or method of solution; or
::* '''it introduces original ideas'''; or
::* it defines new terms; or
::* '''it provides new definitions of old terms'''; or
::* '''it introduces an original argument purporting to refute or support another idea, theory, argument, or position described in the article'''; or
::* it introduces [[neologism|neologisms]].
 
=== How vocabulary is a problem ===
::All of the above may be acceptable content once they have become a permanent feature of the public landscape. For example:
*Part of the problem with the wording, from a Canadian perspective at least, is that it brings back the word 'crown' and the nightmarish ambiguity associated with it. (Hence the particular wording I orginally used.) Skimming through some Canadian statutes, the pattern is clearly that Crown is a non-specific term, representing the state in general as personified by the monarch. 'Queen' and 'Her Majesty' are specific terms, and often occur qualified by 'in right of' for the Dominion or a provincial government, or contrasting Canada and the United Kingdom. Thus 'Crown' in a Canadian court decision must refer to the one and only Crown as shared across the Commonwealth Realms. Of course, legal terminology in other jurisdictions may differ slightly.
::* the ideas have been accepted for publication in a peer-reviewed journal; or
*''Informally'', of course, 'Crown' can mean the legal crown, or the person of the Queen, or the Queen of a specific realm, or the phenomenon of constitutional monarchy, or any of a number of general meanings.
::* the ideas have become newsworthy: they have been independently reported in newspapers or news stories (such as the [[cold fusion]] story).
*'Crown' is ambiguous in another way that has caused enormous grief on the talk pages. Consider the Crown in Canada and the Crown in the UK: how are these to be compared in cultural, non-constitutional terms? Is the "Crown in Canada" the Queen exercising her constitutional office, or is it the combined activities of the Queen and the Governor General? Both interpretations have a certain merit. Thus, while in the legal sense there is no ambiguity regarding an equal partnership of sovereign states, in non-legal meanings (which of course the article should address as well) the statement "the Crown is shared equally amongst the Realms" becomes impossible to assess.
*'''Misconceptions''' do exist about the equality relationship or that the UK has some obscure reserve power over the over Realms. The misconceptions should be acknowledged, and the correct information provided.
*''Perception'' of inequality between the operation of the Crown in the UK and the operation of the Crown elsewhere is of course noteworthy, but as a political opinion, not a legal principle.
*I am still not convinced that quotations from the Rouleau decision contribute anything positive to the article. This was not a ground-breaking decision that changed Canada's destiny; a petition was brought to court and found, on the basis of existing law, and to the surprise of practically no-one, to be wholly without merit. I think it is telling us something that so much effort is required to ensure that it is not misinterpreted. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 23:09, 27 July 2005 (UTC)
 
==New proposal from Homey==
:All the highlighted points apply to the numerous times you have tried to push your interpretation of Rouleau's ruling onto Wikipedia articles. That said, I will leave it to the mediator. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 20:25, 12 July 2005 (UTC)
How about "Some monarchists promote the misconception that the "Crown" is no more British than it is Australian, Canadian, or Jamaican and that it is made up, in equal parts, of all the realms over which it reigns. History, culture and the law suggest, however, that while the Crown is not exclusively British, it is essentially so."[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 14:22, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
:Which meaning of 'crown'? What is 'is not..., it is essentially...' supposed to mean? And remember that ''law'' is the one area where we ''can'' be sure we're talking about equality and symmetry. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 14:35, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
I mean that, in law, the Crown in the sense of the entity that reigns over the Commonwealth realms is properly referred to as the British Crown which certainly suggests that it is more British than, say, Jamaican. We can also talk about the origins of most of the laws defining the Crown as being British just as all received law still extant in the Commonwealth is British (or English in some older cases). Hence, we can speak of it being British in the same sense that we speak of Common Law being English. As well, as has been pointed out, the rules of succession governing the monarchy were written in the 18th century to fit the needs of the British state. They've never been modified or updated to meet the realities or sensibilities of the Commonwealth Realms (such as the inconsistency of having a bar on Catholics in a country such as Canada that is 40% Catholic) and thus they remain British rules that govern the determination of the head of state of Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Jamaica etc. Yes, they can be changed but the mechanism to do so is so cumbersome that Tony Blair, for instance, has ruled out any change in the forseeable future. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 15:27, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
:We've established absolute equality in a legal sense, and "British" in an informal historical sense. I don't see the value in trying to start a whole new debate on 'historical jurisprudence', nor what value it could possibly have to the article. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 15:59, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Being British in origin does not make something British today. If that were the case then you'd have to say the government of Ireland is British as it remains a Westminster model of Parliamentary democracy inherited from Britain, along with many of their current laws. Seems silly, right?
I think you should read what you've posted. The "idea" that there is a single crown and not multiple crowns does not originate with me. St. Laurent said it himself in 1953 and it's been said many times since. See [http://britain.webstation.net.nz/general/common.html The Commonwealth website] for instance and as I keep saying, Rouleau himself speaks of "Union under the British Crown." It's not original research to say that Rouleau said that, it's simply taking a direct quote. The article does not interpret the quote, it simply presents it. That the quote contradicts your personal theory of the monarchy (or rather that of the MLC) does not make it "original research", it just means that your personal theory is just that, a theory not a fact. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]] 20:56, 12 July 2005 (UTC)
 
In the same manner the modern Crown over the realms ''was'' a unitary British Imperial Crown, however, to state that it remains British because it was British is ignoring the modern reality of the situation where the Crown is now 'divided' equally.
:Again, stop trying to be purposefully complex in an attempt to guard your fallacies. There is no debate about there being one Crown-- and there never has been. What you are trying to do is use conveniently extracted quotations from Rouleau's ruling to support your theory that the ruling itself brings into question the established situation of the Crown operating over and within each of it's Realms. What you are also trying to do is use conveniently extracted quotations from Rouleau's ruling to validate your theory that the Crown in Right of Canada is a British institution. You do this when no lawyer, judge, or constitutional expert has ever done the same. You do this in the face of words from lawyers, constitutional experts, and even from Justice Rouleau himself, which negate your theory. That, without a doubt, constitutes 'original research,' as explained above. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 21:47, 12 July 2005 (UTC)
 
As well, though many of Canada's laws obviously have their origins in the UK, including the Act of Settlement, they are now purely ''Canadian'' constitutional law. If Canada were to become a republic we would stay with a Westminster style parliament, and many of our constitutional laws patriated from the UK would remain intact (obviously not the Act of Settlement, though).
Rouleau's statements speak for themselves. They contradict the POV propaganda you get from the MLC and so you divine ways to rationalise or excuse what he says away. Somehow, in your mind, when he says "British Crown" he doesn't really mean it. Anyway, gbambino, you're just a mouthpiece for the MLC - you should try to open your mind a bit and read what's really there instead of what you want to see or what the MLC wants you to think. I know that the MLC wants to distance the crown from the notion of British empire and colonialism in order to make it seem more Canadian and more attractive to modern Canadians but it's not our job to only include facts that fit the MLCs propaganda goals and exclude those that contradict them. Much of what you've been doing is excising inconvenient facts and paragraphs that contradict the MLCs party line and before you blame me for insterting them in the first place, much of what you've censored has been written by others. Basically, you've been operating like a vandal by removing things you don't like and a propagandist by copying MLC material and pasting it in almost without alteration. Despite all your attempts to deflect things on to me your own behaviour remains clear. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]00:18, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
 
There have been many constitutional developments over the past 138 years, and it's true that much of the law and terminology hasn't yet caught up to modern actuality; hence the Crown over the Realms is still sometimes referred to as the "British Crown" for "historical reasons and for convenience." But that does not mean that development stops here and now (as though the Act of Settlement will ''never'' be changed), or that the terminology around the Crown dictates the reality of it.
:Obviously Rouleau's statements do not speak for themselves; you choose to ignore much of them and read implications into the rest to back up your personal theories. As I've stated earlier, you should stop inferring that what [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] and I provide you with is "MLC propaganda," it makes you appear trite and ignorant as any person reading through the reams of debate that have gone on here can see that it is not. And, again, your attempts to defame me in an effort to divert attention away from yourself is a tad pathetic and leads one to wonder precisely what it is you have to hide from. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 01:22, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Also, doesn't Tony Blair's statement that the bar of Catholics from the Throne most likely will not be removed within the foreseeable future affirm that the UK does not have sole control (or even major control) over the line of succession? --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 16:17, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
"you choose to ignore much of them and read implications into the rest to back up your personal theories."
 
::It's all a matter of perception isn't it? Hence, saying that the "British Crown" isn't "essentially British" or asserting that the Crown is no more British than it is Australian or Jamaican is an expression of a POV rather than the expression of a neutral fact, as are your assertions about what are "misconceptions" and what are not. If you want to have a resolution you have to back away from your demand that views you disagree with be labelled "misconceptions" since what you are demanding is the adoption of a certain POV (and yes, what you may regard as fact is regarded as POV by others, you have to learn to recognise that if you want editing on wikipedia to work). [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 18:33, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
Read what the article '''actually says'''. Which sentence of the article constitutes original research? Give me a specific example below.[[User:AndyL|AndyL]]01:25, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
:After all the effort to agree on "no longer exclusively British", you want everyone to go through this all over again with "essentially exclusively British"? You think this wasn't challenging enough for the mediator and everyone else? How, exactly, is this different from what's already been rejected? Besides, in legal terms, it's simply wrong, and in non-legal terms, it's subjective and non-encyclopedic. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 18:39, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
 
No, you are misrepesenting the discussion. I'm fine with "not exclusively British". gbambino reopened the debate by substituting the word "essentially" in order to push his pov and you are trying to push your pov by demanding the characterisation of views you disagree with as "misconceptions". I am fine with the compromise Chris has suggested, are you? [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 19:27, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
:The non-existent debate behind "One Crown or Several?" is what constitutes 'original research'. You have taken a primary source (Rouleau's ruling) and applied to it '''your theory''' that it creates some sort of debate about the current relationship of the Crown in and over its Realms.
 
Um, no, I believe it is the word "misconception" (which I introduced, not Peter) that offends you, Andy. Would you really object if I had proposed "''a common view prevails that the Crown remains an essentially British institution''"?
:What's more, in an attempt to validate '''your theory''' you pull out of context those quotations from your primary source which aid you, and conveniently ignore those which contradict you. For example, why do you never include Rouleau's statement: "[34] The operation of this commitment to symmetry and union of Canada under the British Crown was demonstrated by the adoption in 1937 of the Succession to the Throne Act, I Geo. IV, c.16. This Canadian statute effected changes to '''the rules of succession in Canada''' to assure consistency with the changes in the rules then in place in Great Britain. The changes were necessary in light of the abdication of Edward VIII in 1936. Absent this Canadian statute, the statutory change in Great Britain to account for Edward VIII's abdication would have been '''contrary to Great Britain's commitment in the Statute of Westminster'''. Arguably, without this statute, Edwards VIII's abdication would not have been effective '''in respect of the Crown of Canada'''"?
 
Peter, I think that after having to concede that the Crown is not 100% British, Andy is now trying to say something along the lines of it is 80% British because everyone thinks it is. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 19:59, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
:It is most likely because right there in Rouleau's ruling is the ''affirmation'' of the existent relationship of the Crown in and over its Realms: though Canada, the UK, and every other Realm, equally share ''the same one Crown'' ("commitment to symmetry and union", "Great Britain's commitment in the Statute of Westminster"), the institution operates as a ''separate legal entity within each nation''. They stem from the same body -- one Crown, one Queen -- but the Crown in Right of Canada is different and separate to the Crown in Right of the U.K. ("the rules of succession in Canada" vs. "the rules then in place in Great Britain", "without this statute, Edwards VIII's abdication would not have been effective in respect of the Crown of Canada").
 
I think you've shown an unwillingness and perhaps an inability to compromise. Are you willing to accept Chris' proposal or are you going to continue to try to reshape it so it reflects your POV?[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 20:42, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
:You've misinterpreted all along that "the MLC argues" there is no one Crown, only separate ones. You've also misinterpreted that the one Crown you realise exists is purely British. And to back all that up you've pulled bits and pieces of Rouleau's ruling out of context. You've never been able to see what's correct actually exists somewhere in the middle -- one Crown equally over all Realms, operating distinctly within each. But, if the Crown is ''over'' all Realms, all Realms are ''equal'' (as laid out in the Statute of Westminster), and Britain is a Realm itself, then the Crown cannot be purely British. Only as the Crown in Right of Great Britain can it be British, and therefore the Crown in Right of Canada is Canadian -- as Rouleau points out.
 
Where's your compromise? And no, I don't accept Chris' proposal for reasons I have already stated. --gbambino 20:54, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
:It's been said time and time again that this is a complex matter, but that's no excuse for your personal interpretation of things to be included on Wikipedia articles. And, as it stands, unless you provide secondary sources to back up your claim that Rouleau's ruling actually creates any debate on the situation of the Crown in and over its Realms, then it remains 'original research', and thus the entire "One Crown or Several?" section is invalid. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 17:35, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
 
The compromise I've been referring to, the only compromise I've been referring to, is the one proposed by Chris. If it's a matter of you refusing to accept anything short of your POV in the article I'm afraid we'll just have to keep the article protected indefinitely or otherwise revert any attempt by you to inject POV. Can you suggest any compromise that does not promote one POV over another. You will have to set aside your insistence that your POV is a universally accepted fact. Are you capable of that?[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 21:07, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
Again, read what the article actually says. Which sentence of the article constitutes original research? Give me a specific example below. Your charge of original research is baseless if you cannot find any actual content in the article that fits that description. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]17:53, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:I think gbambino has shown he cannot seperate his POV from the editing process. I suggest we just see if there's a consensus amongst the rest of us and if there is then implement that and if gbambino ends up editing against the consensus we can just go to the arbcomm with the suggestion that he be banned from editing articles related to the monarchy. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 21:12, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
:Stop with your inane arguments. The entire section "One Crown or Several?" is 'original research'. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 18:12, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Settle down. I think you've shown you're in an awful rush to get this resolved before any one else reveals the fallaciousness of your arguments. Chris' proposal is not acceptable for reasons I have already stated. I've been working on something throughout the day here, but seeing as I also happen to have a paying job I can't dedicate my every moment to it. I'm sure it wont be perfect, but I hope it'll help the process. And Andy, there's a difference between acknowledging differing views and acknowledging the utterly baseless assertions of an individual who is discontent with reality. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 21:21, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
=== Line by line ===
Ok, let's go through it line by line:
 
Your suggestions so far have been counterproductive and, frankly, somewhat underhanded (sneaking in "essentially" for "exclusively" for instance). I think your language above only furthers my point that you are incapable of real compromise or actually acknowledging the legitimacy of any view you disagree with.
:It is usually held that the Statute of Westminster, 1931 has resulted in what was formerly a single Crown of the United Kingdom uniting all the dominions giving way to a situation where the one Crown transcended Britain itself to become an institution which operated seperately but equally in each Commonwealth Realm, so that the Crown in Right of Australia or the Crown in Right of Canada is equal to the Crown in Right of the United Kingdom. (See the article Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act 1927 for a more thorough exploration of this concept.)
 
Peter, do you accept Chris' proposal for a compromise?[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 21:31, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
A statement of fact and not original research. If you disagree, explain how it is original research.
 
What ''are'' you going on about? Compare this:
:In 2003, an application by Tony O'Donohue to have struck down sections of the Act of Settlement that bar Roman Catholics from the Throne on the basis that they are in violation of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms was dismissed.
 
:''However, because the Balfour Declaration, the Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act 1927, the Statute of Westminster 1931, and the patriation of each of the Realms' constitutions, remain little known outside of legal circles, a common misconception prevails that the Crown remains an '''essentially''' British institution.''
Again, a statement of fact.
 
To this:
:In his decision, Justice Rouleau quoted former Prime Minister of Canada Louis St. Laurent who said:
 
:''However, because the Balfour Declaration, the Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act 1927, the Statute of Westminster 1931, and the patriation of each of the Realms' constitutions, remain little known outside of legal circles, a common misconception prevails that the Crown remains an '''exclusively''' British institution.''
:"Her Majesty is now Queen of Canada but she is the Queen of Canada because she is Queen of the United Kingdom. . . It is not a separate office, .it is the sovereign who is recognized as the sovereign of the United Kingdom who is our Sovereign. . ." Hansard February 3, 1953, page 1566.
 
Essentially, exclusively, there's a difference between the words, but is it really ''that'' huge within the context of the sentence? You're making such a big deal out of nothing because you didn't read my proposed paragraph properly. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 21:40, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
Again, a statement of fact.
 
"but is it really that huge within the context of the sentence?"
:Rouleau also desribed the relationship between Crown and Commonwelath Realm's as being one of "Union under the British Crown together with other Commonwealth countries". For more information see O’Donohue v. Her Majesty the Queen, 2003
 
Yes, it is - I suggest you consult a dictionary. If, as you claim, it doesn't make a difference then you shouldn't have a problem if we say "exclusively" rather than "essentially". [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 22:57, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
Again, a statement of fact.
 
DoWithin youthat disputesentence? that anyNo, ofI thedon't abovecare. is factuallyBut, correct?I'm Ifscrapping so,that what?sentence anyway. --[[User:AndyLGbambino|AndyLgbambino]]21 23:4201, 1328 July 2005 (UTC)
 
===Facts versus opinions===
:None of the above is factually incorrect. However, whether or not your original source is correct has nothing to do with your trying to push 'original research' on this article and others. As stated on the page [[Wikipedia:No original research|original research]]:
 
There seems to be a pattern of whenever Homey throws out accusations, it's really himself that he's talking about. I think GBambino may have sometimes overstepped NPOV, although apparently acting in good faith. In part he is representing the view of the Monarchist League ''of Canada'', which, naturally, focuses on Canadian aspects of the Crown, and of course the function of the Monarchist League of Canada is, in part to provide encyclopedic knowledge to the public, but also to express sentimentalism and patriotism.
::The phrase "original research" in this context refers to '''untested theories'''; data, statements, concepts and ideas that have '''not been published in a reputable publication'''; or any '''new interpretation, analysis, or synthesis of published data, statements, concepts or ideas''' that, in the words of Wikipedia's founder Jimbo Wales, would amount to a '''"novel narrative or historical interpretation"'''.
 
AndyL/Homey has not demonstrated good faith. He has made repeated attempts to introduce errors of fact in what can only be presumed to be politically-motivated sabotage. The wording suggested is a classic example of this. After much effort by a number of editors to reach some level of concensus, he now proposes describing ''the reality of constitutional law'', which people have invested time in researching, with "Some monarchists promote the misconception", and describing a thus far undocumented ''political opinion'' with "History, culture and the law suggest". This, he would have us believe, should be an acceptable compromise to the objections, which were not raised against explaining dissenting points of view of republicans, but raised only against putting legal fact and political opinion on an equal footing. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 21:38, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
:Have any debates over the matter of "one Crown or many?" been published in a reputable publication? Or is the existance of a debate purely your own "untested theory", "new interpretation", etc.?
 
Chris' proposal is a step backwards, unless it is split so that facts are under "Constitutional implications", and the political opinion is under "Public perceptions". (Which was apparently not the intent.) [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 21:38, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
::Original research is research that produces primary sources or secondary sources. '''Primary sources present information or data, such as''' archeological artifacts; photographs; historical documents such as '''a''' diary, census, '''transcript of a''' public hearing, '''trial''', or interview; tabulated results of surveys or questionnaires, records of laboratory assays or observations; records of field observations. Secondary sources present a generalization, analysis, synthesis, interpretation, or evaluation of information or data.
 
Peter, you are being disingenuous. You write as if I introduced the term "misconception" when, in fact, it was you and gbambino. Quite clearly, my "counterproposal" above was an attempt to underscore the problems with yours and gbambino's position by putting the shoe on the other foot. If the word "misconception" can be used by one side, it can be as easily used by the other. This is why your and gbambino's proposal to descibe views you disagree with as "misconceptions" is a non-starter and anything but an attempt at a compromise. Rather, you and gbambino are trying to enforce your particular POV. That the Crown is as much Canadian/Australian/Jamaican etc as it is British is nothing but propaganda designed to make the monarchy more acceptable to nationalists and non Anglophiles in the Commonwealth Realms (outside of the UK).
:You have provided only what amounts to a heavily edited ruling of a trial.
 
I'm sorry but it's absurd to pretend that describing a contrary view as a misconception, as you propose to do, is either a compromise or anything other than a POV. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 21:55, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
::'''Original research that produces primary sources is not allowed'''. However, research that consists of collecting and organizing information from existing primary and secondary sources is strongly encouraged. In fact, all articles on Wikipedia should be based on information collected from primary and secondary sources. This is called source-based research, and it is fundamental to writing an encyclopedia.
 
I see now where I went wrong with my proposal that included the word "misconception". I was guilty of what Peter points out: lack of differentiation between the legal definitions of the Crown and the cultural. Stating the Crown is not shared equally by law is a misconception. Culturally is perhaps another story. I'm hoping that the proposal I'm working on will address this. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 22:01, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
:You have only produced a primary source: a heavily edited ruling of a trial. You have provided no secondary sources.
 
I sense that gbambino is about to present us with a [[straw-man argument]] in order to justify his use of the term "misconception". [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 22:15, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
::==What is excluded from articles==
::A Wikipedia entry (including any part of an article) counts as ''original'' research if it '''proposes ideas''', that is:
::* '''it introduces a theory''' or method of solution; or
:You have introduced the theory that there is a debate on the status of the Crown in and over its Realms.
::* '''it introduces original ideas'''; or
:Ditto
::* it defines new terms; or
::* '''it provides new definitions of old terms'''; or
:You are trying to redefine the existing status of the Crown in and over its Realms by bringing it into doubt.
::* '''it introduces an original argument purporting to refute or support another idea, theory, argument, or position described in the article'''; or
:Your argument that there is debate on the existing status of the Crown in and over its Realms is original, and purports to refute the existing status.
::* it introduces [[neologism|neologisms]].
 
Contrary views of political opinions are simply other political opinions, contrary views of facts are called errors. Try to debate them one at a time. By the way, my alleged "point of view", as you call it, was that "the Crown is shared equally amongst the Realms" becomes impossible to assess. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 22:17, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
::All of the above may be acceptable content once they have become a permanent feature of the public landscape. For example:
::* the ideas have been accepted for publication in a peer-reviewed journal; or
::* the ideas have become newsworthy: they have been independently reported in newspapers or news stories (such as the [[cold fusion]] story).
 
Peter, do you assert that "the Crown is shared equally amongst the Realms" is a fact or do you concede it is a theory?[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 22:26, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
:Any debate on the status of the Crown in and over its Realms is not "a permanent feature of the public landscape", has not "become newsworthy", nor is has it been "accepted for publication in a peer-recieved journal."
 
===Monarchist misconceptions===
:To ask the question "One Crown or Several?" states that there is debate surrounding the accepted status of the Crown in and over its Realms. To state there is such a debate is unsubstantiated, 'original research'. Therefore the question "One Crown or Several?" is your question, and yours alone, and thus does not belong anywhere on Wikipedia. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 23:35, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
" The Sovereign, however, is a force of unity who embodies all Canada and all Canadians as Head of State."
 
Given the Act of Settlement's bar against Catholics and given the riots in Quebec City against the Queen in 1964, can we say that the quotation from the MLC site above is a misconception?
I don't think you understand what we mean by original research, you've certainly failed to show there is any in the article. Anyway, if you're only problem is with the section title then suggest a new one. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]14:03, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
 
"the British Crown no longer exists in Canada"
== Mediation on Crown section ==
;From [[User talk:Stevertigo]]:
:"Your comments within that paragraph in [[Commonwealth Realm#One Crown or Several?]], the one which attempts to explain the relationship of the Crown over and in the Commonwealth Realms, are also directed at me. Though AndyL originally wrote that particular paragraph to contest its contents with his "Rouleau theories", it was I who last edited it in an attempt to clarify.
 
Peter, can we say that the comment above by MLC theoritician Richard Toporoski, is a "misconception"? Or perhaps we should just call it an error?[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 22:25, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
:"That said, some of your comments are certainly valid, but the matter of the Crown over and in the Realms is complicated and difficult to put into words which are understandable to those not educated on the subject. Personally, I don't think any effort needs to be put into a re-write, as the section "One Crown or Several?" should be removed all-together. If you want to better understand the subject matter, what has been written in the second paragraph of [[Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act 1927]] might give you a better explanation of the facts. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 22:37, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Incidentally Peter, you attacked me for my argument regarding what might happen if Britain changed the succession law and Canada didn't, yet I see Toporoski considers the same question. I was considering an impossibility, you suggested, Britain would never unilaterally change the succession because of the Statute of Westminister, you claimed. Perhaps you should attack Toporoski with the same arrogant ferocity with which you attacked me:
:: I dont believe it is truly as complicated as you say. You assert that Andy L has a "republican bias," when all I see is an attempt to explain the controversy in Canada regarding the continued connection of Canada to the U.K. monarch. Its that simple. Explain that there have been recent attempts to interpret Canadian law according to a more distant relationship with the UK, and that Loyalists, (decendants of [[Loyalist]]s run out of the U.S., as I understand) dont necessarily like that idea. This is a debate which needs to be represented, and the problem that you two both have in attempting to explain this debate is that youre too close to it, and you both assert different details to have superior value in characterising it.
 
:let us say, an alteration were to be made in the United Kingdom to the Act of Settlement 1701, providing for the succession of the Crown. It is my opinion that the domestic constitutional law of Australia or Papua New Guinea, for example, would provide for the succession in those countries of the same person who became Sovereign of the United Kingdom. But this would not be true in Canada. There is no existing provision in our law, other than the Act of Settlement 1701, that provides that the King or Queen of Canada shall be the same person as the King or Queen of the United Kingdom. If the British law were to be changed and we did not change our law (and by section 41 of the Constitution Act 1982 such a change would require resolutions of the House of Commons and the legislative assemblies of all the provinces to authorise a proclamation by the Governor-General to determine who the Sovereign of Canada should be so the Governor-General would be given the authority to create his own King!), the Crown would be divided. The person provided for in the new law would become king or queen in at least some realms of the Commonwealth; Canada would continue on with the person who would have become monarch under the previous law, a situation which certainly would not be allowed to continue either by political reality or by public opinion.[http://www.monarchist.ca/mc/invisibl.htm]
::You might say that the republican /independence movement is just a "[[fringe movement]]", and "not newsworthy", but this is not what [[NPOV]] policy says. NPOV policy is to represent all sides in a debate, and to represent the debate in proportion to its popular support and to its outside interest. Its interesting to hear (from an outside perspective) all the familiar political ins and outs as applied in a different country -- particularly with regard to rulership, soveriegnty, etc. Now, I criticised that paragraph for its writing, not its content. I could take a crack at rewriting it myself, if you both agree, but Id prefer if you both stepped back a bit, and looked at the basics, and explain those first, before citing particular Acts, etc. Given proper context, all the details are easy to understand. If the agenda is to obfuscate, all the details become obstacles to understanding. Sinreg, -[[User:Stevertigo|SV]]|[[User_talk:Stevertigo|t]] 03:26, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Interesting. Toporoski seems to be arguing that if the UK unilaterally changed the succession the "political reality" is that Canada would soon follow. Does this not mean that Britain has more authority on the question of the succession than Canada and that therefore the Crown is more British than Canadian not only "culturally" but politically and one could argue legally as well (at least for all practical purposes)? [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 22:53, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
:What I meant was complex is the relationship of the Crown over and in the Realms; it can sometimes be difficult to explain clearly.
[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 22:41, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
 
No, it does not. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 22:59, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
:Also, I'm not contesting that there are conflicting opinions on Canada's status as a constitutional monarchy-- they do exist and should be acknowledged. However, what AndyL is putting in doubt here is the above mentioned relationship of the Crown over and in the Realms. The accepted and standing view is that there is one Crown equally over all 16 Realms, but which operates as a distinct legal entity within each country. What AndyL is doing is putting that accepted and standing view into question, using a misinterpretation of Ontario Justice Rouleau's ruling as reason to do so. What constitutes 'original research' here is that AndyL is the only person to have interpreted Rouleau's ruling in that manner, and he is thus far the only person to question the status of the Crown over and in the Realms. I've said this before elsewhere: if AndyL could actually provide evidence of a debate on this matter (ie. if there actually were constitutional experts, or theorists, or judges who've questioned the status of the Crown), then a section somewhere on Wikipedia would be warranted. As it stands now, he's provided a primary source, but no secondary sources to support his claim that there is any questioning besides his own opinion.
 
Not only does Toporoski support the mainstream interpretation as to ''law'', he has done the courtesy of carefully distinguishing legal consequences from his speculation on ''political'' consequences. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 02:09, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
:Perhaps other republican minded people chose to interpret Rouleau's ruling as AndyL does, I don't know, that hasn't been proven either. But, if AndyL really wants to make his personal interpretation of Rouleau's ruling known, then it should be where it is now: in the section "Interpretation" on [[O'Donohue v. Canada, 2003]]. Seeing as not one constitutional expert or scholar currently questions the existent status of the Crown over and in its Realms as outlined by constitutional experts, judges, constitutional committees, the government, etc., in Canada as well as the other Realms, for the last 74 years, then nothing which casts it into doubt should be placed in Wikipedia articles. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 17:24, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Actually, it does. He speaks quite specifically of Britain unilaterally changing the rules of succession and he asserts quite clearly that this would result in Canada changing the succession to conform with the new British rules. Sorry to burst your bubble, gbambino, and I'm sorry especially that it is your mentor who has done the bursting.[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 23:03, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
But, by your own admission, every line in question is factual. There is no "interpretation" in it so there's no original research. What you are afraid of, I suspect, is how readers may intepret Rouleau's ruling but it's not our role to tell people what to think or not think or suppress relevent information because we think people might not "understand" it the way you do. And, as I said elsewhere, your contention that your particular view of constitutional arrangements involving the crown are a "proven fact" is contested by Rouleau's arguments. Your views on constitutional law and those of the MLC are just theories, untested in the courts and indeed, in the one case they have been tested, Rouleau, your interpretation is contradicted.
 
No he does not. He states that if Britain unilaterally changed the rules the situation would not "be allowed to continue either by political reality or by public opinion". That does not mean Canada would be forced to do the same, but ''might'' under it's own conviction. It could also mean that Canada and the other Realms would exercise their power to stop Britain's unilateral change. Similarly if Canada unilaterally altered the line of succession (as it well could) it would place the UK and other Realms in a situation which most likely would not "be allowed to continue either by political reality or by public opinion." You're twisting words to suit your bizzarre theories again, and doing it poorly now too. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 23:12, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
What is at the base of this is you are adamant that your particular theory is a fact when, actually, it is a contestable theory. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]18:00, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
 
: "It could also mean that Canada and the other Realms would exercise their power to stop Britain's unilateral change."
:Before you accuse me of providing only "contestable theory" remember that a) it is not my theory, b) I provided numerous secondary, unbiased sources to prove that, and b) you have provided none to back up yours. Even if you want to discard Richard Toporoski's words on the matter because he's a constitutional expert who happens to be a member of the MLC, you still have to face up to the Statute of Westminster, the Balfour Reports, the Canadian department of Justice, Australian court rulings, Australian constitutional committee reports (which, yes, are relevant as they are in a similar position under the Crown as well), and so on. In fact, contrary to your claim that I am contested by Rouleau's arguments, I have actually also cited for you much of Rouleau's ruling which ''supports'' the standing view of the Crown!
 
What power? How would this "power" be exercised? The Statute of Westminster is not a treaty so other countries could not go to the Hague to try to have it enforced (not that much could be done even if it was a treaty), nor would the UN particularly care (in any case the UK is on the Security Council so in the insanely remote chance that the UN Security Council told Britain it must do what the other realms say or else, the UK could exercise its veto)
:If you now simply want to leave it up to readers to interpret Rouleau's ruling from provided factual quotations, then leave quotations and interpretations at "Interpretations" on [[O'Donohue v. Canada, 2003]], where they belong . The question "one crown or several?" is a personal one, and thus doesn't belong in any Wikipedia articles, and the remaining information in the section is covered already at [[Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act 1927]], [[Statute of Westminster 1931]], and [[O'Donohue v. Canada, 2003]]. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 19:04, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:Similarly if Canada unilaterally altered the line of succession (as it well could) it would place the UK and other Realms in a situation which most likely would not "be allowed to continue either by political reality or by public
I think it would be quite useful if you tried your hand at rewriting the section in question. It would also be helpful if you dealt with Gbambino's misunderstanding of the concept of original research since he's not going to accept anything I say on the matter. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]] 04:44, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
opinion."
 
No, Britain has a resident monarch - nothing would change for it if the monarchy divided. Canada, however, does not have a resident monarch but would risk acquiring one if the monarchy divided. Hence, there would be very strong pressure on Canada to conform with British unilateral changes but there would be very little if any pressure on Britain to conform to any Canadian unilateral changes. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 01:12, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
"Before you accuse me of providing only "contestable theory" remember that a) it is not my theory, b) I provided numerous secondary, unbiased sources to prove that" Fine then it's someone else's theory, it's still a theory, not a fact.
"and b) you have provided none to back up yours" No, I've provided a primary source which you misidentify as "original research".
[[User:AndyL|AndyL]]22:13, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
 
This is the same pattern we've seen before, of beginning with a legal question and making a jump to a political question. No-one is denying the possibility that Canada might react if the UK changed its succession. But that is necessarily speculative - let's be charitable and say it's an open question if it's encyclopedic or not. There is no possibility that Canadian courts of law will simply enforce British statutes. British statutes aren't even in both official languages. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 01:25, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
I've said this before, gbambino, but the notion of multiple crowns is contradicted by none other than Canadian Prime Minister Louis St. Laurent who said:
 
Depends on the court's view of the preamble to the Constitution Act, 1867. As Judge Rouleau saw fit to use it as part of the basis for his ruling, other courts may do the same if the question ever comes up. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 01:52, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
"Her Majesty is now Queen of Canada but she is the Queen of Canada because she is Queen of the United Kingdom. . . It is not a separate office .. it is the sovereign who is recognized as the sovereign of the United Kingdom who is our Sovereign. . ." Hansard. February 3, 1953, page 1566.
:Another familiar AndyL/Homey tactic, reaching back before 1982. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 02:03, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Then Rouleau is guilty of the same tactic:
"It is not a separate office". Quite clear. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]22:58, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
::19] It is well recognized that the preamble to the Constitution identifies the organizing principles of our Constitution and can be used to fill in gaps in the express terms of the constitutional text (see Reference re Remuneration of Judges of the Provincial Court of P.E.I., 1997 CanLII 317 (S.C.C.), [1997] 3 S.C.R. 3 at p.75).
:20] The preamble to the Constitution Act, 1867, (U.K.) 30 & 31 Victoria, c.3, as amended, provides as follows:
 
::Whereas the Provinces of Canada, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick have expressed their Desire to be federally united into One Dominion under the Crown of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, with a Constitution similar in Principle to that of the United Kingdom ...
::Sounds like some communication is happening. What remains is to find an appropriate place for the debate, as it exists or does not , in Canada. Is it a major debate? Gbambino would have me (a non-Canadian) to think that its rather minor, while Andy might have me (a non-Candadian) think it major. If the controversy exists, does it deserve a separate article? Does it then deserve more detail in specific article subsections which relate back to the original? [[I'm all ears]]. -[[User:Stevertigo|SV]]|[[User_talk:Stevertigo|t]] 00:16, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:[21] This portion of the preamble confirms not only that Canada is a constitutional monarchy, but also that Canada is united under the Crown of the United Kingdom of Great Britain. A constitutional monarchy, where the monarch is shared with the United Kingdom and other Commonwealth countries, is, in my view, at the root of our constitutional structure.
It's not a major debate. However, the contention that there are "multiple Crowns" and, the corollary, that therefore there can be and is a "Canadian monarchy" is an important part of monarchist ideology and it merits a mention. Since this is the article that seems to deal with the constitutional nature of the Commonwealth realms and as the question of one monarchy or several relates only to Commonwealth realms this would seem to be the article to put it in. Alternatively, it could go in the [[British monarchy]] article. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]00:32, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Peter, the BNA Act was not repealed as a result of the 1982 Constitution, parts of it were amended but the preamble was left alone. Therefore, it remains in effect to the extent that any preamble is in effect. I do not know how a future court may rule if there is a possible "division in the Crown" due to Britain changing the succession rules alone; neither do you, but ruling out the possibility that the court will utilise the 1867 preamble to find that Canada is committed to having the same monarch as the UK is premature. You say the Statute of Westminster displaces the preamble, well just as the Charter of Rights evidently did not displace the Act of Settlement it is incorrect to speak of one part of the constitution displacing another if nothing has been specifically repealed (as certain sections of the BNA Act were). The 1867 constitution has equal weight with all other parts of the constitution, if there is a conflict between then the court assesses the conflict and would usually interpret the more specific section as an exception (for instance the section of the BNA Act which allows for the funding of Separate Schools in Ontario is an exception to the Charter provisions for freedom and equality of religion). If the preamble to the 1867 Constitution which states that Canada is under the British Crown and the preamble of the 1931 Statute of Westminster which says that alteration to the succession shall only occur if there is unanimity amongst the realms end up being in conflict because the UK unilaterally changes the succesion, how would a Canadian court rule? I don't know, and neither do you. So for you to dismiss the possible import of the 1867 preamble is unwarranted and unsupported.[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 14:01, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
Indeed, it might make more sense to move the section to [[British monarchy]].[[User:AndyL|AndyL]]00:34, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:''No Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom passed after the Constitution Act, 1982 comes into force shall extend to Canada as part of its law.'' 1867 was '''before''' 1982. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 22:17, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
:Well, no. I would not think it neutral to refer to aspects particular to Canada as being in an exclusive British context, but perhaps thats because I fail to directly equate Canada as a British outpost, and not an independent country. This is all news to me, nor have I previously had much interest in [[monarchy]] in general or "[[The Monarchy]]" in particular, (which Im curious if it redirects properly to "monarchy" or not.) The important thing is that youre both very communicative (good first sign) and informative about the issues, and are mindful to my suggestions for how to deal with them. From my point of view, the specifics dont really matter, its how they are represented as discrete elements and ordered in a way which best gives the proper impressions regarding the issue. Now, what I hear you saying is that the opposition is equal in ideological terms, while you nevertheless agree that in practical terms, theres little argument over interterpretation. Hence, how to represent the debate, even if its only ideological, but nevertheless newsworthy (due to specific cases of protest). Sinreg & Goodnight. -[[User:Stevertigo|SV]]|[[User_talk:Stevertigo|t]] 01:07, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Also, Rouleau uses the word symmetry to discuss changes in the succession among Commonwealth realms but symmetry and equality are not the same thing. A ten tonne truck and a minivan may travel in symmetry but that doesn't make them equal.
This is not a small debate, it is a ''non-existent'' debate. That one Crown operates separately in each Realm is the established, recognised and accepted view of the Crown in and over the Realms, and one which exists regardless of one's republican or monarchical leanings. I provide the following sources which comply with this:
 
The "equality in law" between the Crown of Canada and the British Crown is a theory, not a fact, and particularly given language about Canada being "under the British Crown" we should be wary of stating equality as a fact. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 14:01, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
* The Balfour Declaration 1926: "[The United Kingdom and the Dominions] are '''autonomous Communities''' within the British Empire, '''equal in status, in no way subordinate one to another in any aspect''' of their domestic or external affairs, though united by a common allegiance to '''the Crown''', and freely associated as members of the British Commonwealth of Nations".
 
Main Entry: sym·me·try
Note, equal, united, '''the''' Crown.
Pronunciation: 'si-m&-trE
Function: noun
Inflected Form(s): plural -tries
Etymology: Latin symmetria, from Greek, from symmetros symmetrical, from syn- + metron measure
1 : balanced proportions; also : beauty of form arising from balanced proportions
2 : the property of being symmetrical; especially : correspondence in size, shape, and relative position of parts on opposite sides of a dividing line or median plane or about a center or axis -- compare BILATERAL SYMMETRY, RADIAL SYMMETRY
3 : a rigid motion of a geometric figure that determines a one-to-one mapping onto itself
 
I'm afraid "symmetry" is actually the same as "equal." Something cannot be symmetrical without one side being the equal of the other. Synonyms (you love those, right?) of symmetry: balance, equilibrium, evenness.
* [[Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act 1927]]: "...a second, and more important function [of the Act], was to modify the King's title, proclaiming that George V was not king of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and of the British Dominions but rather of Great Britain, Ireland and the British Dominions. The change in the wording of the King's title is subtle, but '''has the effect of creating a list of nations of which he ''is'' king''' rather than grouping those nations all together as if under one government. In so doing, '''this replaced the concept of a single Imperial British Crown over the Empire with one Crown operating separately but equally in each Realm.''' In this way, by means of the act, '''each of the Empire's Dominions became a separate kingdom.''' The Act was thus an important step in the evolution of the Dominions towards full independence."
 
As for your constant reference to the preamble of the Constitution Act, 1867, what Peter is saying is that you're using ''definitions'' which are pre-1982. You take the words "Crown of the United Kingdom" and believe that to still literally mean the Crown within the jurisdiction of the UK Parliament (thus implying that Canada's government is subservient to the UK). But you never addressed Peter's earlier point that the "Crown of the United Kingdom and Ireland" doesn't even exist anymore, and you also never address the legal reality that the Crown within the UK constitution is not the same thing as the "British Crown" as shared amongst the Realms. We can sit and speculate all we want about why the wording of the preamble to the Constitution Act wasn't changed at the time of patriation (again, perhaps a lack of proper nomenclature for the Crown over the Realms?), but nothing changes the fact that the Statute of Westminster and the patriation of all the Realms' constitutions has changed the definition of "British Crown". No court would ever rule that because the UK altered their line of succession Canada would be forced follow along because the preamble to the Constitution Act states Canada is united under the "Crown of Great Britain and Ireland." And remember that in 1936 Canada had to pass an Act of Parliament to recognize Edward VIII's abdication for George VI, otherwise if the UK went ahead without us we'd be left with a different King to the UK's (just like Ireland was for one day). The preamble to the constitution was the same then as it is now. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 16:29, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
The beginning of the evolution of the Crown from an Imperial one to one shared by multiple separate kingdoms.
 
:: But you never addressed Peter's earlier point that the "Crown of the United Kingdom and Ireland" doesn't even exist anymore
* The Statute of Westminster: "And whereas it is meet and proper to set out by way of preamble to this Act that, inasmuch as '''the Crown''' is the symbol to the free association of the members of the British Commonwealth of Nations, and as they are united by a common allegiance to '''the Crown''', it would be in accord with the established constitutional position of all the members of the Commonwealth in relation to one another that '''any alteration in the law touching the Succession to the Throne or the Royal Style and Titles shall hereafter require the assent as well of the Parliaments of all the Dominions as of the Parliament of the United Kingdom'''..."
 
I think it's understood in law that a reference to the King in a law passed in one parliament would be read as referring to a subsequent King even if the royal title has changed. Magna Carta didn't cease to be when the title of "king of England, lord of Ireland, duke of Normandy and Aquitaine, and count of Anjou" ceased to exist as such. The Act of Settlement did not become defunct when the "crown and regal government of the Kingdoms of England, France, and Ireland" it refers to became the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (the claim on France being dropped, for one). If this wasn't the case, legislative chaos would ensue whenever the King's title changed (or indeed, whenever a King was succeeded by a Queen or vice versa). In the same way that the BNA Act's references to the Queen did not fall into abeyance when Victoria was succeeded by her son, a reference to the Crown of Great Britain and Ireland does not become defunct when that position changes to the Crown of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 17:20, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
Note, the Commonwealth Realms are now united under "'''the''' Crown", not "the British Crown" -- a subtle, but important reflection of the result of the earlier Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act. As well, note that any Realm must have the assent of all the others to alter the line of succession, meaning the Statute recognizes that each Realm now has their ''own line of succession'' which they may alter unilaterally, but should not to maintain the unity of the Crown.
 
:: No court would ever rule that because the UK altered their line of succession Canada would be forced follow along because the preamble to the Constitution Act states Canada is united under the "Crown of Great Britain and Ireland.
* The Statute of Westminster: "4. '''No Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom passed after the commencement of this Act shall extend or be deemed to extend, to a Dominion as part of the law of that Dominion''', unless it is expressly declared in that Act that that Dominion has requested, and consented to, the enactment thereof."
 
Then why did Rouleau base his ruling, in part, on the 1867 preamble if, by your arguments, the preamble is effectively null and void? For what you say to be certain, Rouleau would have had to not rely even in part on the 1867 preamble in his ruling.[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 17:20, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
This means any alteration to the line of succession in the UK, done by an act of the UK parliament, would have no effect in any of the Realms, illustrating that Britain only has control over the line of succession for the Crown in Right of the UK, and none over the succession for the Crowns of the other Realms.
 
You've answered your own question: it's about current legal definitions of a body vs. outdated ones, whether it be for a particular monarch or the institution of the/a crown. Just as in British law the words "Crown of Great Britain and Ireland" now actually mean "Crown of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland", so too have legal alterations over the past 70 years made the words "Crown of the United Kingdom" mean either the Crown as shared by the Realms ''or'' the Crown within the jurisdiction of the UK parliament. The development of Canadian law gives the former definition to the words "Crown of the United Kingdom", not the latter. It's clear that Rouleau is referring to the ''shared'' "British Crown" rather than the Crown within the UK constitution. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 19:10, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
* Canadian Title of Elizabeth II, 1953: "Elizabeth the Second, by the Grace of God, of the '''United Kingdom''', '''Canada''' and Her other Realms and Territories Queen, Head of the Commonwealth, Defender of the Faith."
Also, you didn't address the point that Canada had to pass an Act of Parliament to recognise the new King in 1936 otherwise the country would have had a separate king to the other Realms (as happened to Ireland). The preamble to the Constitution didn't force the King of the UK on Canada at that time, and as the Constitution is now patriated and 100% Canadian, there is certainly no way it would happen now. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 19:39, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:''No Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom passed after the Constitution Act, 1982 comes into force shall extend to Canada as part of its law.'' 1867 was '''before''' 1982.
By separating the two titles, it illustrates that Elizabeth II's role as Queen of the U.K. is indeed separate and distinct from her role as Queen of Canada. So, if the Queen of Canada is recognized in her own Canadian title as being distinctly Queen of Canada, then that in itself shows that the Crown, like the Sovereign, is both British and Canadian.
 
::So then we have a conflict between that and the preamble just as we have a conflict betweeen the Charter of Rights passed in 1982 and the Act of Settlement passed in 1701. When such a conflict occurs courts do not look at equal parts of the Constitution and say, well this part is more recent therefore it trumps the earlier part - if they did the ruling in the O'Donohue case would have been quite different. Rather, they treat both elements as equal and try to reconcile them. I suspect that just as Rouleau ruled, in essence, that the succession rules were an exception to the Charter's absolute ban on religious discrimination the courts may rule that the 1867 preamble provides an exception to the nullification of post-1982 UK acts. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 22:45, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
* St. Laurent: "Her Majesty is now '''Queen of Canada''' but she is the Queen of Canada because she is '''Queen of the United Kingdom'''... It is not a separate office... it is the sovereign who is recognized as the sovereign of the United Kingdom who is our Sovereign..."
 
:1701 was also before 1982. For your scenario to make ''any'' sense at all (not saying it does, but hypothetically), the Supreme Court of Canada ('''not''' the Parliament of the United Kingdom) would have to elevate a UK statute to constitutional status in Canada. Not just any statute, but one contravening the Statute of Westminster. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 00:59, 30 July 2005 (UTC)
Not a separate office, but that one office ''operates'' as "Queen of Canada" separately to its ''operation'' as "Queen of the United Kingdom." St. Laurent, who was key in the composition of the Balfour Reports and the Statute of Westminster, is ''acknowledging'' this when purposefully distinguishing Her Majesty as Queen of Canada separately from her as Queen of the United Kingdom, but then stating correctly that the two exist in one body/office.
 
"1701 was also before 1982"
* Rouleau: "[33] As a result of the Statute of Westminster it was recognized that '''any alterations in the rules of succession would no longer be imposed by Great Britain''' and, if '''symmetry''' among commonwealth countries were to he maintained, '''any changes to the rules of succession would have to be agreed to by all members of the Commonwealth'''. This arrangement can be compared to a treaty among the Commonwealth countries to '''share the monarchy''' under the existing rules and not to change the rules without the agreement of all signatories. While Canada as a sovereign nation is free to withdraw from the arrangement and no longer be united through common allegiance to the Crown, it cannot unilaterally change the rules of succession for all Commonwealth countries. '''Unilateral changes by Canada to the rules of succession''', whether imposed by the court or otherwise, would be contrary to the commitment given in the Statute of Westminster, would break symmetry and breach the principle of union under the British Crown set out in the preamble to the Constitution Act, 1867. Such changes would, for all intents and purposes, bring about a fundamental change in the office of the Queen without securing the authorizations required pursuant to s. 41 of the Constitution Act, 1982."
 
Yes, that is my point - the courts do not weigh conflicting parts of the constitution on a chronological basis as your earlier post suggested.
Rouleau is acknowledging that Britain only has control over the line of succession for the Crown in Right of the UK ("alterations in the line of succession would no longer be imposed by Great Britain"), as Canada has a line of succession for the Crown in Right of Canada now separate and distinct from Britain's ("Unilateral changes by Canada to the rules of succession..."). But, none-the-less, both lines must be the same as they are for the same Crown ("if symmetry among commonwealth countries were to be maintained", "share the monarchy", "would break symmetry and breach the principal of union under the British Crown...").
 
No, the Supreme Court would not have to "elevate" a British statute. It would just have to affirm that the preamble to the 1867 Constition mandates that whoever is the sovereign of Great Britain will also reign over Canada, notwithstanding any British statute or any changes to British statutes.
* Rouleau: "[34] The operation of this '''commitment to symmetry and union''' of Canada under the British Crown was demonstrated by the adoption in 1937 of the Succession to the Throne Act, I Geo. IV, c.16. This Canadian statute effected changes to '''the rules of succession in Canada''' to assure consistency with the changes in '''the rules then in place in Great Britain'''. The changes were necessary in light of the abdication of Edward VIII in 1936. Absent this Canadian statute, the statutory change in Great Britain to account for Edward VIII's abdication would have been contrary to Great Britain's commitment in the Statute of Westminster. Arguably, '''without this statute, Edwards VIII's abdication would not have been effective in respect of the Crown of Canada'''."
 
IE the crown would be affirming the outcome and disregarding the antecedent -- it would be saying that the more important issue is the avoidance of a division of the crown which would violate the intent expressed in the preamble. How the person who wears the crown is determined is less important than the fact that the same person who reigns over the UK also reigns over Canada. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 01:10, 30 July 2005 (UTC)
Again he's acknowledging that Canada has it's own line of succession separate from Britain's ("the rules of succession in Canada" separate from "the rules then in place in Britain", "Edward VIII's abdication would not have been effective in respect of the Crown of Canada"). But, because Canada's king and the UK's king ''are the same person'', and the two countries have agreed through the Statute of Westminster to keep it that way, Britain needed Canada to pass the Succession to the Throne Act so that UK Parliament could proceed with Edward VIII's abdication. And right there he flat out refers to "the Crown of Canada"!
 
:"And remember that in 1936 Canada had to pass an Act of Parliament to recognize Edward VIII's abdication for George VI, "
* Rouleau: "[36] The impugned positions of the Act of Settlement are an integral part of the rules of succession that govern the selection of the monarch of Great Britain. By virtue of our constitutional structure whereby Canada is united under the Crown of Great Britain, '''the same rules of succession must apply for''' the selection of '''the King or Queen of Canada''' and the '''King or Queen of Great Britain'''."
Not if the 1936 Act was superfluous
:otherwise if the UK went ahead without us we'd be left with a different King to the UK's (just like Ireland was for one day).
Ireland had a different constitution than Canada. I admire your earnestness as a few weeks ago you were arguing, as adamantly, that Britain had to wait for the dominions to pass their own succession acts when, of couse, as it turned out it didn't do that at all.
[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 11:20, 30 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:''whoever is the sovereign of Great Britain will also reign over Canada'' - not automatically according to Rouleau and the 1936 Succession to the Throne Act. The issue is ''not'' chronological order, it's that fact that before 1982 Canada was technically not fully independent. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 01:13, 30 July 2005 (UTC)
Clearly Rouleau recognises the King or Queen of Canada is separate from the King or Queen of the United Kingdom, with separate lines of succession governing the selection of each (always keeping in mind that the Statute of Westminster stipulates that the two must be the same person to maintain the unity of the Crown, as he refers to when he says: "[38] To [unilaterally alter the rules of succession] would make the constitutional principle of Union under the British Crown together with other Commonwealth countries unworkable, would defeat a manifest intention expressed in the preamble of our Constitution, and would have the courts overstep their role in our democratic structure").
 
Feel free to file an amicus curiae brief if the issue ever goes to court, but until it does go to court we just don't know how a court would rule, with or without Rouleau. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 11:12, 30 July 2005 (UTC)
* 1988 Constitutional Commission report (Australia): "2.138 The disappearance of the British Empire has therefore meant that the Queen is now sovereign of a number of separate countries such as the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea, amongst others. '''As the Queen of Australia she holds an entirely distinct and different position from that which she holds as Queen of the United Kingdom or Canada'''. The '''separation of these 'Crowns' ''' is underlined by the comments of Gibbs CJ in "Pochi v Macphee" that 'The '''Allegience which Australians owe to Her Majesty is owed not as British subjects but as subjects of the Queen of Australia' '''.
:"2.151 As discussed earlier,112 the sovereignty of the United Kingdom in 1900 referred to the sovereignty of the entire empire of that country. There was in law and in fact no distinct Monarch of Australia, Canada, New Zealand, etc. There was just the one and indivisible sovereign of all parts of the Queen's dominions. When the Queen, as distinct from the Governor-General or a Governor, acted in relation to either the United Kingdom or overseas possessions of the Crown she acted on the advice of ministers of the United Kingdom. '''The Crown, therefore, was one Imperial Crown. That is no longer the case.''' '''The sovereignty of ''each of the countries'' that recognise Queen Elizabeth II as their Queen is separate and distinct from that of any other country.''' Whether in domestic or foreign affairs the 'Crown of the United Kingdom' may pursue quite different policies from that of the Crown of Australia. The Queen's advisers are different in each case. '''The reference to the United Kingdom is therefore a source of confusion and does not reflect the position of the Crown in Australia today'''."
 
We have Richard Toporoski's expert opinion. But at least we all agree on one point, which is that some combination of Canadian legislators and/or Canadian judges will decide the issue. Hence it is an internal Canadian matter, we can remove all of this speculation from this article. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 16:39, 30 July 2005 (UTC)
Australia exists under the same Crown as Canada and the UK, and also adhere to the Statute of Westminster to ensure their sovereign remains the same as Canada's and Britain's. Thus, the words that describe the Crown of Australia and the Queen of Australia are just as applicable to Canada. It is even said "the sovereignty of ''each of the countries that regognise Queen Elizabeth II as their Queen'' [that includes Canada!] is separate and distinct from that of any other country''." However, the Queen of Australia, the Queen of Canada, and the Queen of the UK are ''obviously'' the same ''one'' person, sovereign of ''one Crown''.
 
Yes and Toporoski's "expert opinion": concedes the possibility that the UK could act unilaterally and that Canada would be compelled by political realities to follow suit. Two things you rejected the last time we discussed this.
* Councillor Julian Leeser (Australia): "the (High) Court confirmed that the '''Queen of Australia does not act as a foreign Queen'''. One of the main arguments that was raised by Heather Hill was that the Queen of Australia is the same person as the Queen of the United Kingdom (and Northern Ireland). Therefore swearing allegiance to the Queen of Australia was the same as swearing allegiance to the Queen of the UK. This argument was rejected by the Court on the basis that '''whilst physically it is the same person, Elizabeth II, they are "independent and distinct" legal personalities'''. This notion is known as '''the divisibility of the Crown''' which Justice Gaudron found to be "implicit in the Constitution."
 
In any case, we should probably focus on the issues at hand. I placed a proposal at the bottom of this page the other day which, I think, we should all be able to agree to. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 22:06, 31 July 2005 (UTC)
Again, an Australian example which is just as applicable to Canada, where we see a woman's argument very similar to AndyL's own being thrown out because it did not recognise constitutional realities.
 
:Nobody ever doubted that the UK could act unilaterally, and Toporoski does not state Canada would be "compelled" to follow anything. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 22:26, 31 July 2005 (UTC)
* Toporoski: "I am perfectly prepared to concede, even happily affirm, that the British Crown no longer exists in Canada, but that is because legal reality indicates to me that in one sense, the British Crown no longer exists in Britain: the Crown transcends Britain just as much as it does Canada. One can therefore speak of 'the British Crown' or 'the Canadian Crown' or indeed the 'Barbadian' or 'Tuvaluan' Crown, but what one will mean by the term is the Crown acting or expressing itself within the context of that particular jurisdiction. Dr Smith suggests that this concept of 'divisibility', however long it took for it to be articulated or accepted, explains how Canadians and Australians were able to make federal systems work."
 
He doesn't argue any legal compulsion, but he argues that politically and practically Canada would have no other choice (of course, he assumes that Canada would not opt to become a republic under this scenario which I think is far more likely). [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 16:03, 1 August 2005 (UTC)
AndyL discounts Toporoski because he is an MLC member, however the man is still a constitutional expert and his words here clearly reflect everything that has been outlined above-- the 'British Crown', the 'Canadian Crown', is '''the''' Crown "expressing itself in the context of that particular jurisdiction."
 
== Gbambino proposal ==
*Honourable Eugene A. Forsey: "Canada is a democracy, a constitutional monarchy. Our head of state is '''the Queen of Canada''', who is '''also''' '''Queen of Britain, Australia and New Zealand, and a host of other countries''' scattered around the world from the Bahamas and Grenada to Papua New Guinea and Tuvalu. Every act of government is done in the name of the Queen, but the authority for every act flows from the Canadian people."
 
Okay, I know it's going to need work, but this is my preliminary proposal:
Forsey acknowledges the separation between the Queen of Canada and the Queen of the United Kingdom, recognising one sovereign acting separately in each Realm.
 
:''It is held that these developments created the current situation where the Crown operates separately and equally in each of the Commonwealth Realms. Hence the Queen in right of each realm is a distinct legal person, with the [[Monarchy in Canada|Queen of Canada]] separate from the [[Queen of New Zealand]] or the [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Queen of the United Kingdom]]. But because the Realms are united through the institution of the Monarchy matters directly related to the person of the Monarch, such as the laws affecting succession, are commonly and symmetrically shared. Thus, legally the Crown is no longer an exclusively British institution, but instead is equally of each Realm.''
This has all been spelled out to AnyL previously, however, he has always chosen to ignore it in favour of his own personal interpretation of things. This means his attempts to put all of the above in doubt is unfortunately nothing but ''his own'' simplistic and misguided interpretation of the facts, as he has so far provided ''no'' secondary sources to back himself up. It seems to me that until he can provide proof of ''others'' (ie. other constitutional experts, lawyers, judges, parliamentarians, scholars, etc.) who actually question the stainding view, then this "debate" about the Crown exists only with him, and therefore does not belong anywhere on Wikipedia articles. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 01:38, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:''From a cultural standpoint, how the Crown is divided is not as clear. Because the constitutional reality of the equally 'divided' Crown remains little known outside of legal circles, many still view the Crown as a solely British institution. Perceptions are also affected by frequent reference to the shared Crown as the "British Crown" for historical reasons and for convenience. The role of the Crown within each Realm is little understood by the majority of the population, including the purpose of the [[Governor General]] in countries outside of the United Kingdom. However, in recent years the Queen, when in a particular Realm, has publicly referred to her personal history, and/or the Crown's relationship and role within that nation, and refers to herself specifically as queen of that Realm. When giving speeches in [[Canada]] she will acknowledge the distinct culture of Canada by always using both the country's official languages. As well, in the larger Realms ([[Canada]], [[Australia]], [[New Zealand]]) the public visibility of the Governors General conducting their ceremonial duties has been increasing, aided by heritage departments of the government who promote the Monarchy within their country as part of the cultural fabric (see [http://www.pch.gc.ca/progs/cpsc-ccsp/fr-rf/index_e.cfm 1]). Thus many others view the Crown within their country as particular to their nation's history and society, distinct from its role elsewhere.''
So you agree that the multiple crown theory proposed by some scholars and propounded by the MLC is questionable? After all, the Statute of Westminster, as you point out, speaks of "the Crown" not "the Crowns" (which, after all, is the whole question we're debating). By the way, given the lack of a source in the Royal and Parliamentary Titles article you cite, it seems obvious that that article has a lot of orignal research in it. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]01:58, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:''For political reasons republicans (outside of the United Kingdom) promote the view that the Crown within their particular country remains British and of Britain, whereas monarchists will assert that the Crown in right of their Realm is a core institution of their nation, distinct from the Crown in right of other Realms.'' --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 22:49, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
I've removed the original research you cite from the Royal and Parliamentary Titles article. [[User:AndyL]]02:04, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
BTW, gbambino, you are contradicting Peter Grey who has asserted that a) there is a single, shared crown and b) it is not illogical to call it the British Crown. See [[Talk:Monarchy in Canada]]. Do you concede the point now or do we need to continue any further? [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]03:01, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:::It is held that these developments created the current situation where the Crown operates separately and equally in each of the Commonwealth Realms. Hence the Queen in right of each realm is a distinct legal person, with the Queen of Canada separate from the Queen of New Zealand or the Queen of the United Kingdom. But because the Realms are united through the institution of the Monarchy matters directly related to the person of the Monarch, such as the laws affecting succession, are commonly and symmetrically shared. Thus, legally the Crown is no longer an exclusively British institution, but instead is equally of each Realm.
:You clearly have a learning disability if you can't see that I'm agreeing with Peter Grey, the MLC and every constitutional scholar, judge, and historian out there. As long as you keep up your absurd attempts to put forward your own conjecture as fact, this will continue on and on and on... --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 14:35, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
I suggest you read Toporoski above. His scenario regarding the succession contradicts your assertions.[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 22:59, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
"You clearly have a learning disability"
 
No, his comments don't. But Toporoski is a monarchist anyway, so his opinions can't be valid. Remember Andy? --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 23:04, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
No personal attacks, please.
 
Even a stopped clock is right twice a day.[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 23:09, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
"if you can't see that I'm agreeing with Peter Grey, the MLC and every constitutional scholar, judge, and historian out there."
 
Have anything constructive to offer, or do you just like to bicker because you're a person who gets upset when the real world doesn't match your imagined view of it? --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 23:16, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
The MLC and some constitutional scholars say there are "multiple crowns". Some of the evidence you've pointed to (Statute of Westminster) and Peter Grey's statements elsewhere suggest a "single crown". The section in question is on whether there is one crown or several. Either you're practicing [[doublethink]] or you've lost yourself in your own argument. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]15:02, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
You are being very snippy today. Anyway, as to your second paragaph the reference to a "divided Crown" is spurious. The rest of your suggestion sounds like a monarchist rationalization for why most people don't espouse monarchist views. You refer to "heritage departments", in what countries do such departments exist? It sounds like you are generalising based on the Canadian example. Your claim that the "public visibility" of Governors-General is increasing is subjective and, I suspect, is also a Canadian generalisation. As for "Thus many others view the Crown within their country as particular to their nation's history and society, distinct from its role elsewhere" do you have a reference for this? Who, specifically, views the Crown like this. Who are these "many others"?
:One Crown ''acts'' as several. The fact that evidence points to both the unified single Crown ''and'' the multiple Realm crowns might just establish that Peter Grey and myself are correct. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 17:04, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
I think we should wait to see what Chris comes up with. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 01:12, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
=== Two essential points ===
I think this is where people are getting hung up:
*Some arguments from republicans in Canada are legitimate points of view to which they are entitled: opposed to monarchy in the abstract, opposed to an absentee monarch, opposed to this particular dynasty, etc. In contrast, the notion that the existing Constitution has some logical contradiction or negates Canada's sovereignty is outright disinformation and is not encyclopedic. To my knowledge this theory has never been proposed in good faith, but is merely a tactic used for its inflammatory value.
*The concept of multiple Crowns is a useful metaphor for describing the shared vs. separate character of the monarchy. It is apparently not, in Canadian law at least, the correct usage of 'Crown' as a legal term. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 03:28, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
''Thus, legally the Crown is no longer an exclusively British institution, but instead is equally of each Realm.''
: Ah. Thanks, Peter. The plot thickens. -[[User:Stevertigo|SV]]|[[User_talk:Stevertigo|t]] 05:08, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
This is a theory, not a fact. There is no law that says this notwithstanding Gbambino's attempt to extrapoloate from the Statute of Westminster. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 14:09, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
===Possible contradictions or ambiguties in law===
"the notion that the existing Constitution has some logical contradiction or negates Canada's sovereignty is outright disinformation and is not encyclopedic."
 
:While it doesn't seem to make any sense to talk about an "unequal" sharing of the Crown, I'm not sure it's really helpful to try to spell out comparisons like this. (Just for clarity, not "crown" headgear or the physical person of the Queen, "Crown" the legal concept.) I think this may be taking us back to comparing disjoint definitions of "Crown". [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 17:06, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
The notion was the basis of the O'Donohue suit (contradiction betweeen the Charter of Rights and the Act of Settlement). Whether or not there is a contradiction is a matter of opinion but you cannot exclude the argument just because you don't like it, Peter. It's perfectly encylopedic to mention it in the [[Monarchy in Canada]] article as an argument brought up by republicans since it is and since we can document that the argument has been made. As for whether Canada's sovereignty is lessened by having what is arguablly a Briton as head of state and not being able to, under the current constitution, change the rules to the succession without the consent of 15 other countries, again that's a perfectly valid point of view and you cannot exclude it just because you don't like it or find it offensive. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]11:46, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
My point is that while we can refer to a "shared Crown" in the article we'd be making assumptions by referring to the Crown being shared equally (and yes, you can share something in an unequal fashion - if I use a cottage 1/3 of the time and my sister uses it 2/3 of the time we are still sharing it). Let's just not use the word "equal", gbambino and Peter are pushing a POV by constantly reinserting it into the discussion. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 17:24, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
:The argument was made '''unsuccessfully''': O'Donohue's petition was dismissed because it was "not justiciable and there is no serious issue to be tried". It is a fringe point of view that is in contradiction to fact and that exists only as a propaganda tool. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 13:56, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Except Rouleau's constant use of the word 'symmetry' to describe the relationship amongst the Realms under the Crown, and the Balfour Declaration's statement that the Realms can consider themselves equal messes up that theory. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 19:35, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
Rouleau did not rule that the Charter of Rights does not contradict the Act of Settlement. He ruled that as the Charter and the succession rules were equal parts of the constitution the former could not be used to strike down the latter.
 
== What are we disputing again? ==
In any case, it's a documented argument and thus not "original research" and merits mention as part of the debate. As for being a "fringe point of view" I suspect most Canadians would agree that the bar on Catholics is abhorrent and inconsistent with Canadian values of equality as expressed in the Charter of Rights (certainly the 40% of the Canadian population that is Catholic would hold that view). The only people I would think who would adamantly oppose changing the succession rules would be the remnants of the [[Orange Order]] which would better fit your "fringe point of view" label. Indeed, reading the MLC discussion board, I know that many Canadian monarchists would like to see the succession rules changed, they just want it done by the "realms" working in concert rather than through a unilateral judicial ruling in a Canadian court. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]14:06, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
I think the focus has moved too far away from, you know, Wikipedia, and making human civilization a better place. With respect to the article as it currently (17:58, 29 July 2005 (UTC)) exists, what, specifically, are the actual disputes?
:So it's not "original research" but you "suspect most Canadians would agree...". Once again you've taken facts and then made the leap to political speculation. You're trying to use litigation to give an artificial credibility to a political opinion. Probably a lot of people would favour changing the succession law on grounds of secularism. But that's very different from saying the Constution is flawed and amendments are imperative. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 14:13, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Peter Grey disputes:
You're parsing together two statements from different parts of my post to create a meaning I did not actually express and are thus acting in bad faith. It's not original research because the argument is not my invention but comes directly from O'Donohue's brief. I'm starting to think you either don't know what original research means or that you're throwing the term around indiscriminately, and disigenuously in an attempt to silence arguments you don't like. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]14:20, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
*''A number of theorists contend that the "Crown" in any of the Commonwealth Realms is the equal of the British Crown, however, in O’Donohue v. Her Majesty the Queen, 2003 Justice Rouleau described the relationship between Crown and Commonweath Realms as one of "Union under the British Crown together with other Commonwealth countries".''
**Rouleau quotations have a long history of causing problems, because readers unfamiliar with Canadian legal terminology might assume "UK-British" instead of "Commonwealth-British".
**"equal of the British Crown" should probably spell out 'Crown the legal concept', or simply be moved to a (balanced) discussion of perceptions, rather than the legal facts. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 17:58, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
*'''To the mediator''': Because the statement in its current form is misleading, I suggest removing it during the discussion. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 06:00, 1 August 2005 (UTC)
 
:What:'s''To badthe faithmediator''': Since the term "British Crown" is pretendingcorrect and is not otherwise used in the article, if you changeddo remove the subjectRouleau eachquote andduring everythe timediscussion you're provenshould wrong.change The"Crown" 'argument'to is"British notCrown" validin -the itarticle wasat rejectedleast byin a courtthe offirst lawinstance. [[User:Peter GreyHOTR|Peter GreyHomey]] 1415:3255, 151 JulyAugust 2005 (UTC)
::The correct term in law is "Crown". "British Crown", "Canadian Crown", only occur for contrast. And the article already has sufficient, if not superfluous, British references. Too many would take us even farther away from NPOV. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 16:30, 1 August 2005 (UTC)
 
Gbambino disputes:
That is not grounds for an argument not to be referred to in wikipedia. Again, we are not dealing with statements of fact but simply references to their being a debate. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]14:59, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
''It is commonly held that these developments created a separate Crown in each of the Commonwealth Realms, united only in the person of the monarch and matters directly related to the person of the monarch such as the laws affecting succession.''
:*This is covered in the paragraph which follows, and thus is repetitive. This whole paragraph should be removed.
 
''A number of theorists contend that the "Crown" in any of the Commonwealth Realms is the equal of the British Crown, however, in O’Donohue v. Her Majesty the Queen, 2003 Justice Rouleau described the relationship between Crown and Commonwealth Realms as one of "Union under the British Crown together with other Commonwealth countries".
:The ''legal'' argument or the ''political'' argument? You can't use one to back up the other. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 15:06, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
:*There is no dispute over which theorists must "contend."
:*The Crown operates the same in each Commonwealth Realm, including the UK -- thus "Crown in any of the Commonwealth Realms is equal of the British Crown" is misleading.
:*"However" implies that Rouleau offers a different, unconventional view of the Crown, when he does not.
 
=== GBambino proposal ===
Peter, is it "original research" to cite O'Donohue's argument or isn't it? Your only grounds for not citing it now seem to be that a judge ruled against it. Well, wikipedia is not a legal document, it's an encyclopedia, and it's perfectly encyclopedic to refer to arguments that have been made in court regardless of the outcome of the court case. Your "you can't refer to it if it's been dismissed by a judge" rule is not wikipedia policy. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]15:11, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
Could we perhaps try the following?:
 
:''The Crown has become an institution which operates separately in each Commonwealth Realm, with the Queen in right of each Realm being a distinct legal person. The institution of the Monarchy, the succession, and obviously the Queen herself, are shared equally by all the Realms in a symmetrical fashion. Thus the Crown has both a separate and a shared character, and in different contexts "Crown" may mean the crown as shared or the crown in each realm considered separately.''
:I believe the original research was your very creative theory about the Royal Title. The O'Donohue petition is merely out of date. You've simply gone and changed the subject again. The question (the one I'm discussing anyway) is "the existing Constitution has some logical contradiction or negates Canada's sovereignty". This is incorrect as a fact of law. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 15:18, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:''From a cultural standpoint, how the Crown is divided is not as clear. For political reasons republicans (outside of the United Kingdom) promote the view that the Crown within their particular country remains British and of Britain, whereas monarchists will assert that the Crown in right of their Realm is a core institution of their nation, linked to but distinct from the Crown in right of other Realms.'' --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 19:31, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
"I believe the original research was your very creative theory about the Royal Title" So you disagree with gbambino's contention that reference to the O'Donohue case is original research. Good.
 
=== Homey's reaction ===
"The question (the one I'm discussing anyway) is "the existing Constitution has some logical contradiction or negates Canada's sovereignty".
How about:
:are shared by all the Realms in a symmetrical fashion.
 
If you are correct and "equal" is a synonym for "symmetrical" it would be redundant to say "shared equally...in a symmetrical fashion."
Unless it is your contention that republicans including O'Donohue accept the court's ruling and no longer argue this then it's a perfectly valid thing to reference. Arguments don't just go away after a court ruling. If they did then [[Dred Scott]] would have put an end to the movement against slavery and [[Roe v. Wade]] would have ended the debate on abortion in the US. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]15:29, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:''From a cultural standpoint, how the Crown is divided is not as clear. For political reasons republicans (outside of the United Kingdom) promote the view that the Crown within their particular country remains British and of Britain, whereas monarchists will assert that the Crown in right of their Realm is a core institution of their nation, linked to but distinct from the Crown in right of other Realms.''
"I believe the original research was your very creative theory about the Royal Title"
Your belief is wrong. See [http://www.foundingdocs.gov.au/item.asp?dID=28 this reference from the National Archives of Australia] and the use of the word "precedence". Hence, my theory is neither creative or original, the Australians changed their Royal Style Titles Act for the same reason in 1973. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]15:49, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
The problem here is 1) the use of the term "divided" is spurious, use "shared" instead ("division of the Crown" is a phrase used to describe what would happen if different realms adopted different succession rules).
:Legal argument or political argument? Pick one. (You do understand the difference?) [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 16:47, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
2) you are ascribing political motives to republicans but no motives to monarchists (when certainly monarchists have political motives for minimising, or even denying the Britishness of the Crown). Why say "For political reasons" at all? Also, there are a number of monarchists who promote (and also defend) the "Britishness" of the monarchy so it is misleading to ascribe one view to republicans and the other to monarchists.
:The reference says that the Australian part of the title is given precedence ''in Australia''. It's a sentimental statement, not changing a legal relationship. Unless you're telling us it turned Canada into a colony of Australia. (Do you think no-one ever checks your sources?) [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 16:53, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
As an aside, I am still waiting for your theory of how the other realms would utilise their "power" to compel the UK not to unilaterally change the succession.
:It wouldn't be surprising, given that he earlier argued himself into stating that Parliamentary Supremacy made Canada a colony of New Zealand. But, of course, I digress... --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 17:00, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Also, I think it is important to use the Rouleau quotation as it affirms a) that the entity we are describing is the "British Crown" and b) that we are under it. I would accept not using the quotation if the article itself referred to the Commonwelath Realms as being "under the British Crown".
I'm saying it's wrong for you to imply that I invented objections to the Royal Style and Titles Act or that no one views putting Britain before Canada (or Australia) as giving that country precedence. But that has nothing to do with *this* article, does it? [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 16:57, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
:'''''that has nothing to do with *this* article''''' That's been the point all along. Now stop wasting everyone's time. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 17:02, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
== Send in the Crowns ==
<blockquote> '''Gbambino 1''': "I'm not contesting that there are conflicting opinions on Canada's status as a constitutional monarchy-- they do exist and should be acknowledged." Gbambino 2: "This is not a small debate, it is a ''non-existent'' debate."</blockquote>
There seems to be a contradiction between previous and later statements, Gbam. -SV
 
so how about:
:If I might insert my point here: As Peter Grey explained above, differing opinions about Canada remaining as a kingdom, differing opinions on the logic of sharing a monarch, differing opinions on the current House of Windsor, etc. do certainly exist. What does not exist are differing opinions on the constitutional ''reality'' of Canada's sovereignty, her relationship to the Crown, and the organization of the Commonwealth Realms as laid out in the Balfour Declaration and the Statute of Westminster. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 14:42, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:''The British Crown is an institution that both reigns over the Commonwealth realms and operates independently in each individual realm, with the Queen in right of each Realm being a distinct legal person. The institution of the monarchy, the succession, and obviously the Queen herself, are shared by all the realms in a symmetrical fashion. Thus the Crown has both a separate and a shared character, and in different contexts "Crown" may mean the crown as shared or the crown in each realm considered separately.''
Republicans certainly do argue that having a non-Canadian monarch impugns Canadian sovereignty and yes, republicans like [[Jeffrey Simpson]] refer to the Queen as being "British" rather than Canadian (he refers to it as a "foreign monarchy"[http://boards.conservativelife.com/ftpc18802.html]) so obviously the question of sovereignty is a question even if you claim it doesn't exist.
 
:''From a cultural standpoint, how the Crown is shared is not as clear. Republicans and some monarchists argue that the Crown within their particular country remains essentially British and of Britain, whereas other monarchists will minimize the "British" nature of the Crown and emphasise its domestic characteristics. For instance, in Canada, some monarchists refer to the "Maple Crown" in order to assert what they contend are the Crown's Canadian characteristics.''
As for the "organization of the Commonwealth Realms as laid out in the Balfour Declaration and the Statute of Westminster" this is a [[straw man]] argument, there's nothing in the article that says the realms are not constitutionaly equal and I haven't proposed saying such a thing (indeed, if you read the passage you'll see I've written the exact opposite). Indeed, many of the things you've said, gbambino, have nothing to do whatsoever with what's actually in this article. Please get focussed. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]14:56, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 22:35, 29 July 2005 (UTC)
 
===GBambino revised proposal===
<blockquote> Andy L: "It's not a major debate. However, the contention that there are "multiple Crowns" and, the corollary, that therefore there can be and is a "Canadian monarchy" is an important part of monarchist ideology and it merits a mention."
It's true that "equally" and "symmetrically" need not be both included in the sentence, so the first paragraph might be as follows:
</blockquote>
This sounds a bit confused, frankly, Andy. It seems like youre not quite sure what the argument is, but youre trying to represent it as well as you can ATM. If you concede that your explanations are a bit confusing and therefore somewhat misrepresentative of actual points made in the debate, then you can sort of understand how Gbambino's tendency toward wholesale exclusion can, in a superficial way, appear to be legitimate.
 
:''The Crown has become an institution which operates separately in each Commonwealth Realm, with the Queen in right of each Realm being a distinct legal person. The institution of the Monarchy, the succession, and obviously the Queen herself, are shared by all the Realms in a symmetrical fashion. Thus the Crown has both a separate and a shared character, and in different contexts "Crown" may mean the crown as shared or the crown in each realm considered separately.''
Naturally, conservatives of all shades and nations seek to exclude rather than include, so in that respect, youre correct that Gbambino is simply representing a conservative point of view. Whats not clear is what agreement can be reached with regard to how to sort and organize this argument. You say its small. Gbambino said it "should be acknowledged" and then changed this to 'it is "non-existent,"' which I consider to be likewise "confusing."
 
As for the second paragraph, your proposed one reads as though those who assert the Crown in Canada is a distinct and intrinsic part of Canadian society are in the minority, and monarchists are divided on the issue while republicans are not. Perhaps it could simply read:
A zealous Christian can, for example, come to Wikipedia and cite the Bible, claiming on various talk pages that Biblical views are preeminent to other views, like culture, history, etc. Likewise, lawyers may cite the law in any local context, and claim that the law supercedes all culture, poltics, debate, and dissent. In other words, it seems clearer to me now. Republican arguments are scattered and unfocused, while Loyalist arguments are narrow and verbatim to doctrinal law, regardless if such law was the product of a democratic consensus or not. While it appears that Andy's arguments seem to be reflective of a minority view, Gbambino's assertion that such views are Andy's alone, (when he himself cites two different recent cases of legal court challenge toward the "trancendent" "single Crown," which is somehow separate for each "Realm," and yet bound "by commitment" to be the "same individual," referred to as "[[the Crown]]" over "[[the Crowns]]" although each Realm may determine its "own line of succession...")
appear to be a bit overstated. It all perhaps sounds like a bunch of legalese nonsense to anyone living in any country not occupied by any formalized genetic aristocracies. Ceremonially established ones, anyway.
 
:''From a cultural standpoint, how the Crown is shared is not as clear. Some argue that the Crown within their particular country remains essentially British and of Britain, whereas others emphasise the larger body of the Crown as a shared link between the Commonwealth Realms, and the Crown in right of their nation as having specific domestic characteristics.''--[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 22:35, 31 July 2005 (UTC)
All that out of my system, Im quite happy with both of the general responses, and I feel much better informed about the nuance of the issue. Both of your comments have been quite telling of the ''great naive confusion,'' or otherwise ''convoluted lack of confusion,'' involved. Now, as a newbie to all of this, I was curious about a number of things cited by Gbambino, and while reading his entire post I simply bracketed those items which I was unclear of to link them, so that I can re-read it and get a deeper gist. For starters, theres no [[MLC]] article, so I hope someone will correct that. The concept of [[the Crowns]] as distinct from (and yet the same as) [[the Crown]], certainly needs looking at. I really think that Gbambino, your response was extremely coherent and informative, and would like to see all of that in a single coherent article, provided more detail about the opposition and any dissenting jurist views are given. Sinreg and goodnight, friendly neighbors. -[[User:Stevertigo|SV]]|[[User_talk:Stevertigo|t]] 05:08, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
'''PS Correction:''' I linked about 2 dozen items in Gbam's point by point walkthrough, but lost those changes, while copying my own text. Alas, Im loathe to go through and re-link tonight.-[[User:Stevertigo|SV]]|[[User_talk:Stevertigo|t]] 05:25, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
===More reaction===
:I don't concede that there is any misrepresentation. There is no contradiction between the Crown being a "shared Crown" and "the British Crown" at least Rouleau did not find any such contradiction when writing his ruling. Remember it wasn't that long ago that the international body former colonies belonged to was the "British Commonwealth" and it wasn't that long ago, that Canadians were "British subjects" - both phenomena postdate the Statute of Westminster and I believer our status as British subjects may even postdate the late 1940s Citizenship Act (but I may be wrong about that). Anyway, gbambino is a bit confused here, the argument in this article is not whether or not the Crown is "British" but whether there are competing views on it being "multiple Crowns" or a shared "single Crown". As Peter Grey now concedes, at least as far as Canadian constitutional law is concerned it's the latter, notwithstanding [[Monarchist League of Canada]] [[propaganda]] suggesting the contrary. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]11:57, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Sounds like we're on to something (although 'cultural standpoint' really belongs in the 'public perceptions' section). Some very small suggestions:
:::I don't believe you should mis-represent Peter Grey by putting words in his mouth. Neither he nor I have ever denied the "single Crown"'s existence. We've both acknowledged that the situation is far more complex than simply that, given the agreed relationship between the 16 Commonwealth Realms through the Balfour Report and the Statute of Westminster, combined with the individual constitutional structure and framework of each Realm which creates each country as a seperate and sovereign kingdom. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 15:50, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
*Maybe spell out "person of the Queen" to contrast legal and physical persons.
*I think "equally" works better than the more technical "symmetically" (but that's just style).
*"British and of Britain" doesn't sound right. Maybe "British in character", and maybe even tack on "and a continuing link with the United Kingdom and/or Commonwealth"? [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 02:59, 1 August 2005 (UTC)
 
"British Crown" may not "sound right" but it is the correct term and thus it should be used at least once or twice so I cannot accept gbambino attempt (and Peter's argument) for removing the the term "British Crown". As for "Commonwealth-British" and "UK-British" theser are [[neologism]]s and thus "original research" Peter (unless you can find citations) and it's not just "Canadian law" that uses the term "British Crown", it is commonly used throughout the Commonwealth and I suspect is used in law in much of the Commonwealth.
::First off, this ''all'' sounds like playing with words, so "propaganda" naturally is a suspicion. Second, I understand the difference between merely citing the law, and representing both sides in an argument. What is the argument? Is it that Canadas republicans claim it should excersise a legal right to seceed completely from The Crown? Its seems like the statutes made things uniform for all "Realms," and therefore the deal is either accepted or broken, but not changeable. So, its a binary issue. Either Canada has the monarchy its been given, or it has none. But you raise some interesting points that there have some apparent contradiction in either explicit law, statute, rhetoric, or culture, which Loyalists appear to want to gloss over. This is an interesting aspect, which of course requires documentation, and no doubt would be a long-term research project. Suffice it to say, there is some debate going on, and its worthy of a separate article, which explores these contradictions. -[[User:Stevertigo|SV]]|[[User_talk:Stevertigo|t]] 13:15, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
=== An "operative" agreement ===
:::I certainly agree that the issue of the operation of the Crown in and over the Commonwealth Realms needs to be carefully looked at and dealt with on Wikipedia. The issue has arisen elsewhere ([http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Elizabeth_II_of_the_United_Kingdom#Of_the_United_Kingdom.3F Talk:Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom/5 Of the United Kingdom?], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Elizabeth_II_of_the_United_Kingdom#Queen_Elizabeth_II_of_Canada Talk:Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom/13 Queen Elizabeth II of Canada], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Elizabeth_II_of_the_United_Kingdom#Elizabeth_II_of_Canada Talk:Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom/16 Elizabeth II of Canada], [[Talk:Elizabeth II of Canada]]), and due to confusion or lack of knowledge has been dismissed or pushed aside for later attention. However, I believe we need to be careful here, because this is a comlplex matter with many nuances open to interpretation, as well as established facts which are not. For example, if Canada chose to separate from the other Realms under the "British Crown", it does have the added option of setting up its own resident monarchy, as was done by Malaysia, Tonga and Lesotho. There is also the possibility, however unlikely, that Canada could alter its line of succession while remaining with the House of Windsor, thereby meaning one Windsor sovereign would reign over Canada, while another would reign over the UK.
 
I've seen no use of the word "equal" in the letter of the law or in its interpretation by judges. "Symmetry" is used so let's go with that rather than getting into semantic arguments about whether equal and symmetry are precise synonyms. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 15:46, 1 August 2005 (UTC)
:::But one point which cannot be debated is the existant, established, legal relationship between the Realms under the Crown, and the operation of the Crown within each Realm. This is not a matter of 'playing with words' or 'glossing' anything over, as it is all written out in black and white in law itself, as well as in court rulings, constitutional committee reports, and essays by constitutional scholars. I think it's clear that this issue of the Crown in and over the Realms is a given fact immune to any republican/monarchist or conservative/liberal point of view. Some politically motivated republicans may want to pull out selective pieces here and there and manipulate them to make it appear as though the situation is something which is patently is not, but it always remains just that -- manipulation and conjecture.
 
"British Crown" is not the "correct" term, but rather, as has been established, is one used sometimes for "historical purposes and convenience." In this instance, calling the shared Crown the "British Crown" when we're trying to distinguish it from the Crown in Right of the UK will cause unnecessary confusion. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 16:25, 1 August 2005 (UTC)
:::As I've said, numerous times now, if AndyL would care to provide some secondary sources to back up his claims that there is a debate (whatever size, and aside from his own) then I think we would all have to accept that it exists. However, so far he as provided nothing but his own interpretations and opinions. I don't think I'm being unfair in pointing out that that constitutes [[Wikipedia:No original research|original research]]. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 15:50, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
:I neglected to add that MLC stands for [[Monarchist League of Canada]]. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 16:34, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:As someone who has been watching this issue unfold from afar, might I just voice support for Gbambino’s revised proposal (as listed immediately above). It’s definitely on the right track towards compromise. I do note Peter Grey’s stylistic suggestions, but don’t think them necessary; symmetrically, in this context, perhaps works better than equally. --(*returns to obscurity*)[[User:Cyberjunkie|Cyberjunkie]] | [[User_talk:Cyberjunkie|Talk]] 16:40, 1 August 2005 (UTC)
::::Given that you are now conceding both the "British crown" point and the "single crown" point I don't see how you can say that any of that is "original research". I'm impressed by how far Peter Grey's and your views have shifted towards mine, it's a shame you can't admit you were wrong in the first place but I guess that's [[human nature]]. [[User:AndyL|AndyL]]16:22, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:''"British Crown" is not the "correct" term, but rather, as has been established, is one used sometimes for "historical purposes and convenience.''
:::::Now conceding? Your attempted trickery is humerous. You can't seem to grasp that everybody with any knowledge about this realises and accepts that the one "British Crown" and the multiple Crowns within the Realms are ''the same thing''. This alone demonstrates that you have no knowledge about this. Your questioning of the established status of the Crown over and in the Realms is 'original research', and until you can provide other respectible sources which back up your claim that there is a debate on this matter, it will remain 'original research'. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 16:34, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
That's *your* qualification, however, Rouleau uses the term "British Crown" throughout his ruling so evidently it is the legal term. What is the correct term, gbambino? "Commonwealth Crown" or "Commonwealth Crown" or neologisms, "The Crown" is in appropriate in an international context as it is unspecific (there's more than one crown in the world?). "British Crown", as you concede, is the historically established term and no other term has been adopted to refer to the entity that reigns over the Commowealth realms. I seem to recall posting a url earlier to the Commonwealth website to show that the term "British Crown" is still used. I know that Canadian monarchists like to downplay the term in order to deflect criticisms that the Crown is a colonial hangover but that is immaterial to our use of terms in this article. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 18:26, 1 August 2005 (UTC)
::::::Actually, your claim of original research is itself original research: "one "British Crown" and the multiple Crowns within the Realms are the same thing". I can't imagine why anyone would view that as inherently contradictory or an act of sophistry. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 16:59, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
===disputed NPOV claim===
It's not contradictory, and it's been reality in the Commonwealth for over 70 years. The key to AndyL line of reasoning is trying to combine 'British Crown' in it's general sense with 'British Crown' as subject to the authority of the UK Parliament. The only contradiction seems to be the one AndyL introduced. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 17:19, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
As well, one has to remember that Wikipedia is international. Using the term "The Crown" in the first instance instead of "The British Crown" violates NPOV in the same way that using, in the first instance in an article, the term "The President" instead of "the US President" or "The President of the United States" since doing so makes assumptions about the "nationality" of Wikpedia and its readers. So not only should we use the term "British Crown" because it's correct, we have to use it at least when the concept of "The Crown" is introduced in the article for NPOV purposes and because there is no established alternative term (as I said "Commonwealth Crown" is a neologism). EG, in an article about, say, the Cuban Missile Crisis we should refer, at least initially, to "US President John F. Kennedy" or "John F. Kennedy, President of the United States" rather than "President John F. Kennedy" (I haven't checked to see if we do or not but if we don't that needs to be changed). [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 18:26, 1 August 2005 (UTC)
 
With "United Kingdom" occuring 17 times and "British" 19 times, further elaboration would diminish the article, especially since the message is supposed to be "not exclusively British". [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 18:54, 1 August 2005 (UTC)
:It must torture you then to think that your own beloved Rouleau is also inherently contradictory as he too refers to both the single "British Crown" ''and'' the "Crown of Canada". How do you deal with that? --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 17:07, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Nevertheless, using "The Crown" exclusively and particularly in the first instance is inappropriate for NPOV purposes and "British Crown" remains the correct term. Your latest intervention changes neither of those facts.[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 18:59, 1 August 2005 (UTC)
::I cope. Anyway, the mediator doesn't seem to have picked up your "original research" accusation and Peter confines his original research accusation to the [[Royal Style and Titles Act]] which isn't mentioned in this article. I'm afraid you haven't convinced anyone, not even your ally Peter. Are you willing to drop it?[[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 17:22, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
====Resolution of NPOV concern====
:::And look at what you have resorted to -- an attempt to simply dismiss the whole thing when faced with a question you can't answer, an attempt to cause a rift between Peter Grey and myself, an attempt to dictate what the mediator has and has not done, an attempt to reduce the credibility of my argument by simply saying it's "not convincing." Sorry, I don't think the mediator has made any real decisions yet, Peter Grey is perfectly right in contesting your Royal Style and Titles Act theories as 'original research', and I will continue to point out that your "one crown or several?" questioning remains 'original research' as well, whether Peter wants to aid with this or not.
*The '''first instance''' is the following: ''The Balfour Declaration of 1926 declared that the dominions were autonomous and equal in status. Although this was a political statement and did not immediately change the legal status of the Crown...''. In the context of 1926, "British Crown" is an acceptable term. I assume that if that change is made, the word "Crown" can subsequently be used without superfluous qualification. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 18:39, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
 
====How the word Crown is actually used====
=== YNGAWT! ===
:::You'reIt nothas gettingnothing awayto do with this--NPOV. so instead[[The ofCrown]] changingis the topic,legal answerterm theas question:it whyis doesused Rouleauthroughout referCommonwealth toRealm bothlaw therather than "British Crown." andIn thefact, "Crownwithin ofthe [http://www.solon.org/Constitutions/Canada"/English/StatuteofWestminster.html whenStatute heof saysWestminster], "Thethe operationone ofstanding thislaw commitmentthat toaffects symmetryall and unionRealms of Canadathe underCommonwealth thein '''Britishregards Crown'''to wastheir demonstratedrelationship byto theone adoptionanother in 1937terms of the Succession toCrown, the Throneinstitution Actis specifically, I Geo.and IVonly, c.16....Arguably,referred withoutto thisas statute,"the EdwardsCrown." VIII's abdicationRouleau wouldis not havecreating beenlaw effectivewith inhis respectruling, so his use of the '''Crownterm of"British Canada''',Crown" anddoes not make it legal. He merely alludes to "the sameCrown rulesin that way for convenience rather than because of successionany mustspecific applyreference forin law. As I said, in this instance, calling the selectionshared ofCrown the "British Crown" when we'''Kingre ortrying Queento ofdistinguish Canada'''it andfrom the '''KingCrown orin QueenRight of Greatthe Britain'''"?UK will cause unnecessary confusion. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 1719:3719, 151 JulyAugust 2005 (UTC)
 
"The Crown" is POV for the reason already given, it assumes a Commonwealth POV rather than an international POV and does not distinguish between the British Crown and, say, the Dutch Crown. "British Crown" remains a legal, correct and proper term and thus, particularly in light of NPOV policy, it should be used at least in the first instance. "Confusion" can be avoided in the body of the article by explaining that the "British Crown" is no longer "exclusively British". Your political considerations should not be an issue here. If you are exceedingly concerned I suggest you write the various Prime Ministers prior to the next Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting and ask them to adopt a new term, until then "British Crown" should be used by us. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 21:08, 1 August 2005 (UTC)
::::I see no support for your original research claim and your arguments seem to be based on a (deliberate?) misunderstanding of what original research is and is not. Given the lack of support for your view, your admission that everything in the passage is factual and your failure to identify one questionable sentence or word I see no reason to entertain your fallacious claim of original research for one more second, particularly as you don't seem to even understand your own argument. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 17:42, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:::::AnswerThe thecorrect question,term is Andy"Crown". --[[User:GbambinoPeter Grey|gbambinoPeter Grey]] 1723:4438, 151 JulyAugust 2005 (UTC)
 
Because:I hesee feelsthat thePeter Crownchooses ofto Canadaignore isthe NPOV issue underor the fact that "British Crown" ratheris thanperfectly therecorrect beingas aconfirmed by Rouleau's multiplicityusage of equalit crownsand ierely theon Canadiansimple Crownassertion. isPeter, partwhich oflaw, agreement or treaty retired the term "British Crown" andfrom must,the therefore,Commonwealth? remainAnd inwhat symmetry.do Canadayou is boundsay to the Britishvarious constitutionacademics asetc awho result.use Thethe questionterm is"British whetherCrown" theto oppositerefer isto alsothe truecurrent andentity that'sreigning aover matterthe for debate.Commonwealth realms? [[User:HomeontherangeHOTR|AndyHomey]] 1700:4815, 152 JulyAugust 2005 (UTC)
 
:WhetherConflicts hebetween meantyour ''equality''personal orprejudices ''identity''and isreality open to interpretation (since both could apply), but it's very clear that he didare not meanan "underNPOV issue". [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 1704:5425, 152 JulyAugust 2005 (UTC)
 
Peter, stop being dismissive. We try to be NPOV by avoiding speaking in the "voice" of a particular nation. Referring to "The Crown" is therefore POV in the same way as referring to "The President". This is not my "personal prejudice" it's a matter of trying to speak in a neutral international voice. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 14:02, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
::Except, of course, that he '''said''' "under". Claiming that Rouleau didn't mean what he said is original research, is it not (or at the very least pure conjecture). [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 18:00, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:It's an article about the Commonwealth Realms. It's blatantly clear which group of countries is being referred to, and which crown they're under. The correct legal term is "Crown" -- and a number of examples of this have been given. "British Crown" is not a legal term. Adding "British Crown" will only negate the clarity we're trying to achieve by muddying the differentiation between the shared Crown and the Crown in Right of the United Kingdom. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 14:36, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
:::He said ''Canada'' was under the Crown (true by definition in a monarchy), not that one crown was under another. This same misrepresentation of the quotation was pointed out a long time ago. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 18:04, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
""British Crown" is not a legal term"
::::Ah so Canada is under the British Crown (a slight omission on your part there) but the Canadian Crown isn't. Clear as mud. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 18:09, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:::::If thingsthat's arethe incase, Rouleau must not be a [[Symmetry|symmetic]]judge. relationship,I thenthink onewe can'tneed beto underbring other people in on the otherNPOV issue. [[User:Peter GreyHOTR|Peter GreyHomey]] 1815:1424, 152 JulyAugust 2005 (UTC)
 
::::::HeRouleau's saidruling symmetrydoes undernot thecreate Britishlaw. CrownOther (preferably unbiased, notbut symmetryeducated) withopinions theare Britishalways Crownwelcome. --[[User:HomeontherangeGbambino|Andygbambino]] 1816:1803, 152 JulyAugust 2005 (UTC)
 
===Ad Hominem cutaway===
Wrong. He said Canada was in symmetry with the United Kingdom. Why do you waste people's time with these games? [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 18:28, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
This is another pattern we've seen from AndyL/Homey - when his politically-motivated assertions are demonstrated to be errors of fact, he then claims an NPOV issue. We saw this on [[Monarchist League of Canada]] before he destroyed the edit history. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 16:07, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
 
I didn't "destroy" the edit history. Gbambino violated copyright by posting large sections of material from the Monarchist League of Canada website into the [[Monarchist League of Canada]] article (the second time he had done this, in fact). Accordingly the page was listed on the [[Copyvio]] page and was deleted after a week, according to policy. The only "pattern" of behaviour this indicates about me is following wikipedia policy. I suggest, Peter, that you address the NPOV issue being raised rather than resort to ad hominems. Indeed, resorting to ad hominems instead of addressing the issue suggests you have no adequate response to the question and are trying to distract attention from it through a personal attack. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 16:46, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
:"He said Canada was in symmetry with the United Kingdom" You really need to distinguish between what is actually written and what you think should have been written. What he actually said was "'''symmetry''' and union of Canada '''under the British Crown'''". [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 18:35, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
I believe Peter's main point was that it is a common tactic on your part to claim NPOV as soon as facts conflict with your political motives. Diverting attention with cries of "ad hominem" attacks, previous errors on my part, and false claims of "no adequate response" being given, is practicing the very thing you recommend that Peter not do (when he wasn't doing it in the first place). --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 17:10, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
::''"Because he feels the Crown of Canada is under the British Crown rather than there being a multiplicity of equal crowns ie the Canadian Crown is part of the British Crown and must, therefore, remain in symmetry."'' You acknowledged some time ago that the Australian Crown exists, and you now acknowledge that the Canadian Crown exists. We now all agree that they are both separate but both a part of the larger Crown (refered to by Rouleau as "the British Crown"), so that affirms that there is indeed a multiplicity of crowns within one (we have 3 of 16, so far).
 
As with Peter you are not actually addressing the NPOV issue on its own merits. I suggest you do so in the previous section rather than trying to help Peter create a distraction. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 17:21, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
::However, I now want to ask, do you acknowledge the status of equality of the Realms, incuding the United Kingdom, under the Crown as laid out in the Balfour Declaration: "[The United Kingdom and the Dominions] are autonomous Communities within the British Empire, '''equal in status, in no way subordinate one to another''' in any aspect of their domestic or external affairs, though '''united by a common allegiance to the Crown''', and freely associated as members of the British Commonwealth of Nations," and the Statute of Westminster: "No Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom passed after the commencement of this Act shall extend or be deemed to extend, to a Dominion as part of the law of that Dominion"?
 
I most certainly did, but perhaps I should make it more clear: you're claiming an NPOV issue where there is none. "Crown" is the accurate term, the one used in law since at least 1931 (if not earlier), and the most applicable to the section of the article we are discussing. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 17:33, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
::"Canada is bound to the British constitution as a result. The question is whether the opposite is also true and that's a matter for debate," The [[Statute of Westminster]] binds Canada's alterations to the line of succession to Britain's as much as it binds Britain's alterations to the line of succession to Canada's, and binds Canada and Britain to every other Realm in the same fashion. Otherwise, why does Rouleau state: "if symmetry among commonwealth countries were to he maintained, any changes to the rules of succession would have to be agreed to by '''all members of the Commonwealth'''," and "The operation of this commitment to symmetry and union of Canada under the British Crown was demonstrated by the adoption in 1937 of the Succession to the Throne Act, I Geo. IV, c.16...'''Absent this Canadian statute, the statutory change in Great Britain''' to account for Edward VIII's abdication '''would have been contrary to Great Britain's commitment in the Statute of Westminster'''"? --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 18:47, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Please reread my actual point regarding NPOV as you have not addressed it. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 17:38, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
:::Canada is bound by Britain's constitution. Britain is not bound by Canada's constitution. The [[Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms]] is trumped by an 18th century piece of anti-Catholic legislation that had a purpose in British constitutional history but is quite irrelevent to Canadian history or Canadian reality and is actually anathama to Canadian values. Given the fact that 40% of our population is Catholic, Canada would not in and of itself devised a mechanism to exclude Catholics from the "Canadian throne", it must accept this device because it's in the British constitution.
 
''I believe Peter's main point was that it is a common tactic on your part to claim NPOV as soon as facts conflict with your political motives. ''
:::Theoretically, Britain must get the permission of Canada and the other realms before changing the succession rules however, in practice, it can act unilaterally as under the concept of parliamentary supremacy the actions of one parliament do not bind its successors. Rouleau is correct in that from Canada's perspective the Statute of Westminster is "like a treaty". However, from Britain's perspective, it's just a statute. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 19:02, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
:::Actually, the Act of Settlement is a part of the patriated Canadian constitution. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 21:10, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Interesting then that the example he used had nothing to do with NPOV. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 17:38, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
:Answer my question: If Britain is not bound to have the same line of succession as Canada then why did the UK have to wait for Canada to pass the Succession to the Throne Act, I Geo. IV, c.16, 1936, as Rouleau points out?
 
The alleged "NPOV issue" has been addressed. Your arguments have been evaluated on their own merits, or rather their lack thereof, not on the basis of your character flaws. Your previous dishonest tactics simply demonstrate the questionable standards you use in assessing NPOV violations. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 17:56, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
:Answer my question: If Canada is subsurvient to British constitutional law, then why does the Balfour Report and the Statute of Westminster specifically state that the Realms are "equal in status, in no way subordinate one to another", as Rouleau points out? Your 'parliamentary supremacy' argument failed before. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 19:16, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
The example, in case you have forgotten (it no longer being in the edit history), was your abuse of <nowiki>{{NPOV}} and {{totallydisputed}}</nowiki> where policy and guidelines clearly indicated that at most a <nowiki>{{dubious}}</nowiki> tag would have been appropriate. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 18:01, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
::Copied from [[Talk:Statute of Westminster 1931]].
The myth is that since the legislative powers of Parliament in the UK are unlimited, it can amend the Statute of Westminster and then somehow the leap is made to implying that the versions outside the UK would change with it. If you think of Parliament abrogating the 1783 Treaty of Paris, and then going on to, say, abolish the Commonwealth of [[Pennsylvania]], you can see how silly the idea really is. Peter Grey 15:01, 11 July 2005 (UTC)
 
That is a) quite picayune (ie the difference between "disputed" and NPOV tags is the number of NPOV violations/errors of fact in an article) b) has nothing to do with your false accusation that I "destroyed" the article's history. c) has of course, nothing whatsoever to do with the NPOV issue here regarding the voice of an article. Rather than attack what you perceive to be my motivation you should actually address the NPOV question itself on its own merits. I understand if you are unable to do this but substituting an ad hominem is not suitable. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 18:16, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
:::Poor analogy as there is no constitutional link between the United States of America and the United Kingdom (and as a treaty cannot be unilaterally rescinded. As I said, the Statute of Westminster may be "like a treaty" as far as Canada is concerned but it is just a statute for Britain - incidentally Rouleau was drawing an analogy, he did not say the Statute *is* a treaty). Gbambino conceded that Canada was bound to the UK constitution, the question is whether the relationship is reciprocal and it isn't. If Canada tried to unilaterally change the Act of Settlement a Canadian court would be bound to strike down that change given the Statute of Westminster. If Britain passed a law unilaterally amending the Act of Settlement and the Statute of Westminster no British court would have a reason to strike down the measure given parliamentary supremacy. Now of course Canada could pass a constitutional amendment but we're talking about our situation under the current constitution, not under a hypothetically amended one.
 
Your "issue" was that you considered "British Crown" was more neutral than "Crown". [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 18:22, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
:::And regardless of whether Canada would be bound to follow Britain's lead in changing the succession, the fact remains that the only reason the succession in Canada is the way it is is because of an archaic British law that has no relevence to Canadian reality. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 19:37, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
''The alleged NPOV issue has been addressed''
=== Hypothetical future is meaningless (to an encyclopedia) ===
::::Hypothetical future situations are meaningless to an encyclopaedia. Now, again, answer my questions. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 19:43, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
::::(BTW-- Britain cannot simply alter the Statute of Westminster at its whim -- the statute is a law touching the succession to the throne, and as the statute itself says: "any alteration in the '''law touching the Succession to the Throne'''... shall hereafter require the assent as well of the Parliaments of all the Dominions as of the Parliament of the United Kingdom." '''And''', the statute states: "4. No Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom passed after the commencement of this Act shall extend or be deemed to extend, to a Dominion as part of the law of that Dominion," so any alteration to the Act of Settlement or the Statute of Westminster in the UK '''would have no effect''' in Canada.) --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 19:50, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Saying "no it's not" is hardly a counterargument or refutation to the issue of adopting an international voice rather than one that assumes the reader is British or in the Commonwealth. If you had addressed the issue you would have answered that question as it is the centre of the issue. Instead you've dismissed the issue and been engaging in ad hominems as a distraction. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 18:25, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
Exactly, I'm talking about the current constitution, not a hypothetical future one. Our current constitution does not allow Canada to unilaterally change the succession while Britain's current constitutional arrangement does allow this.
 
== Dispute on "British Crown" ==
The reason why the Act of Settlement, a discriminatory document peculiar to British history, is part of Canada's constitution is also not "hypothetical", is it?
 
The following paragraphs have been proposed:
Answer my question: Why were the governments of Canada, Australia and the other realms *not* consulted in regards to the marriage of Charles, Prince of Wales to Camilla Parker-Bowles when they were consulted in regards to the proposed marriage of Edward and Mrs. Simpson (Canada, South Africa and Australia favoured abdication while New Zealand and India had "no firm views)? Tony Blair was consulted on Charles' marriage but the other PMs were not. Why was this?[[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 19:49, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:''The Crown has become an institution which operates separately in each Commonwealth Realm, with the Queen in right of each Realm being a distinct legal person. The institution of the Monarchy, the succession, and obviously the Queen herself, are shared by all the Realms in a symmetrical fashion. Thus the Crown has both a separate and a shared character, and in different contexts "Crown" may mean the crown as shared or the crown in each realm considered separately.''
:Ironically, Canada could authorize the UK Parliament to change the succession with an [[Act of the Dominon Parliament]], but it would require (according to Rouleau) a section 41 Constitutional amendment in order to take effect in Canada. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 19:55, 15 July 2005 (UTC) --Was the passing of the Succession to the Throne Act, I Geo. IV, c.16, 1936, not an example of Canada giving authorization to the UK Parliament to change the succession? --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 20:00, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:''From a cultural standpoint, how the Crown is shared is not as clear. Some argue that the Crown within their particular country remains essentially British and of Britain, whereas others emphasise the larger body of the Crown as a shared link between the Commonwealth Realms, and the Crown in right of their nation as having specific domestic characteristics.''
::As long as the Statute of Westminster is a part of Britain's constitution, Britain's constitutional arrangements do not allow it to unilaterally alter the line of succession. And even if it did alter the Statute, or breached the convention, whatever changes they made would have no effect in Canada, as I said above.
 
Reasons for and against using the term "British Crown" in place of "Crown":
::Canada could have convened the Privy Council to give or deny consent to the marriage of Prince Charles and Ms. Parker-Bowles, however, as the couple would produce no heirs to the throne, the Canadian government decided there was no need for debate or discussion, and so approval was automatic. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 20:00, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
'''Against''':
:::"Answer my question: If Britain is not bound to have the same line of succession as Canada then why did the UK have to wait for Canada to pass the Succession to the Throne Act, I Geo. IV, c.16, 1936, as Rouleau points out?" -
*[[User:Gbambino|Gbambino]]:
**"Crown" is the accurate term, being cited within law throughout the Commonwealth Realms, including the key piece of constitutional legislation regarding the relationship of the Commonwealth Realms under the Crown, the [[Statute of Westminster]] [http://www.solon.org/Constitutions/Canada/English/StatuteofWestminster.html 1]. "British Crown" is not a term of law, only sometimes being used in circumstances where the Crown as shared must be distinguished from the Crown within the jurisdiction of a certain Realm Parliament, or for historical reasons.
**Clarity is the utmost goal here and using the term "British Crown" in this instance will muddy the differentiation between the shared Crown and the Crown in Right of the United Kingdom, thereby causing unnecessary confusion for readers. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 18:37, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
**I will accept Peter's proposal, noted below. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 18:51, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
*[[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]]
**I noted under "disputed NPOV claim" how the NPOV concern can be addressed with a minor rewording without introducing "British Crown" in the section in question. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 18:44, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
*I've just come across this discussion, and can perhaps offer an independent view. I've read through the article as it currently stands, and it seems to me that, by the time one comes across the term "Crown", which crown is being referred to should be abundantly clear. A change to "British Crown" would, in the context of this article, indeed be less NPOV than "Crown." [[User:Sonitus|Sonitus]] 15:25, 3 August 2005 (UTC)
 
'''For''':
::::The short answer is it didn't and here's the proof: the UK did *not* wait for Ireland to pass legislation allowing the abdication. The abdication occured and the [[Duke of York]] was proclaimed King one day before Ireland passed its "[[External Relations Act]]" recognizing the abdication.[[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 19:58, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
*I have another compromise suggestion. [[User:CJCurrie|CJCurrie]] 22:30, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
**I would support the aforementioned shift in wording (ie. "Crown" to "British Crown"), but with a caveat. I now believe that "The Crown, historically British" would be a more appropriate introduction to the first paragraph than "The British Crown". Although the Crown is no longer exclusively British, its "legacy" is clearly of the British line. Adding the phrase "historically British" would highlight this legacy, while bypassing the disputed point entirely (which will be dealt with in the next paragraph anyway, pending clarification of the wording). [[User:CJCurrie|CJCurrie]] 22:30, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
:::I don't think this deals with the NPOV problem.[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 10:09, 3 August 2005 (UTC)
 
===Different kinds of Britishness===
Then why does Rouleau state: "The operation of this commitment to symmetry and union of Canada under the British Crown was demonstrated by the adoption in 1937 of the Succession to the Throne Act, I Geo. IV, c.16...Absent this Canadian statute, the statutory change in Great Britain to account for Edward VIII's abdication would have been contrary to Great Britain's commitment in the Statute of Westminster"?
 
Having resolved the outstanding issues with respect to constitutional law, I would suggest that there are more points of view that can be addressed in terms of historical and cultural perspectives. For example, the statement "the Crown is the symbol of the free association of the British Commonwealth of Nations" (Statute of Westminster) was an important political and sentimental statement, which has not completely lost all its meaning. While it is true that monarchy support today tends to focus on the Crown as a domestic institution, the sentimental ties, and the ties to a common history and common traditions, do still play some role for some people. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 16:59, 3 August 2005 (UTC)
And my second question from earlier: If Canada is subsurvient to British constitutional law, then why does the Balfour Report and the Statute of Westminster specifically state that the Realms are "equal in status, in no way subordinate one to another", as Rouleau points out? --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 20:05, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:Im glad to hear things are narrowing down. I think I understand the arguments a bit better. On the one hand there is the familiar approach, which says in "x context, x convention is used" - while a more general ("neutral") approach would be to be explanatory. In the context of all Commonwealth articles, this would mean stating exactly how "British" these are. I personally find it confusing to use Commonwealth terms to describe "the [[Queen of Canada]]" instead of "[[British Queen]]" [[Elizabeth II]]. "[[British Monarch]]" seems to be general ("neutral") enough, and not as confusing as "[[the Crown]]" or the [[Canadian Monarch]]. In other words, if the commonwealth monarchs are all (for the forseeable past and future) equivalent to the British Monarch, policy points toward simple mechanical redirection as the dominant policy. Likewise, the definition "The [[British monarch]] or Sovereign is the head of state of the United Kingdom," will need to be changed to say head of the British Commonwealth, including the UK, Canada," etc. -[[User:Stevertigo|St]]|[[User_talk:Stevertigo|eve]] 18:51, 3 August 2005 (UTC)
BTW- as tedious as this discussion is, we can now remove the "one crown or several?" secion as you've conceded that there exist numerous crowns within one. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 20:08, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
This is why distinguishing legal issues from other issues is so important. Legal distinctions matter, and history and perceptions should not be used to defeat facts of law. Of course the reverse is also true: historical and informal ties should not be ignored or downplayed either. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 23:29, 3 August 2005 (UTC)
:No, we can't because its contents are factual and relevent and because as Peter Grey says it is not the "legally correct" term to use in Canada and because the theory of mulitple crowns hold that they are equal when there is ample evidence that this is not the case and this is clear in Rouleau's wording.
 
:Right. It goes both ways -- local convention, or universal explanation. In this context (open world encyclopedia), the universal needs to supercede the local, as our interest is in conveying information to those unfamiliar, rather than convey 'reinforcing fact' to those already somewhat indoctrinated. Sinreg, [[User:Stevertigo|St]]|[[User_talk:Stevertigo|eve]] 23:55, 3 August 2005 (UTC)
:Now answer the question. Is it a fact or isn't it that Edward VIII's abdication took effect in the UK without Ireland having passed legislation authorising a change in the succession? You hinged a lot on your Edward VIII abdication argument, the least you can do now is deal with the fact that you are wrong. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 20:13, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
I don't know which you're calling "universal" and which "local", but the point is that neither should supercede the other. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 00:26, 4 August 2005 (UTC)
::They may be factual, but they're no longer relevant if you admit that the standing situation of numerous crowns in one is true and real. With that admission the question disappears.
 
Actually, I think the opposite is true. The universal should generally supercede the "local" (or the particular) as we have a world-wide audience. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 00:32, 4 August 2005 (UTC)
::I don't yet know enough about what happened in Ireland at that time to state whether what you say is fact or not. I can only comment on what we have before us. And what I am asking you about pertains to those things: the Statute of Westminster, the Balfour Report, Rouleau's ruling, etc. This is the second time I've asked you to do so for one, and the fourth for the other. So, before you try and create distractions, answer the questions. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 20:22, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:"Local" means anything which is not universal. As large as the [[Commonwealth of Nations|British Commonwealth]] is &mdash;by some definitions it may even be called "global" &mdash;it is not "universal." Hence Commonwealth terms are "local," and universal terms are the most general. Is that clearer? -[[User:Stevertigo|St]]|[[User_talk:Stevertigo|eve]] 06:30, 5 August 2005 (UTC)
:::Well no because obviously the Irish example shows that, in practice, consulation with the dominions was a nicety rather than a constitutional necessity and that, in fact, the British Crown is superior to the others and not equal as the "multiple crowns" theory would have us believe. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 20:25, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:I know what 'universal' means, I'm referring to the use of terms which are accurate without reinforcing existing misconceptions, and in particular when is the right context to use 'British'. We seem to have a consensus that for "Constitutional implications" post 1931, 'British' is incorrect, and that for "Public perceptions", 'British' has some validity. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 17:13, 5 August 2005 (UTC)
::::''"I don't yet know enough about what happened in Ireland at that time to state whether what you say is fact or not."'' Then look it up. I can wait. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 20:26, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:The Commonwealth has not been the "British Commonwealth" since 1946. [[User:Hu|Hu]] 03:10, 20 February 2006 (UTC)
You've also failed to answer my question about Camilla which shows that the nicety of consulting other Prime Ministers in regards to the crown is no longer followed and the UK is quite happy to act unilatrally and expect the rest of the realms to lump it or leave it. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 20:29, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
==Another suggestion==
:I did answer your question. Read before attacking people. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 20:30, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
I think it might be possible to resolve this situation with some clarification of language.
::You haven't answered the question at all: "Canada could have convened the Privy Council to give or deny consent to the marriage of Prince Charles and Ms. Parker-Bowles, however, as the couple would produce no heirs to the throne, the Canadian government decided there was no need for debate or discussion, and so approval was automatic."
 
In recent days, the outstanding dispute on this page has been whether or not the term "Crown" should be replaced with "British Crown". Those who have followed my contributions to [[Talk:Monarchy in Canada]] will know that I regard Canada's monarchy as essentially British -- in terms of its history, and in terms of the existing right of succession. In spite of this, I've been more reluctant to promote the term "British Crown" on this page (as my unsuccessful attempt at a compromise proposal yesterday probably indicates).
::But why did the Queen consult [[Tony Blair]] but not [[Jean Chretien]]? That's my question and you haven't answered it. You only provided a remedy Canada could have followed but you are not explaining why the British government was consulted while Canada, Australia etc were not. The point is that the UK (and the Queen for that matter) do not feel the need to consult the other realms on monarchial matters. The point is about what Britain did or did not do, not Canada's possible response. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 20:40, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
These positions may seem paradoxical, but there's a reason for my ambivalence here: namely, that the "Crown" as a legal institution is not quite the same as the person of the monarch. Having done of a bit of additional research on this subject, I'm now convinced that there is an established (though not uncontested) view that the "Crown" in Canada and other Commonwealth Realm countries is no longer "British".
:::Canada's "possible response"? A "remedy" Canada "could have followed"? What are you talking about? If it's important to you, then ask Paul Martin, as he was the PM then, not Chretien. But it's irrelevant anyway, the marriage of Charles and Camilla means nothing to the constitutional status of Canada's monarchy, hence there was no meeting of the Privy Council, and no formal approval needed from the Canadian Parliament. Your claims that you somehow know what the UK and the Queen "feels" about the Realms is unfounded conjecture, and also means nothing in relation to constitutional reality. So, let's stop wasting each other's time, and get on with the facts.
 
Among those who hold this view is the Canadian constitutional historian David E. Smith, who writes in "The Invisible Crown: The First Principles of Canadian Government" (1995): "it is not possible to talk with any precision about the Crown in Canada without first acknowledging its imperial provenance, not because the Crown in Canada today is British - it is not - but because the patterns of meaning that underlie constitutional monarchy originated in Canada's British and colonial past" (p. 20). David Smith's words need not be taken as gospel truth on this subject, but they represent a body of opinion that cannot be entirely ignored. (Please note that this interpretation says nothing about the "equality" of crowns vis-a-vis Britain and Canada.)
:::I'll try to find out what happened Between Ireland and the UK at that time. However, in the meantime, can you explain how alterations to the line of succession in the UK would affect Canada if the Statute of Westminster states that "4. No Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom passed after the commencement of this Act shall extend or be deemed to extend, to a Dominion as part of the law of that Dominion"?
:And, can we now remove "one crown or several?" --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 20:53, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
There is, however, another side to the story. While the Crown in Right of Canada (to continue with this example) ''may'' be a domestic institution in the strictly legal sense, this does not make the actual monarch "Canadian" (or Jamaican, or Australian, or Tuvaluan, etc.). The royal line which holds the crown is British, and reigns over the Commonwealth Realms by virtue of occupying the British throne. Elizabeth II is, first and foremost, the monarch of Britain. No individual nation other than Britain may change the line of succession, whereas Britain exercised this very right only five years after the Statute of Westminster was passed. It is therefore legitimate to draw attention to the British nature of the monarchy, and to the fact that the monarch continues to reign over Commonwealth Realm nations by virtue of occupying the British throne.
::::No, as Peter points out elsewhere there is no such thing as the "Canadian Crown" at least not legally. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 21:00, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
It is correct, in turn, to describe Canada as being "under the British Crown" in the sense that the monarch of Britain is, ipso facto, also the monarch of Canada (Rouleau's ruling could perhaps be read in this light). The problem with this interpretation is that the Britishness of the "Crown" as a legal institution is far less clear. Rather than clarifying the situation, the phrase "British Crown" could ultimately lead to more confusion on this point.
Oh? Where did Peter point that out? And what of Rouleau's speaking of the Crown of Canada? And, what happened to your acknowledgement of the Australian Crown, and then your admitting to the existence of the Canadian Crown? As you said: "Because he feels '''the Crown of Canada''' is under the British Crown rather than there being a multiplicity of equal crowns ie '''the Canadian Crown''' is part of the British Crown and must, therefore, remain in symmetry." Seems to me that's an admittance of the existence of the Canadian Crown, as well as it being united with others under the larger body of the "British Crown". --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 21:06, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
For this reason, I must conclude (somewhat contrary to my personal inclinations) that "Crown" should not be replaced by "British Crown" in the passage in question. However, a reference to the Britishness of the monarchy would be entirely appropriate (both to resolve NPOV concerns, and for general historical accuracy).
=== If Canada abolished <strike><i>the Crown</i></strike> <strike><i>its Crown</i></strike> its "crown" ===
:[[If Canada abolished the monarchy]] or changed the succession rules it would have no impact on the UK. Conversely, if the UK were to change its succession rules and Canada maintained the status quo, we would be faced with the possibility of having to completely change our system to accomodate a resident monarchy - when our political system and constitution are not designed for an absentee monarch (hence the position of governor general which does not exist in the UK).
 
I would not object to Peter Grey's suggestion, of inserting the phrase, "British Crown", with reference to the 1926 Balfour declaration. I would also recommend that the first sentence of the disputed paragraph be amended to read, "The British monarch continues to reign in all Commonwealth Realm nations, but the Crown as an institution operates separately in each realm, with the Queen in right of each realm being a distinct legal person".
:The "British monarchy" is "first among equals" in political terms as the abolition of the monarchy in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, etc would have no impact on the monarchy in Britain whereas the abolition of the monarchy in the UK would almost certainly lead to its extinction in the rest of the Commonwealth Realms.
 
Thoughts? [[User:CJCurrie|CJCurrie]] 20:48, 3 August 2005 (UTC)
:The fact is that the system in the "Commonwealth Realms" (outside of the UK) was designed with the assumption that the monarch would be resident in London. Do you deny that? The fact is that the monarch is present most of the time in Britain. She has spent 2% of her reign in Canada and, I suspect, around that percentage or less in the other Commonwealth Realms. The fact is that this means there is quite a different relationship between the monarch and a) her British subjects and the British political system and b) her subjects and the political systems in the other Commonwealth realms.
 
I agree with most of what you say, except for the following:
:The most obvious constitutional difference is that the duties and constitutional role played by the Governor General in the Commonwealth Realms is played by the Queen herself in Britain. i.e. The Queen, with increasingly rare exceptions, does not give royal assent to bills passed in Commonwealth legislatures or even give the Throne Speech (what in Britain is called the Queen's Speech because the Queen herself gives it). She does not name the Prime Ministers in Commonwealth Realms, does not resolve constitutional or parliamentary crises that may result in Commonwealth Realms and does not have weekly meetings with her Commonwealth PMs.
*"''While the Crown in Right of Canada... ''may'' be a domestic institution in the strictly legal sense, this does not make the actual monarch "Canadian" (or Jamaican, or Australian, or Tuvaluan, etc.).''"
:The Monarch is Canadian, Jamaican, Australian, etc., in the same legal sense as the Crown; hence the term "Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada," or "Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Australia." However, again, this is the legal reality, not the cultural perception, which is, obviously, more open to interpretation.
*"''The royal line which holds the crown is British, and reigns over the Commonwealth Realms by virtue of occupying the British throne. Elizabeth II is, first and foremost, the monarch of Britain.''"
:This is no longer true. As the Crown is equally shared, so too is the line of succession and the Monarch. So, by the domestic constitutional laws of each Realm the Royal line is also the Canadian line, the Australian line, the Tuvaluian line, and so on. As well, by law the Queen is not first and foremost the Monarch of Britain, but Monarch of Britain as equally as Monarch of Canada.
*"''No individual nation other than Britain may change the line of succession, whereas Britain exercised this very right only five years after the Statute of Westminster was passed."''
:Again, no longer true. As I mentioned above, the laws governing the line of succession to the Crown in Right of Canada are a part of Canadian constitutional law, and thus can only be altered by the Canadian parliaments, ''not'' the UK parliament. This is why, 5 years after the passing of the Statute of Westminster, Canada and all the other Realms had to agree to the abdication of Edward VIII in favour of George VI, and pass ''their own'' legislation recognising this change to the line of succession. Britain did not act unilaterally in that example any more than Canada did, and, as has been discussed earlier, Ireland had given their consent to the changes, but irresponsibly did not get their legislation passed in time; it was done the next day.
:I continue to agree with Peter's proposal, but feel my proposed first paragraph of the section in question remains adequate. Stating "British Monarch" is confusing for the same reasons as stating "British Crown." --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 15:28, 11 August 2005 (UTC)
 
==The term Realm and Dominion mean the same thing==
:Now monarchists like to believe that the Queen is fully informed and intimately involved in, let's say, Canadian affairs. The reality is that in the Commonwealth Realms the role of the monarchy has developed so that it is really more of an abstract and theoretical entity, much more so than in Britain. Let me give you a hard example. We now know that the Queen was not at all consulted on the dismissal of Gough Whitlam in Australia in 1975. This was done by Governor General Kerr in her name but she was not consulted or even informed until after it had happened.
 
The term Realm and Dominion constitutionally mean the same thing. In a nut shell, the independent country choses to use the British Parliamentary System as it form of government. In this form of government, known as '''Constitutional-Monarchy''' the Figure-Head of State is the British Monarch. The British Monarch has almost no political power, and the Elected Parliament, lead by the Prime Minister rules the country.
:Let me give you another example. We now know thanks to the [[30 year disclosure rule]] that the Prince Philip and the Prince of Wales quite regularly write letters and make phone calls to Cabinet ministers and senior bureaucrats in Britain complaining of this or that government policy (this is actually quite shocking considering all the propaganda we are fed about the monarchy being "above politics"). We also know from biographies and autobiographies that UK Prime Ministers do give some consideration to what the Queen thinks about this or that thing or even this or that minister. It may not be a decisive consideration but its in the picture. That is simply not the case for Commonwealth Realm PMs. There is no evidence of royals writing Canadian or Austrlain ministers complaining about this or that policy or of Canadian or Australian PMs being particularly concerned about what the Queen might think, at least not to the extent as is the case in the UK.
 
The use of the term ''Realm''' is in effect a "red-hairing". It still means '''Dominion,''' which donates an independent country within the British Commonwealth, that has the British Monarch as their Figure-Head of State.
:Now you might say but the Governor General acts on HMs behalf so there's really no difference. But there is, the Queen's role in the UK is unmediated, in the realms it is mediated by a GG and she is almost a complete absentee from the process. Therefore, it's quite clear that her role is much more important in the UK than elsewhere. Also, the fact that the systems in the Commonwealth Realms are designed with an absentee monarch in mind and have a GG in place Britain becoming a republic would have an impact on the realms where Commonwealth realms becoming republics has had no impact on the Queen's role in the UK.
 
[[User:ArmchairVexillologistDon|ArmchairVexillologistDon]] 05:57, 8 August 2005 (UTC)
:The fact is if Britain became a republic the Commonwealth Realms would have to figure out which one of them would become the new home for the Windsors, or if some sort of shared custody arrangement should be worked out where, say, she spends one month in each realm. The fact is they would also have to deal with the royal family's wishes, including the possibility that they would not want to move to Canada or Australia but would prefer to either remain in a British republic as ordinary citizens or live in exile in Europe (or even the US). That would raise the possibility of abdication and having to find a new monarch or even of splitting the monarchy into pieces. Then there's the question of what happens to the GG and the other political and constitutional impacts of one of the realms suddenly having a resident monarch.
 
*The United Kingdom typically is not called a dominion; otherwise the words are synonymous. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 20:53, 8 August 2005 (UTC)
:Bosh! you might say. Original research (actually no, because the differences between her role in the UK and elsewhere are well known and the realities of say, her not being consulted about the Australian constitutional crisis are well documented) Speculation! Well the possibility that the UK may become a republic is speculation, but the implications of that on the realms is based on the facts that her constitutional, political and social role in the realms is much more remote than in the UK and, in any case, quite a lot of constitutional theory has to deal with speculation (what happens if this happens in parliament, or if this happens in an election, or if a PM does this or refuses to do that). And the fact is that all these questions arise out of the fact that the Queen is resident in the UK and not resident anywhere else despite the [[legal fiction]] that she is as much a Canadian or Jamaican as she is a Briton.
 
The term Dominion was very carefully defined in the Balfour Declaration as 'AUTONOMOUS (ie not sovereign ) COMMUNITIES ( ie not nations )WITHIN THE BRITISH EMPIRE ( as the empire was considered to be a single national unit the Dominions were still considered to be a part of the British Nation and despite the huge degree of autonomy granted in 1931 remained ultimately subject to the jurisdiction of the British government - at the very least via the British Privy Council ).
:It's more than sentimental. Even putting aside the hypothetical situation of the UK becoming a republic the difference between her constitutional role in the UK and in the other realms is quite clear to anyone with eyes to see and lacking the tunnel vision caused by wishful thinking and sophistry.[[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 21:18, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
The term Dominion is a description of political 'status' ie not a colony and not a Sovereign Nation . It defines the degree of sovereignty .
::Oh? Where did Peter point that out?
Southern Comfort mentioned it in the [[British monarchy]] article. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 21:18, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
To be one of the Queens Realms does not indicate political status - for instance Australia is referred to as one of the Queens Realms but it is not is not within the jurisdiction of the British Nation .Since 1986 Australia has had the Constitutional status of a Sovereign , Independant and Federal Nation . Australia operates as a constitutional monarchy but the Queen represents the Australian 'Crown' or independant political unit with the assent ( or permission ) of the Australian parliament - see Royal Styles and Titles Act 1973 [ Jon Lee 27 Aug 2005 ]
:::Thanks for the diatribe, but what does it have to do with your admission that there are numerous crowns within the "British Crown"? And, I don't actually see your 'example' of Peter pointing out that there is no such thing as the "Canadian Crown." --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 21:22, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:No you are incorrect. The ''Dominion of Canada'' was peacefully granted independence from the UK, on July 1, 1867. It was an ''independent country that choose to stay a member of the British Commonwealth.'' The term Dominion means an independent country, voluntarily apart of the British Commonwealth, that chooses to have the Monarch of the UK as it Figure-Head of State. ''' ''Please leave the Political-Science psycho-babble out of this.'' '''
::::So can I take it from that that you agree with me on the different relationship between the Crown and the UK and the Crown of Canada and the impact a change in the UK succession would have in Canada? As for Peter, ask SouthernComfort where he saw the comment.[[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 21:24, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Other ''Dominions'' for the record,
::::In any case, reading Rouleau, I don't see his argument as acknowledging "multiple crowns", quite the opposite. He talks repeatedly of a single crown, of Canada being united "under the British Crown", "sharing the British monarch" etc. He never refers to the Canadian Crown (though he talks of the British Crown) but, once, to the Crown of Canada in reference to the hypothetical situation of Canada changing the rules of succession. That doesn't strike me as an admission of "multiple crowns" but more of a short form for "Crown in right in Canada". the talk of a "British crown" is inconsistent with the MLC's claim of a "Maple Crown". [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 21:30, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
:The Dominion of Canada (independent July 1, 1867),
:The Commonwealth of Australia (independent 1901),
:The Dominion of New Zealand (independent 1907),
:The Union of South Africa (independent 1910).
:[[User:ArmchairVexillologistDon|ArmchairVexillologistDon]] 05:14, 28 August 2005 (UTC)
 
::I'm sorry, but to say Canada was a fully independent nation in 1867 is an extreme oversimplification. There are a number of features of the Dominions before the Statue of Westminster in 1931 that we would not see as features of an independent state. For instance, the Dominions' Governors-General acted simultaneously as the representative of the British government and as the ''de facto'' exercizer of the King or Queen's reserve powers in the Dominion (summoning and dissolving Parliament, giving assent to laws); indeed, the G-G's actions as de facto head of state in the Dominions were sometimes determined by instructions from the ''British'' government, not the Dominion government. And, in a more concrete example, Britain's various declarations of war at the beginning of World War I were held to speak for the Dominions as well as for Britain proper, without any need for the Dominion parliaments to declare war on their own; and from a large-scale strategic perspective, the Dominion military forces were treated as part of a single Empire-wide force.
Of course there's a different relationship between the Crown in Canada and the Crown in the UK -- I pointed that out ages ago when I said the Canadian Crown has distinct Canadian aspects. But it doesn't answer the question of what '''legal''' effect any alteration to the line of succession in Britain would actually have on the line of succession in Canada. And it '''still''' remains unclear as to what it has to do with your admission that there are numerous crowns within the "British Crown". --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 21:33, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
::From much of the discussion on this page, it seems that people want to either insist that Dominion status immediately made a country independent, or that a Dominion/Commonwealth Realm wasn't independent until ''all'' constitutional links to Britain were severed (which for Canada and Australia wasn't until the '80s). Both of these views seem to me to be overly simplistic. Even after the concept of "Dominion" was come up with, the British Empire was seen as being a single unit in many ways, especially when it came to relations to other states and empires. (Note that Dominions did not send or receive ambassadors to other countries.) The Statute of Westminster established the ''legal'' framework to make the Dominions really sovereign in their own right, but not all of the Dominions exercized all of their new sovereign perogatives right away. Still, it seems silly to me to say that, for instance, Canada in the 1970s was still a British colony: it was inconceivable that Britain would have actually exercized its legal rights to veto changes to the Canadian constitution at that time, and if they had surely Canada would have just issued some sort of UDI that the world would have respected. Anyway, that's my rambling two cents. --[[User:Jfruh|Jfruh]] 16:01, 28 August 2005 (UTC)
"[Crown of Canada as] more of a short form for 'Crown in right in Canada'"-- ''that's exactly it!'' The Crown of Canada, the Canadian Crown, the "Maple Crown" (not a technical term), ''is'' the Crown in Right of Canada, distinct and different from the Crown in Right of Australia, or the Crown in Right of the UK! You've again admitted there are numerous crowns within the one.
Rouleau refers to the Crown of Canada in regards to the real situation of the UK altering the line of succession. He also speaks of the two distinct crowns twice. He also states: "the same rules of succession must apply for the selection of the King or Queen of Canada and the King or Queen of Great Britain." --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 21:40, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Howdy Jfurh,
But it's the same crown, that's the point, one crown, not several, not multiple crowns, one . See [[the Crown]]. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 01:41, 19 July 2005 (UTC)
 
First of all, three reference books that you should read on this issue, I shall list below,
=== Fawltiness ===
*'''(1).''' R.G. Trotter, ''The British Empire-Commonwealth A Study in Political Evolution,'' MacMillan Co., Ltd., Toronto, Canada, pp.131 , (1932).
:Re: the abdication - yes the Irish had not yet passed the abdication into law, but that was 100% the fault of [[Eamon de Valera]], not Britain. A date had been agreed to recognise the abdication by. States made their own legislative plans (some asked the UK to include them in the UK legislation, as they could request under the Statutes of Westminster). De Valera thought that he could do nothing and that it would all fall into place naturally. Then his new Attorney-General, [[James Geoghegan]], pointed out that if he didn't do something, deV would be left with King Edward as King of Ireland, and worse than that the twice-divorced [[Mrs Simpon]] as [[Queen Wallis]]. That freaked him out.
*'''(2).''' M. Ollivier, ''Problems of Canadian Sovereignty,'' Canada Law Book Co., Ltd., Toronto, Canada, pp. 491, (1945).
*'''(3).''' H. Lamont, ''Burkes Speech on Reconcilation with America,'' Ginn and Company, New York, pp. 152, (1897).
 
The UK founded the Colonies that would become the
:He (de Valera) didn't want to tag [[the Free State]] along with the UK legislation, but he hadn't left himself enough time to draft and pass an Irish law, especially as he had made things needlessly complicated by deciding to amend the Irish constitution to abolish the crown and governor-generalship, something that went pearshaped when his Attorney-General, James Geoghegan, his chief civil servant, [[Maurice Moynihan]], Mr Matheson in the Parliamentary Draftsman's Office and others all told him he had made a balls of the abolition; sure he had removed the crown in constitutional law but stupidly forgot that both the crown and the representative of the crown continued to exist in statute law, letters patent, orders-in-council, etc and all of them had to be repealed too. (He re-abolished everything in the ''[[Executive Powers (Consequential Provisions) Act]], 1937'' and dated it retrospectively back to 1936.)
*'''United States of America (July 4, 1776),'''
*'''Dominion of Canada (July 1, 1867),'''
*'''Commonwealth of Australia (Jan. 1, 1901),'''
*'''Dominion of New Zealand (Sept. 26, 1907).'''
 
Each of these four independent countries celebrate their '''dates of Independence from the UK,''' on the dates cited above. The first independent country obtained its independence ''via victory on the battlefield,'' whilst the latter three independent countries ''were peacefully granted independence,'' and choose to stay apart of the British Commonwealth. [[User:ArmchairVexillologistDon|ArmchairVexillologistDon]] 18:11, 28 August 2005 (UTC)
:Faced with a crisis over having Edward and Wallis as King and Queen, he tagged on a recognition of the abdication and the accession of George VI to the ''[[External Relations Act|Executive Authority (External Relations) Act]], 1936''. But because he had screwed up his timetable by having the Dáil pass the ''[[Constitution (Amendment No. 27) Act]]'' purportingly abolishing the crown and governor-general, there physically was no time to pass the External Relations Act with its recognition of the abdication on the same day as everyone else. So it went through a day late, meaning that for one day, Britain and Ireland had a separate king; the UK had George VI, Ireland had Edward VIII.
 
:AVD, I am well awre of the dates you cited, but I don't really see how they relate to my point. Do you consider a country to be independent if it another country's parliament can declare war on that country's behalf? If that country's de facto head of state receives binding advice from another country's government? If its laws can be overruled by the legislature of another country?
:It was ''entirely'' de Valera's screw-up. Britain at that late stage could not reschedule ''[[His Majesty's Instrument of Abdication Act]]'' as the King had already signed the abdication and dated it. The rest of the Commonwealth subscribed to the attitude of "de Valera screwed up. It is his problem. We are not delaying to let him clean up his mess" and went ahead. Ironically, just how bad a mess de Valera had made of things was never made known at the time and the neither the opposition nor [[the media]] copped on. (There is a lot more to it. De Valera ended up with an abolished governor-general who hadn't technically been abolished - he ended up asking him to ''pretend'' that he had been abolished and play along with the scam while de Valera drew up a new law - and invalidly installed a Chief Justice and half the Supreme Court - the governor-general was central to installing judges. De Valera forgot to change the procedure only to have the Chief Justice drop dead at the worst possible timing. The new guy played along with a sham ceremony which de Valera had insisted he had created in a law some months earlier (he hadn't).
:::(ROFL! - Mediator SV.)
:And he even had an invalidly installed Attorney-General when he overlooked the fact that he couldn't appoint the AG: the governor-general (the supposedly abolished office that wasn't ''really'' abolished) alone could. (Oh and his ex-pal, Governor-General Ua Buachalla was suing him for damages over it all - as well as for damage to curtains, a table and a dog kennel ''no. I'm not making it up. It is one of the funniest stories in the Irish National Archives. I couldn't stop laughing while reading the files on the farce!''.)
 
:I'm interested in reading the books you cite. The key term in the title of the first is ''evolution''. Canada was definitely more in charge of its own affairs after July 1, 1867, but it did not instantly become a fully sovereign state. That status was acheived by a process of evolution. --[[User:Jfruh|Jfruh]] 19:06, 28 August 2005 (UTC)
:The whole thing was like an episode of [[Fawlty Towers]]. But de Valera covered it all up and got away with it. The only thing he couldn't hide was that he had left the Free State with King Edward VIII for a day longer than everyone else.
[[User:Jtdirl|<font color="#006666">'''Fear'''<font color="#FF6600">'''''ÉIREANN''''']][[Image:Tricolour.gif|40px]]\<sup><font color=blue>[[user_talk:Jtdirl|(caint)</sup><font color=black>]] 21:38, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Howdy Jfuh,
::Regardless of whose fault it was, the fact remains that Edward VIII's abdication was legal without Ireland's consent. Had the preamble of the Statute of Westminster been binding on British legislation then that wouldn't have been possible, Britain's abdication act would have been invalid until Ireland's external relations act was passed.
 
To help frame this discussion between you and I, I must use a few terms. The Dominion of Canada has two major Linguistic Groups. The people who are of the English-Speaking group are known as ''English-Canadians'', and those of the French-Speaking group are known as ''French-Canadians.'' It simply is a socialogical fact that these two groups look upon the development of Canada ''very differently.''
::Back to [[Rouleau]], with a closer reading of what he said he only refers to the "Crown of Canada" once and that's in discussion of the hypothetical sitution of Canada having not recognized Edward's abdication (in which case there would have been a Candian Crown). I didn't "admit" anything, gbambino, I simply answered your question about what Rouleau might have meant and in rereading the entire judgement I think I was wrong and that he was not implying there are "numerous crowns within the 'British Crown'" as you put it. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]]
 
May I ask, ''Jfuh, are you an English-Canadian, or a French-Canadian?''
:::Of course it was all legal-- it was technically a breach of convention on the part of ''every'' Realm, including the UK and Canada, as they ''all'' agreed to proceed with their legislations despite the lagging of Ireland, and they thus broke no actual laws.
:::What this also points out is how independent the crowns in right of each realm are -- Ireland, due to its domestic machinations, ended up with a seperate king from the other realms for one day. That's precisely what Rouleau was refering to when he speaks of the Crown of Canada and the concequences of Canada not passing the Succession to the Throne Act.
:::Sorry, Andy, but you can't go back and change your answer when you've realised you've just contradicted yourself. You acknowledged the existence of multiple crowns within the one, and that's all there is to that particular matter. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 22:02, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Respectfully,
A few things to point out:
*''The concept of multiple Crowns is a useful metaphor for describing the shared vs. separate character of the monarchy. It is apparently not, in Canadian law at least, the correct usage of 'Crown' as a legal term.'' Rouleau clearly discussed '''one''' shared Crown - "Canadian Crown" was only used in a counterfactual, so clearly there are not two Crowns to be compared. Of course, Crown, as an ''informal'' word, may mean the Crown as shared (physical person) or separate (legal person) depending on the context.
*The Irish Free State '''deliberately''' "opted out" of the shared succession, so it's not a precedent.
*Royal marriages do not require changes in legislation.
*In Canada, Australia, New Zealand and, I would guess, everywhere else, all of these obscure legal technicalities have been superceded by more recent legislation.
*Various French, English, and British laws have applied in Canada, and in some cases continue in force to some degree. '''New''' legislation in the UK '''including''' amendments do not apply in Canada. If the UK changed the succession and Canada wanted to follow suit, it would still need a s.41 amendment in order to be recognized by Canadian courts of law. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 21:50, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
[[User:ArmchairVexillologistDon|ArmchairVexillologistDon]] 19:18, 28 August 2005 (UTC)
Gbambino, I see that Peter has kindly reaffirmed his point that there is legally no "Canadian Crown" and that his reading of Rouleau's use of the term concurs with mine. So, the multiple crown theory has no standing in Canadian constitutional law. So, no, there's no reason to remove the "One Crown or several" section.[[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 21:55, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
::Actually, neither :). I am an English-speaking citizen of the USA. I don't see how that makes the facts I cited any more or less true. If you feel I've misinterpreted them, please explain how. --[[User:Jfruh|Jfruh]] 19:50, 28 August 2005 (UTC)
:No, he's affirmed what I've been saying all along -- one Crown shared, one Crown operating distinctly within each legal jurisdiction. You've acknowledged this situation as well, and so the section goes. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 22:02, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
So a single crown and not a multiple crown, in contradistinction to the MLC's argument that there is a "maple crown" and various refernces to "multiple crown" theory which, as Peter says, "is apparently not, in Canadian law at least, the correct usage of 'Crown' as a legal term".
 
On July 4, 1976 did the United States of America celebrate its bi-centenial (i.e., 200 years)? Yes, or No?
Please, try to read for comprehension in future. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 22:13, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
[[User:ArmchairVexillologistDon|ArmchairVexillologistDon]] 23:56, 28 August 2005 (UTC)
:"Of course, Crown, as an informal word, may mean the Crown as shared (physical person) or separate (legal person) depending on the context." One Crown acts seperately in each legal jurisdiction -- sound familiar?
:How about you give reading for comprehension a try. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 22:20, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:Yes, it celebrated 200 years since the declaration of independence. I don't see the relevance to the issue under discussion. The D of I is a convenient historical signpoist -- the moment at which a group of elected American officials ''declared'' their independence. The US did not ''de facto'' exercize sovreignty over all of the territory it claimed until the last of the British evacuated in 1783. And under the agreement by which the British left, the British government renounced any degree of control in American affairs. This was ''not'' the case in Canada in 1867. --[[User:Jfruh|Jfruh]] 00:08, 29 August 2005 (UTC)
"The Irish Free State deliberately "opted out" of the shared succession, so it's not a precedent."
 
Would that have been possible had the preamble of the Statute of Westminster been binding? One can't say something's not a precedent just because one of the parties was being difficult since it means there's nothing barring Britain, for instance, from opting out of the shared succession as long as they did it deliberately.[[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 22:00, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
::Jfruh,
"Royal marriages do not require changes in legislation."
Unless they violate the Royal Marriages Act. But anyway, the marriage of Edward VIII and Mrs. Simpson would not have required any change in legislation yet the dominions were consulted and asked their opinion, whether they agreed with allowing the marriage, wanted a morgantic marriage, or wanted abdication if the marriage went ahead. The Commonwealth Realm PMs (with the exception of Tony Blair) were not consulted this time even though it's quite possible one or more of them could have opposed the marriage and insisted that Charles give up his claim to the throne. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 22:04, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
::Ah-ha! Yes, the date of July 4, 1776 is a convenient sign post that the USA Government chose after winning its independence from the UK. ''They choose July 4, 1776, as their Independence Day, becuase they had won the right to do so by winning the War Independence (1775-1783).
*"Multiple Crowns" is a metaphor that the Monarchist League of Canada uses, so I would suggest that ''for that article only'' it should be mentioned with notice taken that it's not technically true in the legal sense. In other contexts the shared vs. separate natures may have to be spelled out with more general language. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 22:24, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
*In legal terms, 'Crown' ''in context'' may mean the Crown specifically of Canada or of a province. A provincial Crown Corporation is obviously not shared across the Commonwealth. The point is that it's not the term used when the distinction is explicit. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 22:41, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
::The bicentennial ''of American Independence was celebrated in 1976,'' not in 1981,1983, or 1989 (which represent the 200 year anniversary of the the Battle of Yorktown (i.e., the British Capitualtion), the signing of the Paris Peace treaty (aka, the Treaty of Separation), the Ratification of the USA Constitution, respectively.
The MLC's multiple crown theory is propaganda meant to make the Crown acceptable to Canadian nationalists in a post-imperial age. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 22:38, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:Please refer again to the numerous non-MLC sources given above which confirm that one Crown operates seperately in each realm. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 23:02, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
::The USA Government ''CHOSE its Independence Date'' (via victory on the battlefield).
So the Crown in Canada is British then? [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 23:15, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
:British in historical terms, yes. British as in under the jurisdiction of the UK Parliament, no. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 23:36, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
''Multiple crowns'' is not an MLC theory. That's a bit like saying wearing white was a decision of Pope Benedict. Academics the world over talk of multiple crowns, and that included academics who have never heard of the MLC. [[User:Jtdirl|<font color="#006666">'''Fear'''<font color="#FF6600">'''''ÉIREANN''''']][[Image:Tricolour.gif|40px]]\<sup><font color=blue>[[user_talk:Jtdirl|(caint)</sup><font color=black>]] 23:33, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
 
::Similarly, the Canadian Government ''CHOSE its Independence Date'' (via the UK peacefully granting its independence).
::Couple points - Prof. James, thanks for the input, (and the ROFL). Andy/Homeontherange (?) theres no point whatsoever in seeking concession or approval from Gbamgino, though it seems that youve made your point regarding a bias. That bias, is best emphasised by Gbambino himself, who claims that (prphrsng) 'the thing is thus, and therefore it is not debated.' Thats all for now. Very good stuff guys. Now how best to redirect the energy from the talks toward particular articles. I need to make a list, dont I? Let me make a link: [[Template:Commonwealth]]. ''[[The Terminator|Ill be back]].'' ROFL. -[[User:Stevertigo|SV]]|[[User_talk:Stevertigo|t]] 01:01, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
::[[User:ArmchairVexillologistDon|ArmchairVexillologistDon]] 00:43, 29 August 2005 (UTC)
"Britain cannot simply alter the Statute of Westminster at its whim"
 
Britain can alter the Statute of Westminster the same way it can alter any ordinary piece of statute of law. By introducing a bill, having it go through three readings in the Commons and three readings in the House of Lords and then give it royal assent. Britain cannot mandate that any such change have any jurisdiction outside of the UK but it can amend or repeal the Statute of Westminister as far as British statute books are concerned. There's certainly no legal mechanism to stop the UK from doing this if a British government was, for whatever reason, committed to doing it. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 05:58, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
==Dominion of Canada Sovereignity versus United States Of America Sovereignity==
=== Andy strikes back ===
Yes, I suppose the mulitple crowns theory is not the MLC's invention, they've just latched on to it like white on rice. Gbambino, you asked earlier what would happen if the UK changed the succession rules and Canada did not. I gave you one answer. Now, upon further reflection, he's another possibility.
Canada's succession rules would change automatically once Britain changed its rules. Why is this?
 
:::AVD, will you please stop just asserting things and answer the points I made?
The courts may read the preamble of the Constitution Act 1867, which reads ''"Whereas the Provinces of Canada, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick have expressed their Desire to be federally united into One Dominion under the Crown of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland"'' ...and they may rule that what this means is that whoever is monarch of the UK is automatically monarch of Canada. Of course, that's not absolutely clear as a) it's in the preamble and may or may not be binding (then again, if the preamble of the Statute of Westminster is binding on Canada wouldn't the preamble of the Constitution Act 1867 be as well?).
 
:::Before 1931, laws passed by Dominion parliamentss could be overruled by the British Parliament. The Governor-Generals conflated the position of representative of Britain and de facto head of state. The British Parliament could declare war on behalf of the Dominions without consulting their parliaments. ''These are facts that indicate that Domions were not fully independent states before 1931.''
Second, the courts could well rule that this whereas clause simply explains how the act came to being and is not intended to be interpretive. But Rouleau reads the whereas clause above and interprets it in the following manner: ''"[21] This portion of the preamble confirms not only that Canada is a constitutional monarchy, but also that Canada is united under the Crown of the United Kingdom of Great Britain. A constitutional monarchy, where the monarch is shared with the United Kingdom and other Commonwealth countries, is, in my view, at the root of our constitutional structure."''
 
:::Do you think I am wrong in these facts, or their interpretation? Please answer that question if you want to continue this discussion. --[[User:Jfruh|Jfruh]] 03:05, 29 August 2005 (UTC)
Further Rouleau also says ''"The same rules of succession must apply for the selection of the King or Queen of Canada and the King or Queen of Great Britain."'' Well, if that's the case then Canada is bound to Britain's rules of succession regardless of what the Canadian parliament says.
 
Now, Peter has interpreted part of Rouleau's ruling... ''"Such changes would, for all intents and purposes, bring about a fundamental change in the office of the Queen without securing the authorizations required pursuant to s. 41 of the Constitution Act, 1982."'' ...as meaning that the rules of succession in Canada can only be changed through a constitutional amendment ''even if'' the other realms change theres.
 
Ok Jfruh,
Well, hold on a second, let's look at the whole paragraph " '' '''Unilateral changes by Canada to the rules of succession,''' whether imposed by the court or otherwise, would be contrary to the commitment given in the Statute of Westminster, would break symmetry and breach the principle of union under the British Crown set out in the preamble to the Constitution Act, 1867. Such changes '''would, for all intents and purposes, bring about a fundamental change in the office of the Queen without securing the authorizations required pursuant to s. 41 of the Constitution Act, 1982.''' ''
 
The ''British North America Act 1867'' established the Dominion of Canada as an independent Nation-State. Its independence was peacefully granted by the UK, in stark contrast to the United States of America that won its independence from the UK via victory on the battlefield by winning the War of Independence (1775-1783).
Well, I see that as meaning that a constitutional amendment is needed for ''unilateral changes'' to the rules of succession, not that one is needed for a non-unilateral change. I think a very strong argument can be made that any change by Britain in the rules of succession would automatically apply to Canada by virtue of what the current constitution of Canada says. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 01:47, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
The Dominion of Canada chose to have the British Constitutional-Monarch as its Figure-Head of State, and to remain a member of the British Empire (not yet the British Commonwealth). this process of ''peacefully granting independence to mature British Colonies'' came about after learning from the mistakes the British Government made in handling the grievances of the 13 Colonies (of the 19 Colonies) that rebelled and broke away.
;'''New''' legislation in the UK '''including''' amendments do not apply in Canada
Prior to the Statute of Westminster, the British parliament could pass a law which carried within it a declaration that it would apply in this or that dominion. Britain cannot pass a law and declare that it is binding in Canada or Australia etc. However, that does not stop a Commonwelath realm from voluntarily adhering to British jurisdiction in a certain area. Arguably, the Canadian constitution does this in the case of British laws pertaining to the succession.
 
New Zealand's constitution does this explicitly in a related area: (Section 4 Regency) "(1) Where, under the law of the United Kingdom, the royal functions are being performed in the same and on behalf of the Sovereign by a Regent, the royal functions of the Sovereign in right of New Zealand shall be performed in the name and on behalf of the Sovereign by that Regent. [http://www.oefre.unibe.ch/law/icl/nz00000_.html]
Hence, notwithstanding the Statute of Westminster, New Zealand's constitution declares that the country is bound by "the law of the United Kingdom" as it pertains to a regency. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 02:32, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
In 1867, the Dominion of Canada could pass its own laws, and send them to the Governor-General who would grant them Royal Ascent ''subject to being sent to the '''British Parliament for (i) review, and (ii) final approval.''' ''
:''And my second question from earlier:'' If Canada is subsurvient to British constitutional law, then why does the Balfour Report and the Statute of Westminster specifically state that the Realms are "equal in status, in no way subordinate one to another", as Rouleau points out?
 
Because neither the Balfour Declaration nor the Statute of Westminster amended what was then called the [[British North America Act, 1867]] in order to remove the preamble committing Canada to having the same monarch as the United Kingdom. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 02:58, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
You with me so far Jfruh?
:This is trying to confuse an involuntary or "accidental" change in law with a voluntary one. Canada is not keeping the monarchy against its will. A sovereign nation can make any law it wishes, including choosing to have another country's law have effect. Income tax law is full of examples of this. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 03:57, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
::This is also a very creative 'interpretation' which still remains AndyL's, and AndyL's alone. He still hasn't provided any examples of constitutional scholars, lawyers, judges, etc., who agree with or support this interpretation. Unless AndyL himself is one such person, I can't see how this interpretation can be taken as encyclopaedic. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 23:17, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Now, the British Parliament ''could review (and alter)'' Legislation passed by the Canadian Parliament, and then finally approve it. '''The operative word it ''could''. They actually did not do this very often (if you actually check).'''
Hm, it seems that in your own rather grudging way you are conceding that my points about the constitution are correct and that your previous assertion is incorrect.
 
In the Statute of Westminister 1931, the British Parliament ''could no longer review (and alter) any Legislation pass by the local Parliaments of the Dominions.'' In other words, function (i) the reviewing and changing of local laws was revoked from British Parliament.
The fact remains that, at least according to Rouleau's reading of the 1867 preamble, Canada is bound by whatever Britain decides to do with the succession. The opposite is not true making Canada a subordinate partner whether by design or by "accident".
 
As for Canada being able to get rid of the monarchy whenever it chooses, only if you accept the McWhinney formula. Otherwise, unanimous consent is required among the federal government and all the provinces which is not an easy chore as monarchists eagerly point out at every opportunity and has never actually been accomplished, even in the case of the 1982 Constitution Act.
 
However, function (ii), the final passing of Legislation was retained by British Parliament. With regards to the Dominion of Canada, this finally approval by British Parliament remained on the books until 1982. In 1982, the ''Canada Act (1982)'' finally removed the neccessity of the sending and rubber stamping of Canadian Legislation to the British Parliament.
Certainly, Peter, you meant something when you argued that if Britain changed the succession unilaterally, it would have no legal impact on Canada? Now, that at least according to Rouleau, that seems not to be the case, certainly that has a detrimental effect on our argument? You cannot assert that the former would be a significant proof and then say the latter is insignficant and of no importance. And if you don't think a situation where a foreign country can unilateraly determine who another country's head of state with impacts on the latter country's sovereignty then you must have a unique definition of sovereignty. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 05:27, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
* The point was with respect to the Constitution of New Zealand. Plus a regent is not a head of state.
* ''at least according to Rouleau'' Incorrect. (Again.) [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 10:20, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
So there you are Jfruh, the Dominion of Canada (founded July 1, 1867) and its evolution of Sovereignty. ''Sovereignty is different than independence (and I suspect by your POV you would say that Canada is only 23 years old!'').
What a stunning rebuttal!
On your first "point" I didn't say a regent was a head of state. I said that passage of NZ's constitution was an example of a Commonwealth Realm deferring to current British law.
On your second point, assertion is not fact (or even an argument in this case).
 
Do you actually have a counterargument? [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 14:12, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
[[User:ArmchairVexillologistDon|ArmchairVexillologistDon]] 06:00, 29 August 2005 (UTC)
::"As for Canada being able to get rid of the monarchy whenever it chooses, only if you accept the McWhinney formula." Another of Andy's creative interpretations. I wonder if he is aware of the ammending formula in the Constitution Act 1982. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 23:17, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:::You really should try to read the entire paragraph when you cite a quotation. The sentence immediately after the one you quote is: "Otherwise, unanimous consent is required among the federal government and all the provinces which is not an easy chore as monarchists eagerly point out at every opportunity and has never actually been accomplished, even in the case of the 1982 Constitution Act." So yes, I am aware of the "ammending" (sic) formula in the Constitution Act 1982.[[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 23:40, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
==Compare Autonomy, Sovereignty, and Independence==
:(1) Then we agree that ''deferring to current British law'' is not in any way a compromise of sovereignty. (2) Is there an argument to counter? It's a misrepresentation of Rouleau's judgement, plain and simple. This seems to be your earlier tactic of taking a comment on the 1867 act out of context by ignoring '''all''' the legislation in the nearly 140 years since then. Rouleau in 2003: ''alterations in the rules of succession would no longer be imposed by Great Britain''. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 14:48, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Howdy Jfruh,
: Rouleau in 2003: alterations in the rules of succession would no longer be imposed by Great Britain.
 
Please compare the definitions of ''Autonomy, Sovereignty, and Independence.'' After doing that, please consult their French Language definitions, and their connotations.
There Rouleau is relaying the intent of the Statute of Westminster, to commit the UK to not unilaterally changing its rules of succession. He does not comment on what would happen if the UK were to disregard this commitment. As we know, under parliamentary supremacy, there is nothing stopping the UK from altering the rules if it so wishes and there is no mechanism to prevent the UK from doing so and we have seen in the example of Edward VIII"s abdication the requirement for unanimous action by the realms is not necessary in practice. If the UK were to break its commitment to not change rules unilaterally what would happen? Would Canada be forced to follow the UK's new succession law because of the preamble of the 1867 Constitution (as other parts of Rouleau's ruling suggest). Could a court rule that since the UK broke its commitment in the Statute of Westminster, Canada is not bound by the preamble of the Constitution Act, 1867. We don't know and you don't know. However, the preamble of the Constitution Act 1867 suggests that as with New Zealand's constitution, Canada has wedded itself to whatever law exists in Britain in a particular matter notwithstanding the Statute of Westminster's provision that Britain can no longer legislate for the dominions. Again, as you concede in the case of the NZ constitution, Canada has voluntarily committed itself to harmonization with British law and to accepting British jurisdiction in a particular area, in Canada's case in the matter of succession, in NZ's case in the question of regency. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 15:49, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Then consider the constant battle between English-Canada and French-Canada over controlling ''domestic affairs'', as opposed to international affairs.
Of course deferring to a foreign law in the determination of one's head of state certainly does compromise sovereignty. How could it not? In any case I think you misread Rouleau in regards to the need for a constitutional amendment for a non-unilateral change in the succession. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 15:32, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Then factor in that Canada's Loyality to the UK was assumed, whereas the USA's was rejected. Now, you are starting the get the picture of '''"Canadian Independence from 1867 to 2005".'''
::"If the UK were to break its commitment to not change rules unilaterally what would happen?" More conjecture and hypothesis. Whatever the future holds, it does not change current, existant, accepted realities. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 23:17, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:::Things are as they are and always thus they will be. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 23:40, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
The Canadian Republic does not yet exist, so please do not constrain you POV to ''the narrow USA notion of "Republic equals Independence".''
:The New Zealand Constitution doesn't commit Canada to anything. However: Constitution Act 1982 52. (3) Amendments to the Constitution of Canada shall be made only in accordance with the authority contained in the Constitution of Canada. Unless they made us a colony too - I hope Australia and New Zealand don't go to war over Canada. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 16:16, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:The New Zealand Constitution doesn't commit Canada to anything.
Of course not but, as in Canada's case, the NZ constitution commits it to accepting British jurisdiction in a particular area.[[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 16:18, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
:''as in Canada's case'' Still wrong - this was explained earlier. Also see (4) in [[Talk:Monarchist_League_of_Canada#Monarchy_and_the_Constitution_-_A_Summary|the summary]] [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 16:41, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
[[User:ArmchairVexillologistDon|ArmchairVexillologistDon]] 06:41, 29 August 2005 (UTC)
:Amendments to the Constitution of Canada shall be made only in accordance with the authority contained in the Constitution of Canada.
a) The Act of Settlement isn't actually listed in the schedule of the Constitution Act, 1982
b) amendments to it would not require a constitutional amendment unless they put Canada out of synchronicity with the UK (thus requiring an amendment altering the preamble to the Constitution Act, 1867).
[[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 16:22, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
:Succession is part of the Constitution, notwithstanding omission from the Schedule, that was the whole point of Rouleau's finding. You're taking a quote out of context to try to defeat the very purpose the decision. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 16:52, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
==Dominion of Canada debate (Continued)==
From [[Succession to the British Throne]]: "This provision, however, is a part of the Preamble of the Act. Since it does not follow an enacting clause, it has no legal force. It only applies as a guideline"[[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 16:31, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
The meaning of 'Dominion' changed over time, most notably with the Statute of Westminster in 1931. 1 July 1867 was the '''creation''' of the Dominion of Canada (and abolition of the Province of Canada). It established a new degree of autonomy, but had no bearing on independence. It's particularly significant for English Canadians because English Canada, as a community, didn't really exist until the railways joining the Atlantic, Laurentian and Western anglophone communities were built. (French Canada, of course, had already been there for 250 years.) [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 23:07, 28 August 2005 (UTC)
:First you argue Rouleau's ruling calls the preamble "legally binding", and now you're saying he argues it's not? Rouleau clearly states that it is the ''principal of the agreement between the Realms'' which is most important. In future circumstances that agreement ''could'' be adhered to, or it ''could'' be broken, but we can't sit here and hypothesise about future possibilities. Rouleau made his ruling based on the relationship of Canada to the Crown over the Realms, as well as the Crown in Right of Canada ''as it stands now''-- acknowledging that there is a Crown of Canada which is part of a larger "British Crown" but seperate from the Crown in Right of the UK (the British Crown attached to the British parliament). You've acknowledged this above, and acknowledged the existence of the Australian Crown as well. With your admission that there is a Crown in Right of Canada, and a Crown in Right of Australia, you're therefore admitting there are two seperate legal entities (crown) within the larger "British Crown". "Multiple Crowns" is an analogy -- not a legal term -- but the MLC's description of the situation doesn't change the fact that the larger "British Crown" is indeed 'divided' in its operation throughout the Realms. I've provided numerous non-MLC sources which support this.
:Possible future actions of Britain or Canada is all just a distraction from the real issue -- the needless question of: "one crown or many?" If rouleau points out there is a Crown of Canada which is a part of the larger "British Crown"; if you acknowledge that Rouleau states this, and acknowledge there is a Crown in Right of Canada; if you acknowledge there is also an Australian Crown; then how can you continue to ask "one crown or several"? The question's been answered. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 23:17, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:That is not the case. In 1625, King James I granted a Royal Charter to the British Colony of Nova Scotia (i.e., New Scotland). Additionally, the British Colony of Newfoundland (i.e., Terra Nova) was established in 1497. The Spanish Settlement of St. Augustine Florida was established in 1565,the French Settlement in the Gaspe Penisula in 1604, Quebec City in 1608, and the British of Jamestown Virginia in 1607.
"First you argue Rouleau's ruling calls the preamble "legally binding", and now you're saying he argues it's not?"
 
:In 1763, the Treaty of Paris ceeded all the French Colonies in North America to the UK. From 1763-1775, there were 19 British American Colonies (18 English-Speaking, and 1 French-Speaking). From 1775-1783, 13 Colonies of the 19 Colonies seceeded and won their independence from the UK by winning the War of Independence (1775-1783). ''' ''The 4 Northern Loyalist Colonies'' of Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, and Quebec remained in British hands. ''The 2 Southern Loyalist Colonies'' of British East Florida, and British West Florida fell back into Spanish hands (after 20 years of English-Speaking Settlement).'''
No. The quotation I posted a) refers to the preamble to the Statute of Westminster, not to the preamble of the Constitution Act 1867 b) is not from the Rouleau ruling but from the Wikipeida article on the Statute of Westminster (hence, the link prior to the quotation). The quotation supports my argument that Britain is not bound by the Statute of Westminster, particularly not on the question ofthe succession. Gbambino, this is the second example of inferior reading comprehension you've demonstrated today. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 23:23, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:In 1783, the United Empire Loyalists (known as the "Tories" in the USA), left the USA and settled in British North America (i.e., the 4 Northern Loyalist Colonies). Many settled in Nova Scotia, but the Lion's share settled in the ''Western Half of the Colony of Quebec (today known as Ontario).'' This region was never settled by the previous French Colonists of New France, and was basically empty of European Settlement.
gbambino, in his rush to deny there's any actual debate, neglects the fact that FearÉIREANN has pointed out that there are theorists who advocate the multiple crown theory while Peter Grey points out that the multiple crown theory is factually wrong.
 
:By 1791, the numbers of English-Speaking settlers were so great that this area was broken off into the English-Speaking British Colony of Upper Canada.
Incidentally Gavin, you made much of your argument that Britain waited for Canada before passing the bill recognizing Edward VIII's abdication. Given that it's been confirmed that Britain *did not* wait for Ireland I'm surprised you've failed to concede that this has any implications for your argument. It's almost as if you're engaging in tunnel vision and ignoring facts that contradict your theory, even when the facts came up in response to your own question. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 03:24, 18 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:Therefore, '''English-Speaking British Colonies of Nova Scotia (dominant by 1756), and Upper Canada (dominant by 1791)''' were pre-existing for about 100 years before Confederation in 1867. ''' ''The sole use of the word Canada by French-Canadians is a myth,'' English-Speaking Colonists had their own pre-existing Colonies in "Canada" as well.
:Gbambino is also oversimplifying things to a ridiculous degree. The argument has never been about whether or not there's a unitary crown, it's been whether or not there is true equality between the British Crown and the "Crowns" in other countries; whether there is really an overarching British Crown which is the Queen's principle role, one that is superior to her role in the Commonwealth realms. Clearly, despite claims of equality, the British crown is superior, the Queen's role in the UK takes precedence over her role elsewhere, paritcularly, in constittutional terms, in Canada. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 03:54, 18 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:Lastly, the term ''Dominion means and independent country, that choose to remain in the British Commonwealth and have the British Monarch as their Figure-Head of State.''
*There has '''not''' been an argument as to "whether or not there is true equality". The equality principle is the easiest part of all this. What little ambiguous and indirect support there might be for that particular bit of original research has been based on quotations out of context and obsolete legislation. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 08:27, 18 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:This "self-governing Colony" status is a ''bunch of bunk,'' taken out of context, by people that read the historical texts ''too literally.''
:''the multiple crown theory is factually wrong'' "Crown" is simply, in terms of legal vocabulary, a less specific term. ''Crown'' has been a metaphor for the state for as long as people have been wearing crowns, and there is no question the Commonwealth realms are sovereign states. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 08:27, 18 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:[[User:ArmchairVexillologistDon|ArmchairVexillologistDon]] 00:26, 29 August 2005 (UTC)
::Thank you, Peter, you're quite right. I often suspect the vocabulary I am using is not sufficient to explain the 'many-crowns-in-one' situation with ample clarity. But your point about the word 'crown' being synonymous with 'the state' helps to clarify things immensely. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 14:59, 18 July 2005 (UTC)
 
::Which part is supposed to be "not the case"? [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 01:58, 29 August 2005 (UTC)
Rouleau, in any case, refers to the British crown throughout his ruling. His only use of the term "Crown of Canada", as Peter points out, is as a a [[counterfactual]], so gbambino's claims that Rouleau has been misread or taken out of context is erroneous. The passage "One Crown or Several?" is correct. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 18:32, 18 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:::Peter Grey wrote,
:Using your theory to back up your theory again. So, "One Crown or Several?" is not correct for an encyclopeadia. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 18:49, 18 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:::The meaning of 'Dominion' changed over time, most notably with the Statute of Westminster in 1931. 1 July 1867 was the '''creation''' of the Dominion of Canada (and abolition of the Province of Canada). It established a new degree of autonomy, but had no bearing on independence. It's particularly significant for English Canadians because English Canada, as a community, didn't really exist until the railways joining the Atlantic, Laurentian and Western anglophone communities were built. (French Canada, of course, had already been there for 250 years.) [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 23:07, 28 August 2005 (UTC)
It's not a matter of what my theory is or is not, it's a question about whether or not there are different views in the literature and Rouleau's view differs from the "multiple crown" theory. As Peter pointed out earlier, in Rouleau's ruling ""Canadian Crown" was only used in a counterfactual, so clearly there are not two Crowns to be compared." [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 19:05, 18 July 2005 (UTC)
 
::The part(s) that are "not the case" are,
:No, ''your'' (mis)interpretation of Rouleau's ruling differs from the "multiple crown" theory. You're also misinterpreting what Peter is saying. And lastly, you're attempting to needlessly complicate things to distract from the real issue here -- using Wikipedia as your personal soapbox. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 19:17, 18 July 2005 (UTC)
 
::(i). English-Canada existed, along with French-Canada before Confederation into the Dominion of Canada in 1867.
Actually, gbambino, if you read the article titled [[the Crown]] the section on "The Crown in right of" makes it clear that what we are dealing with are a single crown and the Crown in right of only refers to that single crown's authority in a particular jurisdiction. The Crown in Right of Canada and the Crown in Right of the United Kingdom are not ''different'' or seperate crowns but the same Crown in the same way that if gbambino owned properties in Bermuda, Jamaica and Canada, gbambino's interests in Bermuda and gbambino's interests in Jamaica would not refer to different bambinos but simply to the singular bambino's interests in different areas. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 22:04, 18 July 2005 (UTC)
 
::(ii). the term "Canada" refers to the land mass known as(until 1867) ''' ''British North America.'' '''
:You're very, very close. The only thing to add is that there would be no overlap between my interests in Bermuda, my interests in Jamaica, or my interests in Canada save for how I am voluntarily and equally shared as their head through an agreement between them -- they would be separate and independent from each other even though they are both my interests, and my acting on behalf of the one would not coincide or interfere with my acting on behalf of the other. I'm glad you're finally beginning to understand. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 23:57, 18 July 2005 (UTC)
 
::(iii). the term "Dominion" meant independence from the UK, with membership in the British Empire-Commonwealth, and the Figure-Head of State was the British Constitutional Monarch.
The point is it's a single crown, a British crown, not several baby crowns, so the multiple crown theory is contestable. Glad you agree. The section stays as a result. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 01:44, 19 July 2005 (UTC)
 
::(iv) the construction of a Railroad connecting the four Canadian Provinces (1867) of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec, and Ontario ''had nothing to with English-Canada coming into existance.'' '''English-Canada (i.e., Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Ontario) already existed prior to 1867, as did French-Canada (i.e., Quebec).'''
:Andy, you've gone round and round in circles, contradicting yourself, drifting into corners and then back-peddling to get yourself out again, launching into pathetic attacks as distraction from your convoluted arguments, because, as our mediator has stated, you're only here to argue your idealistic (and I'd like to add: at times ridiculous), republican viewpoint. Well, you may be argumentative, but you are hardly convincing. After all, who would you really have believe that this country is subsurvient to Britain!? As well, and perhaps this is your greatest drawback, you are ''alone'' in this. Perhaps you should be given one more chance: ''provide some credible secondary sources from experts in this matter who support your claim that there is actually an existing debate on the matter of the Crown over and in the realms.'' Don't give us Rouleau again, as it has already been clearly pointed out that it is only ''your interpretation'' of Rouleau which supports you -- a misguided theory to support a misguided theory. Rouleau's ruling supports Peter and myself, and in addition, you've been provided with other court rulings, essays by constitutional theorists, legal documents, reports from constitutional committees, and more, as support for what Peter and I are saying. Let's actually see something from you. I think it's more than fair to say that if you can't do that, your argument is a personal one, and thus has no place in an encyclopaedia. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 03:45, 19 July 2005 (UTC)
 
::[[User:ArmchairVexillologistDon|ArmchairVexillologistDon]] 02:45, 29 August 2005 (UTC)
===gbambino's Irish problem===
BTW gbambino, I'm still waiting for you to comment on the signficance of the abdication of Edward VIII proceeding despite the fact that Ireland had not yet consented. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 22:08, 18 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:Canada (province), New Brunswick and Nova Scotia existed '''separately''' before 1867. Anglophones in Canada (province) had no particular relationship with anglophones in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia before then. (Confederation, starting 1870, ''should'' have also united the francophones in Quebec with francophones in Manitoba, but that didn't quite work out.) 'Canada' didn't mean the same as British North America until 1871. 'Dominion' meant something different in 1867 from what it meant in 1931. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 03:48, 29 August 2005 (UTC)
::I already did earlier. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 23:58, 18 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Peter Grey,
You didn't explain how you reconcile the Irish reality with your theory that the abdication could not have occured without the consent of every dominion parliament. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 01:36, 19 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Where did you learn your Canadian History? You have many things wrong here. The British Colony of Nova Scotia was created by King James I of England (formlerly King James VI of Scotland) in 1625. The territory it sat on was disputed by the Kingdom of France. From 1625-1756 the territory of Nova Scotia was fought over many times (the French called it ''l'Acadie'' ).
:Do we really know for sure Ireland had not consented in ''some'' form or another? Possible, but hard to believe. At any rate, the worst that it could imply would be a consitutional crisis '''lasting only one day'''. It's not exactly an issue now. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 23:06, 18 July 2005 (UTC)
 
The Seven Years War (aka the French and Indian War) which lasted from 1756-1763 changed everything. The Kingdom of France was defeated and ''all of its mainland North American lands became British.'' The British Colony of Nova Scotia was awarded the boundaries that encompass the present day territories of the Provinces of Nova Scotia, Prince Edawrd Island, and New Brunswick.
:::Do we really know for sure Ireland had not consented in ''some'' form or another?
We know that the requirements outlined in the Statute of Westminster were not fulfilled.
 
After the USA was formed and formally recognised by the Paris Peace Treaty of 1783 (the Treaty of Separation), ''British North America (1783-1867)'' consisted of the British Colonies of Newfoundland (1497), Quebec (1763), Nova Scotia (1625), New Brunswick (1784), Prince Edward Island (1770).
" the worst that it could imply would be a consitutional crisis '''lasting only one day'''."
 
''The United Empire Loyalists (aka the Tories)'' left the USA and settled mainly in Nova Scotia, and Quebec. '''So many English-Speaking United Empire Loyalists came and settled, that Nova Scotia was split up into Nova Scotia and New Brunswick in 1784.''' In fact, St. John New Brunswick was settled entirely by Loyalists in 1784.
No, the worst that it could imply is that the preamble of the Statute of Westminster is '''not binding''' and that the claim that the UK cannot unilaterally change the succession is fallacious. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 01:36, 19 July 2005 (UTC)
 
With regard to Quebec (1763), the United Empire Loyalists also settled in the Western part (unihabited) region, known as ''the United Counties of Ontario''. (After Lake Ontario). In fact 80% of the original settlers of ''what is present day Ontario,'' were United Empire Loyalists from ''New York State.'' '''Again, so many English-Speaking United Empire Loyalists came and settled, that Quebec was split up into ''French-Speaking Lower Canada (1791), and English-Speaking Upper Canada (1791),'' from 1791-1840.'''
:But you argued before that Rouleau said the preamble was binding. Do you now disagree with Rouleau? These are your circles I spoke about earlier. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 04:02, 19 July 2005 (UTC)
 
The link between the "English-Canadians" was in the influx of the United Empire Loyalists from the USA, after 1783. '''Where did you learn your history Peter Grey?'''
(sigh) I can't believe I'm correcting you for the *same* mistake a second time. I was aruging that Rouleau said the preamble to the [[Constitution Act, 1867]] was binding. What I am referring to in the post directly above yours is the preamble to the [[Statute of Westminster]]. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 13:37, 19 July 2005 (UTC)
 
[[User:ArmchairVexillologistDon|ArmchairVexillologistDon]] 05:22, 29 August 2005 (UTC)
:Oh, Andy. Allow me to remind you. From [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Gbambino#Statute_of_Westminster User talk:Gbambino/12 Statute of Westminster]:
::gbambino: "Parliamentary supremacy is still irrelevant to the altering of a Realm's line of succession as the preamble to the Statute is ''not'' leaglly binding, it is a convention only. Though Canada does face more challenges than New Zealand when it comes to constitutional ammendments, the Canadian governments could still alter the line of succession to the Canadian Throne without the consent of the other Realms anyway! Whether or not the words in the preamble to the Statute are there or not, each Realm can alter its line of succession if it so chooses. The words merely verbalise the importance of the maintenance of the amicable and agreed upon relationship between the Commonwealth Realms as central to the unity of the Crown. --gbambino 8 July 2005 17:12 (UTC)"
::AndyL: "'''Rouleau ruled that the preamble was legally binding''' (in Canada anyway), otherwise he couldn't have dismissed O'Donohue's challenge."
::AndyL: "But the only part of the Statute of Westminster that deals with the monarchy and the succession is the preamble and it is the wording of the preamble that Rouleau based his ruling upon. '''Therefore the preamble is legally binding''', at least in Canada."
::AndyL: "But in any case, in clause 31 of his ruling, Rouleau specifically invokes the preamble to the Statute of Westminster without any qualification whatsoever and treats it as the equal of ever other part of the codified constitution, ie that part of the constitution that is supreme law (there are other parts of the Canadian Constitution that are simple statute law and thus are not supreme, I suspect the Act of Settlement would be an example of this '''were it not for the preamble to the Statute of Westminster which Rouleau cites as legally binding'''.)"
:So, as you were saying? --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 14:26, 19 July 2005 (UTC)
 
No:Until 1867, itbut justno-one meansoutside theCanada abdication(province) wouldn'tcalled havethemselves beenCanadian effective- untilthey thewere followingseparately dayBritish. Canada isThe independentFrench -Canadian whypopulation dooutside youManitoba findwas thatgeographically socontiguous. hardAnd toBritish accept?Columbia is Whyin do you hate Canada so much?North America. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 0214:1646, 1929 JulyAugust 2005 (UTC)
 
:''"...the term Dominion means and independent country, that choose to remain in the British Commonwealth and have the British Monarch as their Figure-Head of State."''
You're smarter than to demean yourself with a question like that. It's as unfair as asking a monarchist why he or she hates democracy so much? Anyway, the poitn, as you well know, is that the failure to meet the requirements of the Statute of Westminster was insufficient to delay the abdication by even one day. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 03:24, 19 July 2005 (UTC)
:If this is the case then the United Kingdom, an independent country that has chosen to remain in the "British Commonwealth" (I believe you mean [[Commonwealth of Nations]]) and have the "British Monarch" as "Figure-Head of State", is a dominion as much as Canada, Jamaica, Belize, New Zealand, et al., are.
:Whether or not dominion and realm mean the same thing, the term "dominion" has fallen out of use. Today it is accepted that those countries that have Elizabeth II as head of state are termed "realms" -- Her Majesty's Realms, Realms of the Commonwealth, whatever have you.
:The Monarchy's website itself states that those countries who have the Queen as Sovereign are termed Commonwealth Realms: "A Commonwealth realm is a country where The Queen is the Sovereign. The Queen is Queen not only of the United Kingdom and its overseas territories, but also of the following realms: Antigua and Barbuda, Australia, Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Canada, Grenada, Jamaica, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, St Christopher and Nevis, St Lucia, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Solomon Islands and Tuvalu." [http://www.royal.gov.uk/output/Page345.asp 1]
 
:It also seems, from that same website, that the word "realm" replaced "dominion" around the time of Elizabeth II's coronation, when she, unlike her father, was proclaimed with different titles in the "independent realms of the Commonwealth." In each Realm her titile included the phrase "...Queen of Her Other Realms and Territories and Head of the Commonwealth." Prior to that date, the Imperial Conference of 1926 and the Statute of Westminster, 1931, still refer to "dominions." --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 01:07, 29 August 2005 (UTC)
:This is irrelevent to Canada's sovereignty, and the Crown of Canada, aside from the fact that it demonstrates that each realm does indeed have its own crown within its government's control. Had this ''not'' been the case, Ireland would have had George VI forced on it (which is what you claim would happen to Canada if the UK unilaterally altered its line of succession). However, instead of having a new king forced upon them, Ireland had ''a seperate king'' for one day until ''the Irish Parliament'' passed ''it's own Act'' recognising the abdication and assention of the new king. The Irish Parliament was in ''no'' way forced by the UK, or any other Realm for that matter, to do anything! Sounds like sovereignty and independence to me. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 03:52, 19 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Hello gbambino,
:"This is irrelevent to Canada's sovereignty, and the Crown of Canada, aside from the fact that it demonstrates that each realm does indeed have its own crown within its government's control."
 
Yes the term "Dominion" (at least in Canada) has fallen into disuse by the Elected Governments since 1963. Nevertheless, the full length formal names of Canada, Australia, and New Zealand are,
No, it's not irrelevent. It means that under the current constitution Canada is not free to alter the rules governing who is our head of state while a reciprocal arrangement does not exist for the UK. It also means that, due to the preamble to the ''Constitution Act 1867'' we are obligated to follow the UK's succession rules ie a foreign country determines who our head of state is. (And in case gbambino is still getting his preambles confused I am referring to the premable to the 1867 constitution, '''not''' the preamble to the Statute of Westminster.)[[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 13:37, 19 July 2005 (UTC)
 
''The Dominion of Canada,''
=== Legalese does not equate to encyclopedic language ===
Then at issue, it would seem that, if Britain theoretically changed "the" Statute of Westminster, that the Realms would be left with original copies, not the UK version. But alteration of that document would, theoretically breach the overall contract agreement, and therefore null and void the wider aggreement entirely. Naturally the loyalist argument would be "thats never going to happen" simply because the UK has no interest in doing that: "Her Majesty" is everyone's "Her Majesty," and no else's "her majesty" is theirs, so the UK doesnt seem likely to do such.
 
''The Commonwealth of Australia,''
So, in the end, the "law" as instituted by The Statute, by Balfour, etc., etc., by various other agencies, were simply the visible formalities for a disorganized, improper, and a sometimes unethical executive process, by a ruling monarch (and its prime ministers) to establish revised concepts of [[Reserve powers]] and of the Commonwealth itself, whilst making the necessary and impending transition from a classical monarchy to a "modern" and "ceremonial" one, due to the humanist changes brought by WW I, the "loss" of India, WW II, etc. Thats perhaps the encyclopedic way of summarizing the actual nature of the transition, and hence give a general, very honest sense of the history of the creation of the Commonwealth itself.
 
''The Dominion of New Zealand.''
Naturally, its not clear that a non-democratic process would be sufficient to appease more developed (or current) concepts of democracy and republic. Hence, the loyalist argument (as always) is one based in stability and continuity of the general society. (Though a strictine "deference" to such established law, as it simply echoes thier values, is simply a game for loyalists to play.) The reasonably mild and benevolent temperment of the current UK monarch has served to strenghten popular support for this view, wheras some future monarch might by their actions severely test that support, forcing people in Commonwealth entities to rethink the status of their relationship to the UK monarch. At such a time, the concept of loyalism would naturally change from a popular sense of continuity, to a narrow and "legalistic" claim to "[[originalism]]" in interpretation. Thats the basics, as I see it, from an objective view. -[[User:Stevertigo|SV]]|[[User_talk:Stevertigo|t]] 16:43, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
respectively. The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is just that, ''i.e., a Kingdom.'' Whereas Canada, Australia, and New Zealand are ''Dominions.''
Initially, the Statute of Westminster only applied to the UK, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Canada and the Irish Free State. Even then, it was difficult getting all the realms on the same page when a crisis came up as we see with the Irish situation. Now there are 16 realms with much more disparate interests than the "original six". Say Charles comes to the throne and some of the realms are less than thrilled and wish to skip to William. Could consensus be achieved among the 16? Frankly, it's more likely that some realms will withdraw from the monarchy entirely... but what if Britain wishes to change the succession rules for some reason, whether for reasons of principle in order to remove the bar on Catholics and the practice of male primogeniture or because a sitting or prospective King (say, [[Prince Harry of Wales|Harry]]) is considered "unreliable" or a "loose cannon" as far as being a constitutional monarch is concerned. The system really does depend on a monarch who is willing to abide by the constitution, if a monarch is a short fused, intellectually limited hothead who feels he knows better than the PM and wishes to exercise actual power parliament would have little choice but to remove him. But if Britain faced this sort of crisis would it really wait for the 15 other realms to agree, particularly if some of them are holding out for their own reason (say a poorer country wanting something in exchange for their consent, or a country with an ideosyncratic PM who happens to like having a right wing fanatic for a king)? Would Westminster really defer or would it go ahead and (regrettably, they would no doubt say) act uniltaerally? Of course, Britain could just declare itself a republic at that point (which would create a new set of headaches for the "realms" stuck with a homeless monarchy) but if Britain wanted to retain a monarchy but just have a different monarch I find it hard to believe that Westminster would allow, say, Grenada to exercise a veto. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 17:06, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
Take care,
:[[Sovereignty]] at work. Maybe this should go under [[Politics of the United Kingdom]]. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 17:42, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
[[User:ArmchairVexillologistDon|ArmchairVexillologistDon]] 01:45, 29 August 2005 (UTC)
::''Peter: "Sovereignty at work. Maybe this should go under [[Politics of the United Kingdom]]."'' Well, Andy's right in the sense that the concept of Monarchy is removed from politics, and therefore to claim that such debates are all political without accounting for the ultimate Royal trump cards is a bit constrained. In my country, for example, our "politics" is largely money-driven, which means its corporate and "elite"-driven. (You could say its also consumer-driven, greed-driven and fear-driven.)
But there are two separate entities, considering the political individual and the political corporation, but both still debate on the field of "politics." The UK monarch does not debate, because to do so would symbolize thier need to ask permission, which she doesnt need. Conversely the monarch doesnt directly excercise her supreme powers much, because that would open the door to the fact that such are not democratic.
 
==South Africa==
::I think the interesting thing, because this diverges from both Andy and Gbambinos general points, is the fact that the monarchy has been maintained only by its relative silence. It was not in fact instituted by law, but rather the "laws" and "treaties" were simply the byproduct of a process by which it executively changed itself. It remains simply because it remains quiet, not because its bound to do so, but because its ''obliged'' (politically) to do so by the precariousness of its continuum, relative to the everpresent democratic potential for removing it. So, yes, at a certain level it would seem that the monarchy is a "political balance," though the term political seems to have different meaning when talking about "supreme" authorities. -[[User:Stevertigo|SV]]|[[User_talk:Stevertigo|t]] 06:07, 17 July 2005 (UTC)
Could a moderator please change the listing of [[South Africa]] in the list of former Commonwealth Realms to [[Union of South Africa]]? This article deals entirely with the former country. Thanks in advance.
[[User:Homagetocatalonia]] 08:53, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
 
Would anyone object if I implemented the above change? Are there any other "housekeeping" changes that should be carried out?[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 12:43, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
You've never given the monarchy much actual thought, have you Peter? How is it justifiable in a democratic society supposedly based on principles of equality and merit to have its nominally highest office determined by heredity? How is it justifiable in Canada to have as part of our constitution the exclusion of Catholics from an office of state? Monarchist claims that monarchy is above politics or the embodiment of the nation do not withstand serious examination. Take Edward VIII's Nazi sympathies, his father's meddling in regards to Ramsay Macdonald's Labour government or George VI and his consort heartily endorsing the Munich Pact by greeting Chamberlain on the balcony before the deal had even been debated in parliament.
 
Sure, make snide remarks, use reductio ad absurdum arguments, gnash your teeth all you like but I think you know underneath that the romantic illusion of monarchy is incompatible with and ultimately untenable in a modern democratic society. You're smarter than Gbambino; hopefully you'll come around at some point. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 18:11, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:''You've never given the monarchy much actual thought''. Incorrect. Perhaps you should give some thought to what might be wrong with an extremely small minority trying to impose a narrow vision of democracy on others. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 21:38, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
==Commonwealth Realm Protected Status==
What on god's green earth are you talking about? Where are these republican minorities imposing their will on monarchist majorities? [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 23:11, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
 
I think we're close enough to consensus now to end this article's protection status. What do people think?[[User:HOTR|Homey]] 15:10, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
:"You're smarter than Gbambino"? What happened to no personal attacks, Andy? Your hypocracy shines through yet again. Your republican bias is also shining strong -- full of weak argument, manipulation, and sales-tactics as always. I was accused earlier of having bias by Stevertigo. I hope he can now see the motives behind your attempts to push your own misinterpretation of law, convention and rulings, and your hypotheticals, as fact, all still lacking any secondary sources from experts or scholars who agree with your theories. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 23:26, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
:: I agree that Andy is acting a bit out of line, and seeking [[m:more heat than light]]. I do understand that hes fishing for a more balanced view, which Im sure you can be of help with. -[[User:Stevertigo|SV]]|[[User_talk:Stevertigo|t]] 06:07, 17 July 2005 (UTC)
 
I see no consensus on the matter of either the proposed paragraphs or the use of the term "British Crown." The article should remain protected until at least those issues are sorted out. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 17:44, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
:I certainly agree that a balanced view should be maintained where opposing views actually exist. However, in this case the only opposing view is Andy's own personal one. His question "one crown or many?" implies a debate. Yet, though Andy has been asked to provide other respectible sources (constitutional scholars, judges, lawyers, parliamentarians, academics, even anything published in a journal somewhere) as example of others who question the accepted reality of the operation of the Crown over and in the Realms, he has not. He certainly attempted to say that the ruling of Ontario Justice Rouleau has put the situation into question, but Andy has only used ''his interpretation'' (influenced by heavy and convenient editing) of Rouleau's ruling to back up ''his own questioning'' of the Crown -- using a theory to back up a theory! To prove how weakly the ruling supports Andy's assertions, Peter Grey and myself have used the same ruling as verification of ''our'' points. Thus, without concrete evidence of any debate, I can't see what opposing view actually needs to be balanced with the accepted one. Also, it seems in some ways that Andy is coming round, against his own will mind you, to seeing things as they are. He's acknowledged the existance of the Australian Crown, he's acknowledged the existence of the Canadian Crown (Crown in Right of Canada, Crown of Canada), and by doing so has acknowledged that at least two seperate legal entities (crowns) exist within the larger "British Crown." He thus answers his own question "one crown or many?" -- it is one crown ''and'' many, many in one. That, of course, would end this debate on whether or not there is a debate about the Crown in and over the Realms. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 01:49, 18 July 2005 (UTC)
 
:Howdy gbambino,
::Let's see, you suggest I'm unaware of the amending formula to the constitution based on your partial reading of a paragraph when, had you read the entire thing, you would have known I'm quite aware of the formula and then you read a quote from an article on the Statute of Westminster and think it's a quote by Rouleau on the Constitution Act 1867. Two sloppy examples of failure to read comprehensively in a few minutes and you have the nerve to protest my claim that Peter Grey is smarter than you? I think you owe Peter an apology. I suggest in future you read everything twice in hopes that you might actually understand what is being said and be able to make a semi-intelligent contribution.[[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 23:40, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
:Just to let you know, I support your contributions, as being accurate, informative, and educational. I thank you for taking the time to type them. I have learned quite a bit from your writings, and I wish to congratulate you on work well done eh. [[User:ArmchairVexillologistDon|ArmchairVexillologistDon]] 18:16, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
 
So be it. Do you have any problem with my implementing the suggested link to [[Union of South Africa]]? [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 17:51, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
*'''Getting back to [[Commonwealth realm]]:''' The Constitution (in Canada) works, and the courts don't think there's anything wrong with it. Perhaps there are a few people who don't like ''how'' it works, but that is not the same thing. Could Consitutional amendment become desirable in practical (as opposed to ideological) terms because of a change in circumstances? Of course - that's true of any legislation. Would Canadian politicians blindly follow the rules of another country and pass up the opportunity to assert Canada's sovereignty, and all the potential photo-ops that that might involve? Would the courts even allow them to? A matter of speculation. The original concern was AndyL misrepresenting, seemingly intentionally, a political opinion as a question of law. A political opinion may merit a mention in an appropriate context, but deliberate, politically motivated errors of fact do not belong in an encyclopedia. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 00:54, 17 July 2005 (UTC)
 
I don't; but then, I'm sure I'm not in any position to give permission either. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 18:16, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
Good of you, Peter, to come to gbambino's defence. Well, in any case, good of you to try to change the topic even if you don't feel moved to defend poor Gavin.
 
I'm just trying to ensure that no one will object if I carry out the edit. Since there is no objection I'll carry it out. If anyone objects to the edit I'll revert it. [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 18:42, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
Anyway, I'm still curious about this purported minority trying to impose its views on a democracy. Give us some details, Peter. Who are these people and what are they trying to do? Can republicans be so dastardly as to try to impose their views by encouraging a democratic discussion followed by a vote? How devious of those bastards! Imagine, encouraging debate when we all know that only a tiny minority of 48% of Canadians (according to Ipsos-Reid) favour the replacement of the monarchy following the Queen's demise. Anyone with a different view should shut up rather than try to "impose" them by expressing them in public since we all know that voicing a dissenting opinion is an imposition on everyone who is happy with the status quo. How undemocratic of them to exercise their "rights" to express their views!
 
== Just so we're clear ==
In any case, despite Peter's straw dog arguments about supposed errors of fact, we have through this discussion, cleared up the "multiple crown" myth (which has resulted in corrections being made to various articles). As the professor points out, though, this theory is purported by various theorists so there is some purpose in discussing the debate in the article, notwithstanding gbambino's confused and ever shifting objections.
 
As far as I can tell, this is what we have right now:
I'm curious though how Peter reckons that the preamble to the Constitution Act, 1867 which Rouleau cites in his ruling has ceased to be binding? If it ceased to be binding how can Rouleau refer to it and use it to reject O'Donohue's petition?
 
*'''Change''' the first occurrence of 'Crown' in a pre-1931 context to 'British Crown'; all other references will not require qualification.
I'm also rather moved by Peter's confidence that unanimity amongst the provinces is no obstacle to the demoratic will of the people. But as a democrat, Peter, (and aren't all monarchists democrats at heart?) don't you think it would make more sense to allow the monarchy to be abolished by a simple majority in a national referendum? [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 01:54, 17 July 2005 (UTC)
*Under 'One Crown or several?', '''change''' ''shared equally by all the realms'' to ''shared by all the Realms in a symmetrical fashion''.
*'''Delete''' the entire sentence ''A number of theorists contend that the "Crown" in any...''
*'''Add''' new paragraph: ''From a cultural standpoint, how the Crown is shared is not as clear. Some argue that the Crown within their particular country remains essentially British and of Britain, whereas others emphasise the larger body of the Crown as a shared link between the Commonwealth Realms, and the Crown in right of their nation as having specific domestic characteristics.''
[[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 21:16, 12 August 2005 Peter Grey
 
:EncouragingThat misinformationsounds isfine notto compatibleme. withCan "encouragingwe ago democraticahead discussion".and implement that? Any objections? [[User:Peter GreyHOTR|Peter GreyHomey]] 0223:2639, 1712 JulyAugust 2005 (UTC)
 
:I'm willing to accept this change. [[User:CJCurrie|CJCurrie]] 01:56, 14 August 2005 (UTC)
So then, the misinformation promoted by the MLC concerning "multiple crowns" and the "Canadian monarchy" is beyond the pale in your opinion? Then you should speak up and tell them that! Or is there some other misinformation you are referring to? Since you are casting aspersions in such a vague way (the norm with smears) it's difficult to know precisely what you are talking about. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 02:54, 17 July 2005 (UTC)
 
I concur, though perhaps the "essentially British and of Britain" part could be re-worded as per your earlier suggestion, Peter. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 05:03, 14 August 2005 (UTC)
=== MHTL ===
:Andy, with all due respect, I think youre putting out [[m:more heat than light|more heat than light]], and instead of arguing over what ifs or what should or should not be, you should focus on answering the material issues, which are ''how to best represent the material and explain the issue.'' At this point, Im a bit sympathetic to Peter and Gbambino, because at least they tend to be more brief. I dont need a history lesson. Rather I need to know what your actual purpose is. Your interest seems to be much more in arguing rather than helping clarify this topic for others (ie. at least the simplistic and strict approach promises to be "clarifying").
 
:For example, you go into statements like these: "...Could consensus be achieved among the 16? Frankly, it's more likely that some realms will withdraw from the monarchy entirely..." This becan as a hypothetical, for which you gave your speculative opinion, stating it as "Frank[]" fact. You could be more tactful. Your questions seem like they contain their own answers: ''"How is it justifiable in a democratic society supposedly based on principles of equality and merit to have its nominally highest office determined by heredity? How is it justifiable in Canada to have as part of our constitution the exclusion of Catholics from an office of state?"'' I personally would tend to agree that the single Crown concept was and still is undemocratic, but you appear as if on a quest to convince those who may not have quite an idealistic concept of "democracy" as others.
 
So can we lift protection? I think at this point we might make more progress if protection were lifted and changes were actually tried out. We can always have the article reprotected with the status quo ante bellum put in place if there's a problem.
:At the root of your motivations is a youthful and naive concept of idealism, which simply ignores the "pragmatic" "real-world" notions which are ''somewhat'' embodied in conservative traditionalism and loyalism. From the conservative POV, societies arent created in a day, and therefore things which are too radically changing (like bloody revolution) simply weaken the society, hence they are considered dangerous. Meaning, that popular revolt may very well equal war and famine, etc. and that undoes the both the work of building the society, as well as the work of the society itself --to make a more "secure" future for people. From that point of view, "change" often does more real damage in contrast to the idealistic good that comes from idealistic change. But from the liberal pro-democracy side, stalled progress toward greater idealism simply means that society can slip backwards, which likewise leads to damage and destruction. Though democracy is a principled thing, its name is typically trampled through the mud, and its commonly understood that the acceptance of a trampling climate (for example in my country) leads to destruction, just as assuredly as it leads to revolt.
 
BTW, this scholarly article may be of interest to you both [http://www.geocities.com/noelcox/Succession_Law.htm The law of succession to the Crown in New Zealand] [[User:HOTR|Homey]] 12:15, 14 August 2005 (UTC)
:So, understanding all of that, I think your purpose (if there really is one) is to make some kind of contrast between the idealistic concept of a democracy, (as in the U.S. for example? LOL) and the monarchy-Commonwealth system established by the UK and its former outposts, colonies, and slave camps. But, if you understand history, then you can understand this is cyclical between shifing popular poles. I see this debate as more an issue of youthful interpretation on your part, than on the facts themselves. ("Issues" are somewhere between interpretation and facts). Lastly, the issues you raise are overly general, --perhaps you chould centralise your efforts on [[democracy]] article itself. The fact of the matter is that "democracy" is, as you suspect, under attack from many fronts. In light of political panderism and corporate influence over my country's "democracy," I cant say that the "ultimate deference to the Queen" model is any worse. But, again, this isnt the place for discussions. Sinreg, [[User:Stevertigo|SV]]|[[User_talk:Stevertigo|t]] 06:07, 17 July 2005 (UTC)
 
=== So many Crowns, so little content ===
 
It strikes me that for the article to raise the question rhetorically, "One Crown or several?", and describe the various meanings which people attach to the word ''crown'', would be an excellent way of presenting the shared vs. separate dichotomy of the <s>crown</s>monarchy, rather than trying to pin down exactly one answer to the question. [[User:Peter Grey|Peter Grey]] 19:25, 18 July 2005 (UTC)
 
That would make sense for [[the Crown]] article but it would be a largely irrelevent tangent for [[Commonwealth realm]]. [[User:Homeontherange|Andy]] 21:40, 18 July 2005 (UTC)
 
== "Rise of Republicanism" ==
 
The sub-title "Rise of Republicanism" was based on nothing but POV and read like a republican call to arms. There have been republican sentiments in every Commonwealth Realm since they were first colonised, and though there continue to be those with republican leanings in the Realms, including the UK, there is nothing to prove there is a Commonwealth-wide ''rise'' in these feelings.
 
What's more, much of what was stated in the section exists almost verbatim in articles relating to republicanism within individual realms (ie. [[Republicanism in Australia]], [[Canadian Republicanism]] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monarchy_in_Canada#Debate_on_the_monarchy Monarchy in Canada/Debate on the monarchy] -- these links have been included in the "Controversy" section. All other information was shifted down to the "Controversy" section, and some was moved to the more relevant [[Republicanism in Australia]]. Very little, if anything at all, was removed. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 15:54, 12 July 2005 (UTC)
 
== Edits to 'Commonwealth Realms and the Crown' ==
 
For well over one month now AndyL has been attempting to use Wikipedia as a [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia is not a soapbox|soapbox]] to push his biased [[Wikipedia:Neutral point of view|POV]] through the use of personal interpretations of a primary source, which constitutes [[Wikipedia:No original research|original research]]. Throughout more than a month of debate he has been asked to provide proper secondary sources of constitutional experts, judges, lawyers, parliamentarians, scholars, or publications of any kind, which also support his theories, but has given none. Thus, the passage has been edited to remove any POV and original research. --[[User:Gbambino|gbambino]] 14:43, 19 July 2005 (UTC)