Is the
Monarchy Next?
by
Jørn K. Baltzersen
by Jørn K. Baltzersen
DIGG THIS
At the end
of June Tony Blair stepped down as Prime Minister of the United
Kingdom, leaving the office to Gordon Brown.
One of the
features of the Blair regime was constitutional reform, notably
reform of the House of Lords. Also, civil liberties have been curtailed
under Blair. Philip Johnston, in an award-winning
essay, describes this quite well.
There is a
petition for
restoring a hereditary House of Lords, which may be signed by
British subjects and residents (overseas
territories, Crown dependencies, and Sovereign Base Areas included,
but Commonwealth
Realms excluded).
It is of course
important to remember that the House of Lords has been an emasculated
institution for quite a while. The chamber basically lost its absolute
veto in 1911 – with the Parliament
Act of that year. While the monarch still has quite extensive
formal powers, the same basically goes for Her Britannic Majesty.
The state expands to ever-higher levels of size and reach, and modern
tyranny marches on, to an extent that one wonders whether these
royal powers ever will be exercised.
Charles
A. Coulombe noted a while ago:
[M]onarchies
have lost much of their ability to serve their people through
acceptance of the myth that the politicians really do speak for
the people – or for that matter, that whatever the majority of
the people want at any given time ought to be given preference
over objective right and wrong.
If a check
is to be a check, the least one should expect is the check to be
protected when attempted removed by those who are to be checked.
When checks on politicians can be removed unilaterally by those
same politicians, they hardly qualify as checks.
That said,
it is hard to see how things will get better by formally emasculating
the British monarch. Judging by reports
of the Daily Express, there seems to be a drive for continued
constitutional reform, including ending formal powers of Her Britannic
Majesty. While the Parliament Acts of 1911 and 1949 were part of
a greater development towards "power of the people," they
were relatively speaking basically isolated events constitutionally.
There seems now to be a quite constant drive for ridding the British
system of everything "archaic."
The United
Kingdom was on the winning side of World War I and was spared Woodrow
Wilson’s principle of self-determination at that crossroad. The
British Empire only really started falling in the aftermath of World
War II. The United Kingdom had come far in the process of modern
democracy even in the summer of 1914. Wilsonian mass democracy was,
however, never formally imposed on the kingdom. Some may say it
is perhaps time it was. One could wonder whether these are sadists
or masochists.
I would rather
be a subject of old than a citizen of a modern, Wilsonian, mass
democracy. It is true that we have had progress over the years,
but democracy belongs in the decline category.
Those who believe
that the transition from monarchy to democracy represents progress
need serious educational doses of Erik
von Kuehnelt-Leddihn, Hans-Hermann
Hoppe, and Bertrand
de Jouvenel.
Among the main
vices of democracy are:
- the buying
of votes for other people’s money
- the illusion
that we rule ourselves
- everything
is up for grabs by every single ambitious demagogue
The democracy
we have today is tyranny of the popular majority. No, it is not
even that. It is tyranny of the representatives of the popular majority.
No, not even that. It is tyranny of those representatives who happen
to have gotten the majority according to the procedural rules of
the elections. Well, that is if we assume that everything goes by
the book.
It is often
claimed that democracy has evolved because people have become more
and more mature. With the state of affairs today, in particular
with the growth of government in size and reach, this maturity is
highly disputable. What is not so disputable is that democracy evolved
because wars, revolutions, and political battles were fought, and
modern democracy eventually emerged as the victor.
Often
it is argued that monarchy belongs in the past. Some are sickly
obsessed with monarchy being a symbol of tyranny. It might then
be fitting to ask who is stuck in the past; those who are obsessed
with the excesses of monarchs of old and with monarchy being a symbol
of past "lording it over the people" or those who are
concerned with modern tyranny.
It remains
to be seen how Gordon Brown will seek to make the world safe for
his clutches.
Jørn
K. Baltzersen [send him mail]
writes from Oslo, the capital of the Oil Kingdom of Norway. You
are cordially invited to his blog Wilson
Revolution Unplugged.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
Jørn
K. Baltzersen Archives
|