WROLD NEWS:- Queen Elizabeth II is not accustomed to being dragged into the messy heart of British politics.

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LONDON — As a largely ceremonial head of state, Queen Elizabeth II is not accustomed to being dragged into the messy heart of British politics. But on Wednesday, that’s exactly where she found herself.

At a secretive meeting in Balmoral Castle, the fairytale royal residence in Scotland, ministers sent by Prime Minister Boris Johnson asked the queen, 93, to suspend Parliament for a month.

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The world’s longest-serving living monarch had little choice but to agree to “prorogue” Parliament, the formal name for the suspension. And this has triggered what many across the political spectrum say is an unprecedented constitutional crisis that threatens the values of British democracy.

Johnson says he made this request because the current parliamentary term has gone on too long, and he wants to launch a “bold and ambitious domestic legislative agenda.”

Few buy that.

Most believe he wants to make sure lawmakers don’t come back from summer recess with enough time to thwart his plans for Brexit, which is currently due to happen on Oct. 31. Some think he wants to goad them into triggering a general election, which he would likely fight as the populist champion of Brexit.

Either way, Johnson stands widely accused of exploiting a huge gray area left by the U.K.’s lack of a single constitutional document, and of using the supposedly apolitical queen as a tool to achieve his short-term Brexit goals.

“To ask her to prorogue in these circumstances is, in effect, an abuse of executive power,” said Meg Russell, a professor, and director of the Constitution Unit at University College London.

Members of Johnson’s own party and beyond called the move a “constitutional outrage” and “profoundly undemocratic.”

John Major, a former Conservative prime minister, has compared Johnson to Charles I, the 17th-century king whose suspension of Parliament led to the English Civil War and ultimately his own beheading.

What’s the queen got to do with it?

In the U.S., President Donald Trump is the head of state and the head of the government. In the U.K., however, Johnson is the head of the government and the queen is the head of state.

The power resides in the government and the Houses of Parliament. In normal circumstances, the queen’s role is mostly ceremonial.

One of her functions is to open and close Parliament with the passing of every legislative cycle, which normally lasts a year. These occasions are ablaze with velvet robes, wigs and all the other paraphernalia associated with the British ruling classes.

“Because we are a constitutional monarchy, officially the queen has to make some decisions with regard to Parliament and government, and has to, therefore, take advice from the prime minister,” said Tim Bale, a politics professor at the Queen Mary University of London.

But — years-deep into a Brexit turmoil that has gripped most aspects of political and social life — Britain is a long way past normal.

Whereas the queen normally prorogues Parliament for a few days, Johnson asked her to suspend it for almost five weeks.

Source  - nbcnews
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