Advice (constitutional)
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In constitutional law, Advice is formal, usually binding instruction given by a constitutional officer of state to another. Heads of state in particular act on the basis of Advice¹ issued by governments and prime ministers. For example, Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom formally appoints Ministers of the Crown on the advice of the British Prime Minister.
Among the most prominent forms of Advice offered are:
- Advice to formally dissolve parliament.
- Advice to deliver formal statements, such as a Speech from the throne.
Footnotes
- To indicate that what is being received is not merely an informal suggestion but a formal constitutional instruction which potentially may be obligatory to follow, some though not all constitutional writers capitalise the word, writing it as Advice.
- Article 13.2.2. of Bunreacht na hÉireann (1937)
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