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Originally posted by alldaylong
She did this with the then Australian Prime Minister Gough Whitlam in 1975.
Originally posted by dereks
Originally posted by alldaylong
She did this with the then Australian Prime Minister Gough Whitlam in 1975.
Very wrong actually. The GG, John Kerr, removed Whitlam as he was incompetent. The Queen had no say in the matter.
The Constitution provides that a "Governor-General appointed by the Queen shall be Her Majesty's representative in the Commonwealth . . ."
Originally posted by Billmeister
If the situation in Australia is the same as it is in Canada, and I suspect it is, the Governor General is nothing more then the spokesperson for the Queen, so, yes, in fact, it was the Queen's decision, being carried out through her agent in the Commonwealth, the Governor General.
Originally posted by JohnnyCanuck
I would guess that the GG communicated a political decision to the Queen, who basically rubber-stamped it if there was no abiding craziness with the notion.
Originally posted by dereks
Originally posted by JohnnyCanuck
I would guess that the GG communicated a political decision to the Queen, who basically rubber-stamped it if there was no abiding craziness with the notion.
You guess wrong, the GG alone made the decision to sack the incompetent Whitlam, the Queen would have been informed after the event.
As established by the Constitution, the Parliament of Australia is composed of two houses, the House of Representatives and the Senate, together with the Queen of Australia. The Queen is represented through the Governor-General, who has executive powers granted in the Constitution,[1] as well as rarely exercised reserve powers.
Originally posted by Billmeister
So, if you have any sources that make your interpretation somewhat clearer for me, that would be fabulous.
Although the Governor-General and the Queen occasionally observe certain formalities...
At the start of Chapter 2 on executive government, the Constitution says "The executive power of the Commonwealth is vested in the Queen and is exercisable by the Governor-General as the Queen's representative".