You’ll see so much weirdness in this one
image that I want point it out to you bit
by bit.
So this is obviously a coronation ceremony.
Specifically, it’s the coronation of William
and Mary in England, 1689.
And that’s the first peculiarity.
They’re being coronated as co-regents, co-monarchs-
sharing power between two in a role which
we typically have in our head as a job for
one.
So, a split crown and authority.
Second oddity, one of those co-regents, William,
on the verge of being King of England, Scotland,
and Ireland, is neither English, Scottish,
or Irish- but rather, Dutch.
But most history books will describe no great
war between England and the Netherlands in
this period.
So how did a Dutchman rise to share the throne?
And last, the peculiarity I think most significant:
the document being held in front of them.
It’s not what we might expect at a coronation:
a congratulatory letter, a religious text,
or a royal poem- no.
It’s a list of demands from the Parliament.
It starts with complaints against the predecessor
King, James II, and then lists a series of
desired limitations on the new monarch's powers.
Granted, it wasn’t technically required
William and Mary accept these limitations
in order to ascend to the throne.
Nonetheless, an odd way to greet your new
King and Queen- crashing their coronation
to tell them what they shouldn’t do.
It’s a lot to digest, but understanding
this mystery will allow us to focus on the
foundation of power in the United Kingdom’s
political system.
I’ll address the Dutchman first.
William of Orange invaded England in 1688.
A prince from the Netherlands crossing the
channel with a fleet of ships, landing in
Brixham, and successfully marching his force
to Westminster to be crowned King is a deceptively
simple explanation of what happened.
That’s because William of Orange was invited
to invade.
Though by nationality he was absolutely foreign,
he had a couple things going for him: Perhaps
most important, he was a protestant at a time
when England’s King, James II, was catholic.
Now James II enjoyed support from Catholics
within Ireland and Scotland, but sentiment
in England was resoundingly anti-catholic
after years of religious violence between
the two.
They resented pushes by James II to normalize
catholicism in the Kingdom.
They claimed that he suspended laws of Parliament
in order to so.
They feared his drives to maintain a standing
army as the actions of a tyrant.
And as a catalyst to their angst, James II’s
wife gave birth to a son in 1688- as critics
saw it, a son who would continue the tyrannical
catholic dynasty over Protestant England.
Which brings us to the second thing William
of Orange had going for him as an invader
of the British Isles: he was also a part of
King James family; he was James’ son-in-law,
the husband of Mary, a product of James first
marriage.
So why would being in the hated king’s family
actually help?
Well, the newborn and direct catholic heir
to the throne was a product of James’ 2nd
marriage.
By invading, removing James and his second
family, and installing himself, William of
Orange broke the catholic part out of the
equation while still maintaining royal lineage
through James’ protestant daughter and through
himself, her protestant husband.
In a letter addressed to William of Orange
by seven powerful noblemen, each carrying
a title like Earl, Bishop, or Lord, the state
of mind of English Protestants, particularly
Protestant elites, came into view.
This was 1688.
They wrote to William,
“The people are so generally dissatisfied
with the present conduct of the government
in relation to their religion, liberties and
properties (all which have been greatly invaded)...It
is no less certain that much the greatest
part of the nobility and gentry are as much
dissatisfied...And there is no doubt but that
some of the most considerable of them would
venture themselves with your highness at your
first landing…”
Please Dutch Prince.
Come depose our king, and bring his daughter
too.
You might also notice two distinct, diverging
lines of reasoning here.
We already mentioned religion.
James wanted catholicism legally accepted
in English society, and his protestant opposition,
‘averse’ to what they called the ‘popish
religion’.
The second line of reasoning seems to contradict
the first.
They get on a ramble in the letter about Parliament
and end with this: “if things cannot then
be carried to [the King’s] wishes in a Parliamentary
way, other measures will be put in execution
by more violent means,”
Basically, the catholic king will continue
to ask things of Parliament which Parliament
doesn’t want to give, and upon denial, he
will usurp the Parliament with violence.
Thus, the king is a tyrant, as they wrote,
‘religion, liberties and properties...greatly
invaded’.
I only mention this second line of reasoning
to you because, though mixed in with the religious
stuff, their complaints about the king threatening
the legislative body proves important to our
exploration.
William receives the letter and agrees.
What was astounding with William’s 1698
invasion was the lack of violence.
Resistance would come from the Scottish and
Irish in the following years, but during the
initial march, William and his 25 thousand
men quickly gained support on their way to
London.
As Professor Steven Pincus describes in his
brief history of the Glorious Revolution,
“Common people, gentry, and nobility, disgusted
with James II’s government but fearing his
power, soon found the courage to pour into
William’s camp and rise independently throughout
England, offering both physical and financial
support,”
William of Orange landed in England, marched
towards London, was greeted by cheering crowds
and defecting soldiers of King James- who
then fled to France.
At their own behest, William and Mary acceded
together as King William III and Queen Mary
II, hence the picture with which we started.
And we can now finally address that document-that
list of demands being read to them at their
1689 coronation.
It starts with complaints against James II
on religious grounds: ‘subverting protestantism,
affiliating with the Catholic church, disarming
protestants while arming Catholics’ This
has been interpreted as the more conservative
part of the 1689 revolution.
But then came, for our purposes, the more
interesting bits.
They complained of the King: ‘Dispensing
and suspending laws without Parliament’s
consent, using tax funds for purposes other
than what was intended by Parliament, maintaining
a standing army without Parliament’s consent,
and by blocking free elections of Parliament…’
As John Locke might say, the social contract
was broken.
Absolutism was under attack-not an uncommon
theme in 17th century English history, but
now it would be codified.
Late 1689: the Parliament creates a statute
form of their listed complaints and restrictions;
they author and pass the Bill of Rights.
Included were the aforementioned exclusive
powers of Parliament to create and terminate
law, levy tax, and maintain an army.
But also, a vague but precedent setting provision
for free elections of the Parliament and free
speech within it.
If the Magna Carta in 1215 was an attempt
to subject the King to his own laws- a foundation
of limited government, this was now an Act,
almost 500 years later, that future lawmaking
must go through an elected Parliament.
The sovereignty, the crown of the monarch
was moving from the palace to the Parliament
and would gather there through to our time.
Hence where we get the controversial term,
Parliamentary Sovereignty, a concept which
evolved after the revolution in 1689 and is
best described by constitutional theorist
A.V.
Dicey in his Introduction to the Study of
the Law of the Constitution.
He writes, “Parliament thus defined has,
under the English constitution, the right
to make or unmake any law whatever: and, further,
that no person or body is recognised by the
law of England as having a right to override
or set aside the legislation of Parliament,”
In layman’s terms which I’ve seen laid
out in a couple different places: ‘Parliament
may legislate on any subject.
No parliament can bind its successors or be
bound by its predecessors.
No person or entity can challenge the validity
of an act of Parliament, ‘be they court
or King,’ (Jago).
In this model, the ‘checks and balances’
so inherent to the American Constitution simply
don't exist as we would recognize them.
You and I could draw the American system like
this, with the Congress creating law, Executive
enforcing law, and judiciary interpreting
law- each impacting the others, but acting
independently.
If we would attempt to do the same for the
United Kingdom, we would encounter great overlap,
as everyone from the Prime Minister to the
Civil Service all serve at the pleasure of
the majority in Parliament.
The glorious revolution in 1698 led to an
institution with, if not complete sovereignty,
expansive power in the United Kingdom- the
legal right to legislate on any topic without
question.
But Parliamentary Sovereignty doesn’t come
without criticism.
Struggling a bit with the concept myself,
I grabbed a couple books from the library.
This one, “Essentials of UK Politics,”
by Andrew Heywood has a digestible objection.
He writes, “Parliament is not and has never
been politically sovereign.
Parliament has the legal right to make, amend,
or unmake any law it wishes, but not always
the political ability to do so.
A simple example would be that Parliament
could, in theory, abolish elections, but this
would be likely to result in widespread public
protests, if not popular rebellion,”
Even if all this criticism is true-distinguishing
the legal right and the political ability
of Parliament-in my opinion there’s still
no proper checks and balances.
The American Supreme Court is an institution
we know to be a check on the President and
the congress.
The United Kingdom Supreme Court, by contrast,
was created by Parliament in 2005, and defaults
to Parliamentary Sovereignty when making rulings.
In short, the UK Constitution is malleable,
and that’s what makes it interesting.
The result of England’s Revolution in 1689
was a document meant to create a wall of separation
between the monarch and the legislature.
And to an American observer, it does seem
like a radical concentration of power, one
the writers of the American Constitution sought
to avoid by creating three coequal branches
of government.
But while American founders distinguished
their new system from the one developing in
Westminster Palace, they embraced some of
its core messaging; and I think you’ll find
the echo of the protests in the English Declaration
of Rights against King James reverberates
in a familiar way on second listening:
“unqualified persons have been returned
and served on juries...excessive bail...
And illegal and cruel punishments inflicted,”
“For depriving us in many cases, of the
benefit of Trial by Jury,”
“By raising and keeping a standing army
within this kingdom in time of peace without
consent of Parliament,”
“He has kept among us, in times of peace,
Standing Armies without the Consent of our
legislatures,”
“and quartering soldiers contrary to law”
“quartering large bodies of armed troops
among us,”
“By violating the freedom of election of
members to serve in Parliament,”
“For suspending our own Legislatures, and
declaring themselves invested with power to
legislate for us in all cases whatsoever,”
“Dispensing and suspending laws without
Parliament’s consent,”
“He has refused his Assent to Laws...necessary
for the public good..”
“By levying money for...another manner than
the same was granted by Parliament,”
“For imposing Taxes on us without our Consent,”
“King James the Second having abdicated
the government,”
“He has abdicated Government here.”
Resistance to absolutism, limited government,
social contracts, taxation only with representation-ironically,
the American Declaration of Independence,
the document meant to forever disconnect the
United States and the Kingdom of Great Britain,
actually reveals our common heritage.
