A Team of Three
The Monarchist League of New Zealand has a wonderful new website: Monarchy New Zealand. One of their pages caught my attention, which I think should be used more often to bolster the argument that our countries are better constituted than all of the world's modern republican states.
All countries have a "head of state" and a "head of government". In some political systems the president is the head of state and the head of government. In other countries, the two roles are separated. Sometimes the head of state is a president, but in all constitutional monarchies, the head of state is the monarch. The head of government is the Prime Minister. He or she is elected by the people and controls day to day government operations. This separation of powers is designed to prevent one person from having too much power.
New Zealand is fortunate because, as a Commonwealth Realm, it has a Governor-General. The Governor-General is neither head of government nor head of state. Often he or she is referred to as the "de facto head of state" which means that he or she operates like a head of state, but isn't legally one. Because we have a Governor-General, we can divide political power between three people, instead of just two.
The Governor-General can keep watch over the Prime Minister to ensure he or she is not attempting anything illegal. The Queen can keep an eye on both to make sure they are doing their jobs. Fortunately, the system works so well that there have been very few cases where the Queen or a Governor-General needed to take action to stop a prime minister from abusing power. It has happened before in other countries, and if it happens here in the future, kiwis can be confident that their democracy is safer in the hands of three people than in the hands of one or two.
New Zealand and the other Commonwealth Realms (except Britain) are the only countries in the world which divide their highest political powers between three people. This arrangement has made our democracy much stronger. To concentrate the powers of three people into the hands of two would be a fundamental change in our political system and would take us down a road that has not be very successful in many other countries.
One is good, two is better, three is best!
1 comments:
One could argue that this three-part balancing act was what the writers of the US Constitution were aiming for: The President, Congress and the Judiciary counter-balancing each other.
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