Commonwealth of Britain Bill
The Commonwealth of Britain Bill was a bill first introduced in the House of Commons in 1991 by Tony Benn,[1] then a Labour Member of Parliament (MP). It was seconded by the future Leader of the Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn.
The Bill proposed abolishing the British monarchy, with the United Kingdom becoming a "democratic, federal and secular Commonwealth of Britain", or in effect a republic with a codified constitution. It was introduced by Benn a number of times until Benn's retirement in 2001, but never achieved a second reading. Under the Bill:
- The monarchy would be abolished and the constitutional status of the Crown ended;
- The Church of England would be disestablished;
- The head of state would be a president, elected by a joint sitting of both Houses of the Commonwealth Parliament;
- The functions of the royal prerogative would be transferred to Parliament;
- The Privy Council would be abolished, and replaced by a Council of State;
- The House of Lords would be replaced by an elected House of the People, with equal representation of men and women;
- The House of Commons would similarly have equal representation of men and women;
- England, Scotland and Wales would have their own devolved National Parliaments with responsibility for devolved matters as agreed;
- County Court judges and magistrates would be elected; and
- British jurisdiction over Northern Ireland would be ended.
- The judiciary would be reformed and a National Legal Service would be created.
- The Constitution would be codified and an amendment process established.
- The voting age would be lowered from 18 to 16.
- MPs and other officials would swear oaths to the Constitution, not the Crown.[2]
See also
- Charter 88
- Common Sense (book)
- Commonwealth
- Commonwealth of Europe Bill[3][4]
- Constitutional reform in the United Kingdom
- Disestablishmentarianism
- Irreligion in the United Kingdom
- Labour for a Republic
- Oath of Allegiance (United Kingdom)
- Reform of the House of Lords
- Religion in the United Kingdom
- Republic (political organisation)
- Republicanism in the United Kingdom
- Secularity
- Separation of church and state
- United Ireland
References
- "Early day motion 1075 – COMMONWEALTH OF BRITAIN BILL". UK Parliament. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
- "COMMONWEALTH OF BRITAIN (Hansard, 20 May 1991)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 20 May 1991. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
- https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/id/397cb7cd-719f-46e6-bebe-a363e58d22a9/1005905.pdf
- "COMMONWEALTH OF EUROPE BILL (Hansard, 12 February 1993)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 12 February 1993.
- Benn, Tony; Hood, Andrew (1993), Winstone, Ruth (ed.), Common Sense, Hutchinson, ISBN 0-09-177308-3
- Benn revives Bill to replace monarch with a president The Independent, 12 December 1992
- Tony Benn’s Plan to Democratise Britain – and Abolish the Monarchy
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