Maybe a Ceremonial Monarchy Can Show the Way to a Less Powerful State
The real danger to citizens is the use of coercive government power, no matter how it’s named.

When it comes to kings and queens I agree that, as Monty Python had it regarding King Arthur, strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government. I'm a skeptic. But people seem better at dumping the forms of monarchy than at disposing of the practice. Solitary rulers still command in many countries, eschewing titles and crowns while wielding power to interfere in people's lives.
In recent generations, the British royal family evolved in a different direction, embodying crowd-pleasing pageantry while abandoning most of the political role that made the monarchy so dangerous in the past. Harmlessly satisfying an appetite for pomp while threatening nobody's liberty is a decent attribute for any institution—and one to which we should aspire for government in general.
That the British monarchy has not always been perceived as benign is apparent from some reactions in former imperial possessions to the death of Queen Elizabeth II.
"As condolences poured in from around the world after Queen Elizabeth's death, there were mixed feelings among some Africans about the monarch and her country's colonial legacy on a continent where Britain once ruled more than half the territory," Reuters reported.
Memories linger of the days of often-brutal rule by Britain over territories it controlled until the years after World War II. But much of the resentment is of imperial conduct by an elected government; the royal family itself has been shedding authority since long before Elizabeth took the throne, starting as long ago as the Magna Carta in 1215. The English civil wars of the 17th century set the tone for a monarchy that came to sign off on policies chosen by elected politicians (and unelected bureaucrats).
That's not to say the monarchy has no authority. After briefly losing the power to dissolve Parliament between elections in 2011, the crown regained it this year. A 2014 play focused on a constitutional crisis when a then-fictional King Charles III refused to give expected rubber-stamp assent to legislation. But Queen Elizabeth II continued surrendering authority in favor of a ceremonial role that could be inoffensive and even unifying to anybody who isn't a firmly committed republican.
Meanwhile political systems that rejected robes, crowns, and titles proceeded to demonstrate that isn't enough to protect against the real danger of monarchy: concentrated coercive power.
"Great Britain is a republic, with a hereditary president, while the United States is a monarchy with an elective king," the Knoxville Journal quipped in 1896. That the president at the time was Grover Cleveland, one of the less autocratic chief executives in the United States, illustrates the inherent power of an office that was still decades away from being labeled "imperial."
The 20th century then provided seemingly endless examples of absolute rulers, including Hitler, Stalin, Mussolini, Mao, and Idi Amin, who adopted very modern titles of their own choosing while exercising authority that some kings and queens of the past would have envied. Today, Belarus is ruled by "President" Alexander Lukashenko who exercises unquestioned authority.
"Lukashenko now has near absolute rule over Belarus through the construction of a vertical structure of political and personal power," Andrei Sannikov, who later publicly challenged the Belorussian dictator and was imprisoned for his troubles, wrote in 2005. "Lukashenko sits atop this arrangement, controlling the executive, legislative and judicial branches of the government. He personally appoints and dismisses not only the ministers of the central government but also local administrators at all levels."
Then there's the bizarre socialist Kim dynasty of North Korea. Without using the term "king," hereditary absolute rulers preside there amidst pageantry recognizable to devotees of traditional royalty.
"Keeping up with the Kims: North Korea's communist monarchy," The New Statesman headlined a 2018 analysis of the regime that delved into the country's status as "an impoverished garrison state with nuclear weapons, led by a succession of madmen as devious as they were dangerous."
What matters, obviously, is the character of a regime, not its terminology.
In the U.S. the presidency, for its part, continues to live up to the Knoxville Journal's 19th century snark about being "a monarchy with an elective king." Amidst growing concern over the increasing unilateral authority of the office, Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. wrote The Imperial Presidency in 1973. Decades later, after increasing concentration of power, Gene Healy revisited the problem in 2008's The Cult of the Presidency. "From popular culture to the academy to the voting booth, we curse the king, all the while pining for Camelot," Healy wrote. In 2014, F.H. Buckley argued that the country's political system had degenerated into "elective monarchy" in The Once and Future King: The Rise of Crown Government in America.
Evidence supports the warnings. Former President Trump tried to unilaterally order companies out of China and invoked the Defense Production Act to exercise extraordinary economic power. His successor, Biden, was criticized for ruling through executive orders within weeks of taking office and has yet to stop. Why should he when elective kings often enjoy popular support? Last September, almost half of respondents, Republicans and Democrats alike, told University of Virginia Center for Politics pollsters they at least somewhat agreed "it would be better for America if whoever is president could take needed actions without being constrained by Congress or the courts."
By contrast, the late Queen Elizabeth II guided a largely decorative monarchy with little power while satisfying the appetite for a national figurehead. The institution isn't without costs to taxpayers—rising costs that topped 87.5 million pounds ($101.7 million U.S.) in 2021. But it is arguably less bad than an empowered monarchy, or a popular leader with real authority, or even an elected presidency that accretes unilateral power despite warnings of the dangers. The test is whether the new wearer of the crown can follow his mother's example.
"Part of the reason Brits have found it easy to accept a system in which democracy only functions with permission from the sovereign is that we've had a ruler who was impeccably neutral," cautioned Robert Jackman for Reason. "If the monarchy were to break away from its own tradition of neutrality we might have a very different proposition."
The example of a ceremonial monarchy may offer hope for something better still. If people can be satisfied by an essentially powerless figurehead, perhaps the same treatment could be applied to the rest of government. Imagine a world in which tourists watch legislators live-action-roleplay their way through passing laws that have no authority, and then go home to live lives of their own choosing. That would mean an end, or at least reduction, in the real danger: the use of coercive power. Maybe a purely ceremonial monarchy can show us the way to a purely ceremonial state.
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The UK isn't exactly a shining example of a less powerful state. Just sayin.
Yup. Takes quite abit of gall to say that about a nation whose democratic forces put people in jail if they hurt someone's feeling on twitter.
Look, just bake the cake, ok? We're focused on weed and food trucks here.
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Compare it to its neighborhood. There's an argument to be made that the remaining monarchies are generally more liberal and more respectful of tradition than their Republican counterparts (Switzerland excepted, though Switzerland is always an exception).
I'll cop to being sympathetic to the idea of a sufficiently defanged monarchy. The British state is at least honest about what it is and whom it serves, unlike ours.
Yeah, was gonna say, the article is rather myopic. There's that big gorilla in the room which is the rest of the State Apparatus.
Maybe a purely ceremonial monarchy can show us the way to a purely ceremonial state.
If you think the mass of Congress aren't purely ceremonial figureheads for the puppet-masters behind the scenes, you're delusional. How does Biden get away with doing so much damage to the country? Easy - because the ones pulling his strings demand it.
Check out deep state conspiracy theorist over here.
Probably a seditious semi-fascist.
Smelled like insurrection to me.
America doesn't need a monarch, we've got Hollywood. We're overfilled with famous people to attend charities, lecture us, and giving out and receiving ceremonial awards.
Those in the know always take seriously the political and economic opinions of Hollywood types.
Michele Obama pretty much fills that role for us already.
If you want to end the use of coercive power by the government apply the NAP and prohibit it from initiating force.
"Maybe a Ceremonial Monarchy Can Show the Way to a Less Powerful State"
I.mean, sure, it can.
It doesn't. It hasn't in the UK. Because, like, the British monarch has been ceremonial since before the last one was born.
Seriously, WTF?
^^This^^
What was the purpose of this essay? Is there some fear that Charles will try to seize power?
Charles is literally a Plantagenet!
Dr. Jill's husband is going to attend Queen Elizabeth's funeral because she was "head of state." How many funerals of U.S. presidents have British monarchs attended? Rehoboth Beach is so lovely this time of year.
We've already bowed to the Saudi King, so this seems pretty tame in comparison.
There have been very few deaths of US Presidents. Deaths of former Presidents wouldn't count. JFK's funeral was attended by Prince Phillip on behalf of Queen Elizabeth (who was 7 months pregnant at the time). Prince Charles was at Reagan's funeral. Eisenhower's funeral maybe too. FDR was WW2 and before that the voyage would have been too long.
Well said. I'm no fan of kings and queens, but the current British version certainly seems benign enough, and may even play a useful role in unifying the country so as to avoid the kind of political polarization that the U.S. has been experiencing lately.
But I was surprised to read recently that the Queen met weekly with the Prime Minister (as the new King presumably will as well), and that the PM was forbidden, on pain of a "treason" charge, to speak publicly about what was discussed. Was the Queen more involved in actual governance than was publicly apparent? I guess we are not likely to find out.
So, how often do Biden, Pelosi, Newsom, etc. meet with Soros and the court of Davos?
We don’t know. They always meet at knight time
The UK is just as politically polarized as the US.
I'm not sure it matters all that much that it's the Prime Minister and Parliament wielding the immense power of government instead of the Monarchy. I guess you can give the British credit for limiting the powers of at least one section of their government. But beyond that, their government is even more intrusive than ours.
"Maybe a Ceremonial Monarchy Can Show the Way to a Less Powerful State"
Sure, but that example doesn't exist in the UK.
"Amidst growing concern over the increasing unilateral authority of the office, Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. wrote The Imperial Presidency in 1973.
Pretty sure Schlesinger didn't give two shits about the "increasing unilateral authority" of the Presidency. He just cared that it wasn't one of his "team" in the office at the time using that power.
Yeah but CAMELOT!!!
I agree that, as Monty Python had it regarding King Arthur, strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
What would you prefer, an anarcho-syndicalist commune where we take turns acting as a sort of executive-officer-of-the-week?
I tend to trust women who live in ponds more than our current swamp creatures.
As long as all the decisions of that officer are ratified at a special bi-weekly meeting by a majority in....
Watery Tart or Deep State? One of them has to be the kingmaker! As for the Syndicaliss—I think they have a Caucus in the House these days…
Ah, Reason still suffering from the delusion that somehow the political system determines how society operates.
Folks, it's the other way around.
The political system is a reflection of society and culture. If you want more libertarian government, you need to create a more libertarian society and culture first.
That means that people need to understand how to operate in free markets, they need to have a personal code of responsibility and morality that allows them to function without government interference, and they need to be willing to stand up for themselves.
In the US, those attributes have largely been lost from society and culture. Government was responsible for that indirectly, through the creation of the welfare state, a massive bureaucracy, and the takeover of the educational system. But now that society operates that way, people aren't going to vote for anybody who is going to change it. You first need to change society and culture.
That means that people need to understand how to operate in free markets, they need to have a personal code of responsibility and morality that allows them to function without government interference, and they need to be willing to stand up for themselves.
Perhaps some founding document that is largely an instruction manual on how to limit government which gives it a few, narrowly divided enumerated powers, and a short, easy to read bill of rights is in order.
Narrowly defined*
Did you bother to read at all what I said?
It is not laws and constitutions that cause a society to be libertarian; rather, a libertarian society will adopt libertarian laws and constitutions.
As we have seen over the last century, progressives and socialists have no problem completely reading whatever they want to into a plainly and clearly written Constitution.
If you want to make the US more libertarian, you need to start by changing the culture; winning political battles is pointless.
"...If you want to make the US more libertarian, you need to start by changing the culture; winning political battles is pointless."
Nice fantasy, zero evidence.
We had Trump, who did more to advance liberty than any POTUS in a century, and he did so by winning a political battle.
Evidence, not wishes.
"Ah, Reason still suffering from the delusion that somehow the political system determines how society operates..."
I think you're reading too much systemic direction into this; seems more a case of a particular TDS-addled shit pile (Tuccille) grasping at straws in the hopes of deflecting attention from his assholish opposition to Trump.
'See, maybe instead of Trump, we can follow the Brits (who really don't have anything like free speech, but ignore that)...'
Sovereignty comes from the people, not a king. It's way past time for the UK to abolish the monarchy. I guess they'll have to change their name then though (the K stands for Kingdom).
Libertarians should be happy that the royal family's 30 billion dollar estate is exempt from the UK's 40% inheritance tax on properties valued over 377K. You would think Progressives might have a problem with that though.
Is this the vote for the senile president strategy?
"Enfeebled" was the exact term, I believe.
At least they're getting a real-time refresher from the history classes they failed on what happens when you have an "enfeebled" leader in charge.
Tuccille, as with other TDS-addled shit piles, is still hoping to find redemption for his fucking moronic focus on personality by grasping at any straw he can finds.
Stuff your head up your ass, Tuccille; your TDS wants company.
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The real danger to citizens is the use of coercive government power, no matter how it’s named.
How convenient and utterly 'libertarian' to be able to wave away any notion of personal responsibility. Sure, the most likely reason to get shot in Chicago, by far, is because you're a felon who associates with felons but let's pretend, and I've got no love for the administration, that Mayor Groot and the Goon squad are the ones solely responsible for all the shootings.
No wonder the Mises caucus is driving you bitter clingers back to your basements.
Trump "invoked the Defense Production Act "
OMG he made factories make face mask and other medical equipment during a pandemic. I don't know if Reason was in favor of this at the time but i know many liberals were screaming for such action and I at the time was also in favor of this since clearly China was not going to help. I know liberals who even wanted Trump to bring in the army to lock everything down and test people. the same people that claimed Trump would declare martial law if he became president were goading him to do so for the Pandemic. I'm glad he didn't fall for that trap
I thought all the monarchists fled to Canada.
"...the royal family itself has been shedding authority since long before Elizabeth took the throne, starting as long ago as the Magna Carta in 1215. "
Henry VIII : "Magna Carta? We don't need no stinkin' Magna Carta!"
The Euro Royal Pedophile Houses are The Globalists , and have been pretending to be a "ceremonial monarchy" .
This writer is a Globalist Disinformation Gaslighting Moron .
>"Evidence supports the warnings. Former President Trump tried to unilaterally order companies out of China and invoked the Defense Production Act to exercise extraordinary economic power."
And of course THAT is your go-to example... sigh
"Maybe a Ceremonial Monarchy Can Show the Way to a Less Powerful State"
We had a POTUS who was about as good as any for the last hundred years in cutting the power of the state, but TDS-addled piles of shit like Tuccille had an adolescent focus on personality instead of policies, and ended up with droolin' Joe.
And now the asshole is looking to England for salvation? Stuff your TDS up your ass, Tuccille.
Name one thing Trump cut.
You stupid TDS-addled pile of shit, you've been handed the evidence many times and you continue (as you do with 'climate change') to return, repeat the same lies and have your faced rubbed in it:
1) DeVos
2) Gorsuch
3) Kavanuagh
4) Ajit Pai, end net price fixing
5) Major reduction in the growth of regulations.
6) Dow +35%
7) Unemployment at 3.0% (!)
8) The US Manufacturing Index soared to a 33 year high
9) Got repeal of the national medical insurance mandate.
10) Withdrawal from Paris climate agreement.
11) Not sure about the tax reform; any "reform" that leaves me subisdizing Musk's customers is not what I hoped for. Let Musk run a company for once. But cutting taxes is good.
12) Pulled support for the $13 billion Hudson Tunnel project.
13) More than 16,000 jobs have been cut from the federal leviathan
14) MIGHT have a deal to de-nuke NK.
15) Killed moonbeam’s choo-choo
16) Supported and signed First Step Act.
And finally:
17) Still making lefties steppin and fetchin like their pants is on fire and their asses are catchin'
To repeat, I did not vote for the guy; he's a blow-hard and a loose cannon, but by accident or design, he's doing better than any POTUS I can remember.
Fuck off and die, asshole; make the world a better place.
Oh, and:
"...first nine months of the Obama administration, when the federal workforce grew by 68,000” https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/how-the-trump-era-is-changing-the-federal-bureaucracy/2017/12/30/8d5149c6-daa7-11e7-b859-fb0995360725_story.html?utm_term=.25b07160a26e
I'd suggest you stuff your TDS up your ass, but with an erroneously enlarged head such as yours already there, it's doubtful there's room.
Eat shit and die, asswipe.
Plus we already pay hundreds of useless salaries for congress/senate etc.
Do we really need someone who is purely ceremonial that also takes a tax payer salary? It really is absurd when you think about it.
Legislators aren't pointless, though ours are certainly inept. That money needs to be spent, it just should be spent on different legislators.
Well, somebody has to manage our liberty for us.
There is a case to be made that monarchy is better than democracy. A king or a queen trains from birth to be a ruler, has an incentive to leave the nation in good shape for their heirs, and you may occasionally end up with someone who is wise and fair. In a democracy pretty much only power-mad people will seek the throne, and they have no incentive to worry about things beyond the next election.
A 100 year moratorium on new laws would be a good start, and save lots of money. It's not like we have too few laws right now.
There is a case - there's a case for communism too.
It just ignores the evidence from the sum total of history that those things that are needed for a 'good ruler' don't actually happen. What happens is some greasy oil who can talk good talk to those who are persuadable and has an eagerness to chop the heads off of those who dissent get to the top. Every time.
you may occasionally end up with someone who is wise and fair
Yeah, that's a pretty big reach to equivocate monarchism with democracy. I'm not saying one is inherently better than the other but your "Brutal oppression punctuated by intermittent benevolence is better than spastic quasi-benevolence punctuated by dysfunctional oppression." is neither accurate nor convincing.
There is a case to be made that monarchy is better than democracy. A king or a queen trains from birth to be a ruler, has an incentive to leave the nation in good shape for their heirs, and you may occasionally end up with someone who is wise and fair.
This certainly looks good on paper. Like other ideologies we've tried.
There were plenty of good kings, but for the best of them, all a historian can write is "Nothing happened", so they aren't prominent in history. Historians celebrate the ones that won wars and forced more people and land under their rule, but these were mostly the medium-bad ones. Historians can also write much about the very bad ones, but skip over the good ones with just a few lines.