Dear Madam, Considering your position administrating for the - TopicsExpress



          

Dear Madam, Considering your position administrating for the nation, and the key position as a high level public servant for the people of your constituency, ultimately I would expect you to have a better understanding of our constitution than the average person in the street? The importance of this knowledge for someone in your chosen career is obviously paramount due to the protections it affords to those who elected you to your current position and ultimately, it would be in your duty to uphold the pre-existing rights protected therein. With this in mind, the series of unconstitutional statutory legislation over the last few decades, preventing liberties and creating division in the general population - are becoming increasingly common without much consideration for our constitutional documents or the limitations on government that they impose. From this point, I have two questions; firstly, if statutory legislation, (bills and acts etc) are given force of law by the consent of the governed, what happens when I withdraw my consent? And secondly, it is my understanding that a statute cannot be passed without royal assent, but there have been many breaches of our constitution, so in what circumstance should members of parliament such as yourself, find it reasonable to suggest to Her Majesty, that assent be given to an unconstitutional act - thus forcing her to breach her coronation oath and render her unlawful as monarch? Kind regards
Posted on: Wed, 26 Mar 2014 14:42:43 +0000

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