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Order in Council

An Order-in-Council is a type of legislation in many countries, especially the Commonwealth realms. In the United Kingdom this legislation is formally made in the name of the monarch by and with the advice and consent of the Privy Council (King-in-Council), but in other countries the terminology may vary. The term should not be confused with Order of Council, which is made in the name of the Council without royal assent.

Types, usage and terminology

Two principal types of Order in Council exist: Orders in Council whereby the King-in-Council exercises the royal prerogative, and Orders in Council made in accordance with an Act of Parliament.[1]

In the United Kingdom, orders are formally made in the name of the monarch by the Privy Council (King-in-Council or Queen-in-Council). In Canada, federal Orders in Council are made in the name of the Governor General by the King's Privy Council for Canada; provincial Orders-in-Council are of the Lieutenant-Governor-in-Council by the provincial Executive Council. In other places in name of the governor by the Executive Council (Governor-in-Council, Governor-General-in-Council, etc.).

In New Zealand, the Orders in Council, undertaken by the Executive Council, are required to give effect to the government's decisions. Apart from Acts of Parliament, Orders in Council are the main method by which the government implements decisions that need legal force.[2]

Prerogative orders

An Order in Council made under the royal prerogative is primary legislation and does not depend on any statute for its authority, although an Act of Parliament may change this.[3] This type has become less common with the passage of time, as statutes encroach on areas that used to form part of the royal prerogative.

Matters which still fall within the royal prerogative and hence are regulated by (prerogative) Orders in Council include dealing with servants of the Crown (e.g., standing orders for civil servants), appointing heads of Crown corporations, governance of British Overseas Territories, making appointments in the Church of England and dealing with international relations.

Traditionally, Orders in Council are used as a way for the prime minister to make political appointments, but they can also be used to issue simple laws as a sort of decree. In times of emergency, a government may issue legislation directly through Orders in Council, forgoing the usual parliamentary procedure.[4][5] Most orders of this sort are eventually formalized according to the traditional lawmaking process, if they are not revoked at the end of the emergency. However, in the UK, this power was later superseded by a statutory power to make such Orders in Council under the Civil Contingencies Act 2004.

British Orders in Council may occasionally be used to effectively reverse court decisions applicable to British Overseas Territories without involving Parliament. Within the United Kingdom itself, court decisions can be formally overruled only by an Act of Parliament or by the decision of a higher court on appeal.

In the rest of the Commonwealth they are used to carry out any decisions made by the cabinet and the executive that would not need to be approved by Parliament.

It was long thought that prerogative orders, being primary legislation, were not subject to judicial review. This was reversed in the 1985 case Council of Civil Service Unions v Minister for the Civil Service, which however allowed for some exceptions, such as national security. A given prerogative order therefore may or may not be subject to judicial review, depending on its nature.

As statutory instruments

In this second case, an Order in Council is merely another form of statutory instrument (in the UK, regulated by the Statutory Instruments Act 1946), albeit subject to more formalities than a simple statutory instrument. This kind of Order in Council tends to be reserved for the most important pieces of subordinate legislation; its use is likely to become more common.[citation needed] Like all statutory instruments, they may simply be required to be laid before both Houses of Parliament, or they may be annulled in pursuance of a resolution of either the lower House (House of Commons in the UK and Canada or House of Representatives in the other realms) or the upper House (House of Lords in the UK or Senate in other realms) ('negative resolution procedure'), or require to be approved by a resolution of either or, exceptionally, both Houses ('affirmative resolution procedure'). That said, the use of Orders in Council has been extended recently, as the Scotland Act 1998 provides that draft Orders in Council may be laid before the Scottish Parliament in certain circumstances in the same way as they would have been laid before the Westminster Parliament. From 2007, legislation put before the Welsh Assembly will be enacted through Orders in Council after following the affirmative resolution procedure.

An Order in Council of this type usually has the following form: "His Majesty, in pursuance of [relevant section of primary legislation], is pleased, by and with the advice of His Privy Council, to order, and it is hereby ordered, as follows:"

For most of the period from 1972 to 2007, much Northern Ireland legislation was made by Order-in-Council as part of direct rule. This was done under the various Northern Ireland Acts 1974 to 2000, and not by virtue of the royal prerogative.

Under the Government of Wales Act 2006, royal assent to Measures of the National Assembly for Wales was given by Order-in-Council, but this is not done by statutory instrument but in a form similar to that of a prerogative order.[6] The National Assembly became the Senedd (Welsh Parliament; Welsh: Senedd Cymru) in 2020, at the same time gaining the competence to pass Acts of Senedd Cymru, assent to which is given by letters patent without requiring the involvement of the Privy Council.

Controversial uses

Canada

After the British Empire entered World War I on the Allied side, an Order in Council was made in Canada for the registration and in certain cases for the internment of aliens of "enemy nationality". Between 1914 and 1920, 8,579 "enemy aliens" were detained in internment camps.[7]

An Order in Council made by the Brian Mulroney government on 21 November 1988 created Amex Bank of Canada, a Canadian banking subsidiary of American Express, although federal banking policy at the time would not ordinarily have permitted such an establishment by a foreign company.[8]

In July 2004 and August 2006, Orders in Council were used to deny a passport to Abdurahman Khadr, a member of the Khadr family who had previously been held in detention by the United States at Guantanamo Bay, on the grounds of national security. The first was overturned on judicial review by the Federal Court[9] as, at the time of his application, national security was not included as a ground for refusal in the Canadian Passport Order,[10] which was since amended to include the ground.

In July 2017, the government of Canada used an Order in Council to strip ex-Nazi interpreter Helmut Oberlander of his Canadian citizenship.[11]

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the government of Canada used an ongoing Order in Council to limit foreign nationals from entering Canada from the United States and other countries. Additionally, an Order in Council was used to impose a mandatory 14-day quarantine upon some individuals entering Canada.

On May 1, 2020, an Order in Council was used to declare over 1500 models of firearm to be prohibited weapons, in response to the 2020 Nova Scotia attacks.[12] The order immediately nullified the existing registrations of ownership for all the weapons it affected, making it illegal for owners to possess, use, transport, or sell them except in a few limited circumstances.[13] A second Order in Council was simultaneously passed declaring an amnesty period until April 30, 2022, in which time owners of newly-prohibited firearms could have them deactivated, destroyed, or exported to a country in which they could be legally owned.[14]

United Kingdom

Orders in Council were controversially used in 2004 to overturn a court ruling in the United Kingdom[15] that held that the exile of the Chagossians from the British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT) was unlawful. Initially, the High Court in 2006 held that these Orders in Council were unlawful: "The suggestion that a minister can, through the means of an order in council, exile a whole population from a British Overseas Territory and claim that he is doing so for the 'peace, order and good government' of the territory is to us repugnant."[16] The UK government's first appeal failed, with the Court of Appeal holding that the decision had been unlawfully taken by a government minister "acting without any constraint".[17] However, the government successfully appealed to the House of Lords, which overturned the High Court and Court of Appeal decisions (R v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, ex parte Bancoult (No 2)).[18] The Law Lords decided[15] that the validity of an order in council made under the prerogative legislating for a colony was amenable to judicial review.[19] Also, it was not for the courts to substitute their judgement for that of the Secretary of State as to what was conducive to the peace, order and good government of the BIOT. The orders were not Wednesbury unreasonable on the facts, given the considerations of security and cost of resettlement. Finally, none of the orders was open to challenge in the British courts on the ground of repugnancy to any fundamental principle relating to the rights of abode of the Chagossians in the Chagos Islands.

See also

References

  1. ^ (PDF). Cabinet Office. December 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 April 2012. Retrieved 31 December 2010.
  2. ^ . Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. 19 February 2019. Archived from the original on 12 May 2020. Retrieved 30 April 2020.
  3. ^ Council of Civil Service Unions v. Minister for the Civil Service [1985] 374 at 399, per Lord Fraser of Tullybelton
  4. ^ Home defence and emergency planning 1972–2001 (PDF), The National Archives, November 2005, p. 11, retrieved 20 November 2008
  5. ^ Historical use: see Orders in Council (1807)
  6. ^ For example, the Order approving the NHS Redress (Wales) Measure 2008
  7. ^ Luciuk, Lubomyr (1998). A Time for Atonement. The Limestone Press.
  8. ^ Newman, Peter C. (July 30, 1990). "The brash new kid on the block. (American Express Co. opens Amex Bank of Canada amid controversy)" (column). Maclean's, 30 July 1990 v103 n31 p33(1)
  9. ^ Khadr v. Canada (Attorney General), 2006 F.C. 727, [2007] 2 F.C.R. 218.
  10. ^ Canadian Passport Order SI/81-86.
  11. ^ Bueckert, Kate (26 July 2017). "Ex-Nazi interpreter Helmut Oberlander stripped of citizenship for 4th time". CBC News. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  12. ^ Tasker, John Paul (1 May 2020). "Trudeau announces ban on 1,500 types of 'assault-style' firearms — effective immediately". CBC News. CBC/Radio-Canada. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  13. ^ "What you need to know about the Government of Canada's new prohibition on certain firearms and devices". Royal Canadian Mounted Police. 5 May 2020. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  14. ^ "Order Declaring an Amnesty Period (2020)". Justice Laws Website. Government of Canada. May 2020. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  15. ^ a b R (Bancoult) v Secretary of State For Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs [2008] UKHL 61
  16. ^ "", Neil Tweedie, The Daily Telegraph, 12 May 2006. Accessed 17 December 2006.
  17. ^ "Chagos families win legal battle", BBC News, 23 May 2007
  18. ^ "Chagos exiles ruling overturned". BBC News, 22 October 2008
  19. ^ Note: see paragraph 35 of the decision

External links

  • Orders in Council:
    • made since October 2000.
      • Northern Ireland
    • Canada 1867–1910.
      • Alberta
      • British Columbia
      • Manitoba
      • Nova Scotia
      • Saskatchewan

order, council, confused, with, order, council, orders, council, 1807, orders, council, 1807, order, council, type, legislation, many, countries, especially, commonwealth, realms, united, kingdom, this, legislation, formally, made, name, monarch, with, advice,. Not to be confused with Order of Council For the Orders in Council of 1807 see Orders in Council 1807 An Order in Council is a type of legislation in many countries especially the Commonwealth realms In the United Kingdom this legislation is formally made in the name of the monarch by and with the advice and consent of the Privy Council King in Council but in other countries the terminology may vary The term should not be confused with Order of Council which is made in the name of the Council without royal assent Contents 1 Types usage and terminology 1 1 Prerogative orders 1 2 As statutory instruments 2 Controversial uses 2 1 Canada 2 2 United Kingdom 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksTypes usage and terminology EditTwo principal types of Order in Council exist Orders in Council whereby the King in Council exercises the royal prerogative and Orders in Council made in accordance with an Act of Parliament 1 In the United Kingdom orders are formally made in the name of the monarch by the Privy Council King in Council or Queen in Council In Canada federal Orders in Council are made in the name of the Governor General by the King s Privy Council for Canada provincial Orders in Council are of the Lieutenant Governor in Council by the provincial Executive Council In other places in name of the governor by the Executive Council Governor in Council Governor General in Council etc In New Zealand the Orders in Council undertaken by the Executive Council are required to give effect to the government s decisions Apart from Acts of Parliament Orders in Council are the main method by which the government implements decisions that need legal force 2 Prerogative orders Edit An Order in Council made under the royal prerogative is primary legislation and does not depend on any statute for its authority although an Act of Parliament may change this 3 This type has become less common with the passage of time as statutes encroach on areas that used to form part of the royal prerogative Matters which still fall within the royal prerogative and hence are regulated by prerogative Orders in Council include dealing with servants of the Crown e g standing orders for civil servants appointing heads of Crown corporations governance of British Overseas Territories making appointments in the Church of England and dealing with international relations Traditionally Orders in Council are used as a way for the prime minister to make political appointments but they can also be used to issue simple laws as a sort of decree In times of emergency a government may issue legislation directly through Orders in Council forgoing the usual parliamentary procedure 4 5 Most orders of this sort are eventually formalized according to the traditional lawmaking process if they are not revoked at the end of the emergency However in the UK this power was later superseded by a statutory power to make such Orders in Council under the Civil Contingencies Act 2004 British Orders in Council may occasionally be used to effectively reverse court decisions applicable to British Overseas Territories without involving Parliament Within the United Kingdom itself court decisions can be formally overruled only by an Act of Parliament or by the decision of a higher court on appeal In the rest of the Commonwealth they are used to carry out any decisions made by the cabinet and the executive that would not need to be approved by Parliament It was long thought that prerogative orders being primary legislation were not subject to judicial review This was reversed in the 1985 case Council of Civil Service Unions v Minister for the Civil Service which however allowed for some exceptions such as national security A given prerogative order therefore may or may not be subject to judicial review depending on its nature As statutory instruments Edit In this second case an Order in Council is merely another form of statutory instrument in the UK regulated by the Statutory Instruments Act 1946 albeit subject to more formalities than a simple statutory instrument This kind of Order in Council tends to be reserved for the most important pieces of subordinate legislation its use is likely to become more common citation needed Like all statutory instruments they may simply be required to be laid before both Houses of Parliament or they may be annulled in pursuance of a resolution of either the lower House House of Commons in the UK and Canada or House of Representatives in the other realms or the upper House House of Lords in the UK or Senate in other realms negative resolution procedure or require to be approved by a resolution of either or exceptionally both Houses affirmative resolution procedure That said the use of Orders in Council has been extended recently as the Scotland Act 1998 provides that draft Orders in Council may be laid before the Scottish Parliament in certain circumstances in the same way as they would have been laid before the Westminster Parliament From 2007 legislation put before the Welsh Assembly will be enacted through Orders in Council after following the affirmative resolution procedure An Order in Council of this type usually has the following form His Majesty in pursuance of relevant section of primary legislation is pleased by and with the advice of His Privy Council to order and it is hereby ordered as follows For most of the period from 1972 to 2007 much Northern Ireland legislation was made by Order in Council as part of direct rule This was done under the various Northern Ireland Acts 1974 to 2000 and not by virtue of the royal prerogative Under the Government of Wales Act 2006 royal assent to Measures of the National Assembly for Wales was given by Order in Council but this is not done by statutory instrument but in a form similar to that of a prerogative order 6 The National Assembly became the Senedd Welsh Parliament Welsh Senedd Cymru in 2020 at the same time gaining the competence to pass Acts of Senedd Cymru assent to which is given by letters patent without requiring the involvement of the Privy Council Controversial uses EditCanada Edit See also Canadian passport Refusal and revocation of passports After the British Empire entered World War I on the Allied side an Order in Council was made in Canada for the registration and in certain cases for the internment of aliens of enemy nationality Between 1914 and 1920 8 579 enemy aliens were detained in internment camps 7 An Order in Council made by the Brian Mulroney government on 21 November 1988 created Amex Bank of Canada a Canadian banking subsidiary of American Express although federal banking policy at the time would not ordinarily have permitted such an establishment by a foreign company 8 In July 2004 and August 2006 Orders in Council were used to deny a passport to Abdurahman Khadr a member of the Khadr family who had previously been held in detention by the United States at Guantanamo Bay on the grounds of national security The first was overturned on judicial review by the Federal Court 9 as at the time of his application national security was not included as a ground for refusal in the Canadian Passport Order 10 which was since amended to include the ground In July 2017 the government of Canada used an Order in Council to strip ex Nazi interpreter Helmut Oberlander of his Canadian citizenship 11 During the COVID 19 pandemic the government of Canada used an ongoing Order in Council to limit foreign nationals from entering Canada from the United States and other countries Additionally an Order in Council was used to impose a mandatory 14 day quarantine upon some individuals entering Canada On May 1 2020 an Order in Council was used to declare over 1500 models of firearm to be prohibited weapons in response to the 2020 Nova Scotia attacks 12 The order immediately nullified the existing registrations of ownership for all the weapons it affected making it illegal for owners to possess use transport or sell them except in a few limited circumstances 13 A second Order in Council was simultaneously passed declaring an amnesty period until April 30 2022 in which time owners of newly prohibited firearms could have them deactivated destroyed or exported to a country in which they could be legally owned 14 United Kingdom Edit Orders in Council were controversially used in 2004 to overturn a court ruling in the United Kingdom 15 that held that the exile of the Chagossians from the British Indian Ocean Territory BIOT was unlawful Initially the High Court in 2006 held that these Orders in Council were unlawful The suggestion that a minister can through the means of an order in council exile a whole population from a British Overseas Territory and claim that he is doing so for the peace order and good government of the territory is to us repugnant 16 The UK government s first appeal failed with the Court of Appeal holding that the decision had been unlawfully taken by a government minister acting without any constraint 17 However the government successfully appealed to the House of Lords which overturned the High Court and Court of Appeal decisions R v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs ex parte Bancoult No 2 18 The Law Lords decided 15 that the validity of an order in council made under the prerogative legislating for a colony was amenable to judicial review 19 Also it was not for the courts to substitute their judgement for that of the Secretary of State as to what was conducive to the peace order and good government of the BIOT The orders were not Wednesbury unreasonable on the facts given the considerations of security and cost of resettlement Finally none of the orders was open to challenge in the British courts on the ground of repugnancy to any fundamental principle relating to the rights of abode of the Chagossians in the Chagos Islands See also EditDelegated legislation Executive order United States References Edit Draft Cabinet Manual para 32 PDF Cabinet Office December 2010 Archived from the original PDF on 26 April 2012 Retrieved 31 December 2010 Orders in Council Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet 19 February 2019 Archived from the original on 12 May 2020 Retrieved 30 April 2020 Council of Civil Service Unions v Minister for the Civil Service 1985 374 at 399 per Lord Fraser of Tullybelton Home defence and emergency planning 1972 2001 PDF The National Archives November 2005 p 11 retrieved 20 November 2008 Historical use see Orders in Council 1807 For example the Order approving the NHS Redress Wales Measure 2008 Luciuk Lubomyr 1998 A Time for Atonement The Limestone Press Newman Peter C July 30 1990 The brash new kid on the block American Express Co opens Amex Bank of Canada amid controversy column Maclean s 30 July 1990 v103 n31 p33 1 Khadr v Canada Attorney General 2006 F C 727 2007 2 F C R 218 Canadian Passport Order SI 81 86 Bueckert Kate 26 July 2017 Ex Nazi interpreter Helmut Oberlander stripped of citizenship for 4th time CBC News Retrieved 4 September 2020 Tasker John Paul 1 May 2020 Trudeau announces ban on 1 500 types of assault style firearms effective immediately CBC News CBC Radio Canada Retrieved 29 December 2021 What you need to know about the Government of Canada s new prohibition on certain firearms and devices Royal Canadian Mounted Police 5 May 2020 Retrieved 29 December 2021 Order Declaring an Amnesty Period 2020 Justice Laws Website Government of Canada May 2020 Retrieved 29 December 2021 a b R Bancoult v Secretary of State For Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs 2008 UKHL 61 Britain shamed as exiles of the Chagos Islands win the right to go home Neil Tweedie The Daily Telegraph 12 May 2006 Accessed 17 December 2006 Chagos families win legal battle BBC News 23 May 2007 Chagos exiles ruling overturned BBC News 22 October 2008 Note see paragraph 35 of the decisionExternal links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Canadian Orders in Council Orders in Council UK made since October 2000 Northern Ireland Canada 1867 1910 Alberta British Columbia Manitoba Nova Scotia Saskatchewan Queen s University Canadian Orders in Council An Overview Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Order in Council amp oldid 1116288984, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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