Everything about Head Of The Commonwealth totally explained
Queen Elizabeth II is the second person to be recognised as
Head of the Commonwealth (which currently has 53 members). These include the 16
Commonwealth realms (where the Queen is also
head of state, separately from her roles as Head of the Commonwealth),
Commonwealth republics, and monarchies under another
Royal House (as in
Tonga,
Malaysia,
Swaziland, etc.).
The official French version (for use in Canada) is
Chef du Commonwealth; the
South African version in
Afrikaans is
Hoof van die Statebond (literally 'Chief of the confederation', while the common Afrikaans word for Commonwealth is
Gemenebes).
Title
The title was devised in 1949 (see below), however, wasn't added to the
monarch's style until 1953. In that year, a
Royal Style and Titles Act was passed separately in each of the seven Realms then existing (except
Pakistan), which gave formal recognition to the separateness and the equality of the Realms by entitling the Queen as "Queen of [Realm] and her other Realms and Territories, Head of the Commonwealth."
Position
The role of the "Head" of the Commonwealth is perhaps best compared to that of a ceremonial president, but for life: unlike a chairman or
secretary general of any other international organisation, the Head of the Commonwealth is a symbol of the association – without
executive powers, yet playing a very important role in shaping the Commonwealth.
The title isn't vested in
the Crown. However, the assumption is that the title itself would become extinct were it not held by the shared monarch, and no new suggestions have ever been put forward by any of the Commonwealth member-countries as to who, if anyone, should take on the role currently exercised by Queen Elizabeth II. In all probability, therefore, her successor will also succeed to the role of the Head of the Commonwealth.
The Head of the Commonwealth is recognised by its members as the "symbol of their free association", attends Commonwealth Heads of Government summits and the
Commonwealth Games, which are held every four years, and on every
Commonwealth Day, which is the second Monday in March, broadcasts a message to all member countries.
Every two years a
Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) is held, at locations throughout the Commonwealth. The Head of the Commonwealth is normally present in the host country, and has a series of private meetings with the Commonwealth countries' leaders and attends a CHOGM reception and dinner, and makes a speech there. The latest CHOGM was held in November 2007 in
Uganda; the next meeting will be held in 2009 in
Trinidad and Tobago.
History
The
London Declaration of 1949, devised by
Canadian Prime Minister Louis St. Laurent stated that the monarch would be a symbol of the free association of independent countries, and as such the Head of the Commonwealth. These words meant that kingdoms that were not Commonwealth Realms, as well as republics, could remain members - they could recognise the monarch as Head of the Commonwealth without accepting the person as the country's
Head of State. Thus when the former
Dominion of
India became a
republic within the Commonwealth in 1950, it recognised
George VI as the symbol of the association, but not as its head of state.
When
Queen Elizabeth II came to the throne in 1952 she became Head of the Commonwealth.
On her accession she said
In December 1960, the Queen had a
personal flag created to symbolise her as an individual and not associated with her role as Queen of the United Kingdom. Over time, the flag started to be used in place of the
Royal Standard when the Queen visited Commonwealth countries where she wasn't head of state and for Commonwealth occasions in the United Kingdom to symbolise the Queen's role as Head of the Commonwealth. When the Queen visits
Marlborough House in London, headquarters of the
Commonwealth Secretariat, her personal standard is raised and not the Royal Standard.
Footnotes
Further Information
Get more info on 'Head Of The Commonwealth'.
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