The monarchy in Britain (not England) is not strong or powerful. In terms of political power, the British monarchy is actually quite weak. The King or Queen does little more that officiate ceremonies and serve as a rubber-stamp for the views and ideals of the British Parliament. His/her political views are largely unknown and unimportant.
As for why the institution of the monarchy remains, the laws of the United Kingdom function in such a way that a number of traditions have simply become law without an official codification. As a result, traditions in their own right have legal standing. The monarchy is one such tradition and remains because of its traditional presence.
ok i do this answer in my class and me class get answer monarchy
the government invented was Constitutional Monarchy
England was a monarchy until 1688 CE. While it was the monarchy state, parliament's power was limited by the ruler. After the Glorious Revolution of 1688, England became a constitutional monarchy and parliament had more power than the ruler.
a strong unified national state under a popular monarchy
monarchy
England was one of the first countries in Europe to develop a strong central monarchy.
A constitutional monarchy.
ok i do this answer in my class and me class get answer monarchy
No. England, which is part of the United Kingdom, is a Constitutional Monarchy.
An absolute monarchy to a constitutional monarchy.
England is a monarchy, not a republic, so it has a monarch not a president. The current monarch is Queen Elizabeth II.
England has never had a president. It is a monarchy, so it has a King or a Queen. So unless they change their system to being a republic, there will never be a president in England.
The Church of England.
England does not have Presidents. It is a monarchy.
the government invented was Constitutional Monarchy
England is a country with constitutional monarchy.
I think England would be a monarchy