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The Crown and Prime Ministerial Power

  • Autores: Philippe Lagassé
  • Localización: Canadian parliamentary review, ISSN 0229-2548, Vol. 39, Nº. 2, 2016, págs. 17-23
  • Idioma: inglés
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  • Resumen
    • This article elaborates on the relationship between the Crown and prime ministerial power through the lenses of the confidence convention and royal prerogatives. The article highlights how the prime minister’s status as the Crown’s first councilor complicates the operation of the confidence convention, the means which the House ultimately determines who heads the governing ministry. The article then outlines how the prime minister’s discretionary authority to exercise key royal prerogatives serves as the foundation of the centralization of government around the first minister. Rather than seeing the centralization of power in the prime minister as a form of ‘presidentialisation’, the article argues that it is more accurately understood as a form of ‘regalisation’, owing to its source in royal authority.


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