Privy Council of Shingoryeo

From NationStates Sports Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Privy Council of Shingoryeo
Her Majesty's Privy Council of Shingoryeo
신고려추밀원
AbbreviationPrivy Council, PCS
Predecessor
Formation1770
PurposeCouncil of State
Membership
28
20 quorum
Official language
Korean
Monarch
Christine II
(Queen-in-Council)
Sir. Heo Dong-Soo
(Since 2065)
Dame. Annette Morse-Kleinman
Websitewww.privycouncil.que/

The Privy Council of Shingoryeo is a formal advisory body to the monarch of Quebec and Shingoryeo. The council membership are led by Monarch of Quebec and Shingoryeo, who chairs the council, the Lord President, who often chairs meetings instead of the Queen and is considered a major figure of the Council, and consists of Crown-appointed members of political, economic, diplomatic and military experience and expertise. The Privy Council was founded in 1770 as a successor of the Shingoryeoite State and Inteachan privy councils, and is considered a historical institution symbolising the nation's transition from an early modern state to an empire, and then a contemporary state.

The primary function of the Privy Council of Shingoryeo is to consult and be consulted by the cabinet, which is also led by the Prime Minister in his role as Lord President of the Council, on proposed legislation before the said cabinet submits a law. Traditionally, the Privy Council's Judiciary Committee, which consists of two of the House of Lords members who consist the Judicial Committee of the House of Lords, advises on the legality of the proposal, though the advice taken by the committee presents as a matter of judicial advice, not a final word. In addition to its primary capacity as an advisory board for the cabinet, the Privy Council also advises the sovereign to grant royal assent, which usually involves the signature of the Monarch, the Lord-President, the Prime Minister, the Clerk and the fifth member of Council, to Acts of Parliament, and Privy Council Order and Royal Charters that could be used to regulate public institutions, and updated or renewed statuses to local bodies and their authorities.

Additionally, the Privy Council is the body that advises on the execution of the Royal Prerogative. The Royal Prerogative, in which powers can be exercised by the monarch without the approval of Parliament, is issued with the signature of the sovereign, the Prime Minister and three members of the Council, with the general line of expectation that the Lord President sign it as one of the three Council members. Due to the powers it authorises the Prerogative is rarely used and is considered to be ceremonial in nature for the most part, though exceptions have existed with Kingston Incident of 1997, when several thousand members of provincial Police, Provincial Cabinet and far-right convoy of counter-protestors led by the Premier of Mahan was arrested and executed on the aftermath of their suppression of the legally-authorised General Strike, being the last one. Matters involving the Royal Family are not eligible to be exercised by the prerogative powers as well to avoid conflict with the Crown-related interests.

Council protocols are secret in lifetime, with the files usually made available after seventy years. Those summoned to the Privy Council of Shingoryeo are generally appointed for life, with exceptions to be made where the member resigns or is removed under various grounds. Unlike most other state councils of similar stature and function, the PCS is mandated to avoid excessive politicisation, which means that the number of current and former cabinet ministers are set to be limited.

It is due to this reason that most Lord Presidents of the Privy Council, who are appointed, not elected, outside of federal politics with terms usually lasting no more than eight years. Some notable exceptions do exist, however, with the most notable example being the previous Lord President, Sir. Kim Seung-Yin, who was the Prime Minister from 2039 to 2044, and was appointed to the role under his successor, Arsene Pineau Kim following the 2071 Quebec and Shingoryeo federal election. Due to his status as the Lord Clerk, he was ranked first among former Prime Ministers, which number three, over Kim and Ellington, his two successors respectively and who would normally take precedence due to their recency in the position. Those holding Membership of the Council are accorded the use of post-nominal letters and an honorific style 'Right Honourable', though some Councillors hold higher titles.

Membership

List of Members

The Order of Precedence places the order of priority on 1) Sovereign, 2) Lord President, 3) Clerk, 4) Prime Minister, and 5) any number of past Prime Ministers appointed to the position. Order of Precedence for remaining members goes by year of appointment, regardless of the member's respective position and status.

Members of the 269th Privy Council of Shingoryeo (2069 - 2070)
Order of Precedence Portrait Name Position Birth Year Era (Year of Appointment) Classification Note of Merit
1 Christine II Sovereign of Quebec and Shingoryeo 2020 2041 Royal
2 Sir. Heo Dong-Soo Lord President 1991 2059 Research and Academics (2059-)
3 Error creating thumbnail: Dame. Annette Morse-Kleinman Clerk
Chair, Quebec Foundation
1990 2043 Education (2048-)
Diplomacy (2043-48)
4 File:Eugene Levy 2011.jpg Lucien Azagury-Zovaco Prime Minister 2012 2060 Head of Government (2063-)
Politics (2060-)
5 Error creating thumbnail: Irene Kweon Binnington 2014 2054 Head of Government (2059-)
Politics (2054-)
Policy (Special Appointment, 2054-56)
Former Prime Minister of Quebec and Shingoryeo
6 File:Howard K. Koh.jpg Arsene Pineau Kim 2001 2039 Head of Government (2044-)
Politics (2039-)
Former Prime Minister of Quebec and Shingoryeo
7 Etienne McMillan Chair, Judiciary Committee
Member, Judicial Committee of the House of Lords
1990 2027 Judiciary (2034-)
Research and Academics (2027-)
Former President of Farrer University
8 File:정희선위키백과.jpg Denise Yeun Chair, Royal Shingoryeoite Society 1987 2031 Research and Academics (2031-) Former Chair, Shingoryeoite Academy of Natural Sciences and Engineering
9 Error creating thumbnail: Tenoch Calderon Etlelooaat Chair, Intergovernmental Committee
State Secretary of Intergovernmental Affairs
Premier of Inteachan autonomous province
2029 2067 Politics (2067-)

List of Privy Council Lord President

List of the Lord Presidents of Her Majesty's Privy Council
Number Portrait Name Historic Position Year of Appointment to Council Year of Appointment to Presidency Note of Merit
[[]]
File:Governor General Roland Michener at Alma College graduation ceremonies 1972 (crop).jpg Sir. Horace McMillan
(1903-1994)
Peer, House of Lords, Crossbench
MP for St. Pierre's, Moogoongwha Party
1956 1964
File:Wassily Leontief 1973.jpg Henri Maltseff
(1898-1993)
President, Royal Shingoryeoite Society
Laureate, 1967 Royal Society Prize for Economics
1954 1972
Sir. Byeon Sang-Hyeon
(1927-2029)
Peer, House of Lords, Moogoongwha Party
Chair, Industrial Pension Fund of Shingoryeo
1965 1979
File:Peter Lougheed - Premier of Alberta - 1983.jpg Howard Normandin
(1925-2016)
Premier of Nord-Est (1968-1989) 1971 1990
File:Jack Layton-cr bl (cropped).jpg Marian Lecavalier
(1929-2007)
Prime Minister of Quebec and Shingoryeo (1989-2002) 1978 2002
File:160824 Rhyu Si-min.png Alanis Jaures-Park
(1958-2051)
Peer, House of Lords, Shingoryeoite Liberals
Chair, Strathcona Trust
Editor-in-chief, The Taegukgi
2003 2007
File:Bob Rae 01.jpg Albert D. Cohen
(1938-2036)
High Commissioner to the Commonwealth
Chair, Quebec Foundation
2000 2017
File:Governor JB Pritzker official portrait 2019 (crop).jpg Raymond Lemoureux-Lasker
(1986-2051)
Peer, House of Lords, Shingoryeoite Liberals
Chair, Kingston Board of Trade
Jurist
2029 2033
File:Moon Jae-in (2017-10-01) cropped.jpg Sir. Kim Seung-Yin
(1976-2065)
Prime Minister of Quebec and Shingoryeo (2039-44) 2020 2044
File:Pierre Mauroy 1-1.jpg Francois Khan-Millette
(1996-)
Chair, National Industrial Negotiations Board
Mayor of Equinox Hill
President, Ironworkers' Union of Quebec and Shingoryeo
2042 2050