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== Queen of Australia v British Monarch ==


== Name ==
As Skyring points out, section 2 of the Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act 1900 (UK) says: "The provisions of this Act referring to the Queen shall extend to Her Majesty’s heirs and successors ''in the sovereignty of the United Kingdom''." However, this merely highlights that the Commonwealth Constitution was enacted by the British Parliament, and was intended to make the Federation of Australia binding on the British monarchs. In the Commonwealth Constitution, there is only reference made to "the Queen".


Hello all
In the Royal Style and Titles Act 1953 (Cth), the Commonwealth Parliament declared that the monarch in relation to Australia is to be referred to as "Queen of Australia and Her other Realms and Territories": cf. s 2. As far as I have been taught, "the Queen" in Australia is a distinct legal entity from "the Queen" in the United Kingdom. The succession rules to the Crown are the same as they are in the United Kingdom, being set out by the Act of Settlement 1701 (UK) s 1, and received at the time of European settlement. However, due to the Australia Acts 1986 (UK & Cth) s1, any changes by the UK Parliament to the law of succession to the throne will not take effect in Australia. Thus, it is legally possible to have different monarchs in Australia and the United Kingdom. In this respect, the current Australian monarch might currently be the same as the United Kingdom monarch, but they should (and are) treated as distinct entities.
I have tried to rewrite this section from a more neutral POV. I have replaced the following sentence: "This and terms such as "Commonwealth Government" were used by the government itself until the ] implemented a policy of using the term "Government of Australia" as a means of blurring the distinctions between state and Commonwealth governments in an attempt to increase federal power" with the more neutral and factual sentence: "The term "Australian Government" was preferred by Robert Menzies in the 1960s and was officially introduced by the Whitlam government in 1973." The problem with the original sentence was that it was a political interpretation of the reason for the change in name sourced to one writer Anne Twomey. Moreover, the cited page of this source is referring specifically to the use of the term "Queen of Australia" in the Royal Styles and Titles Act. Other sources note that the Menzies government in the 1960s used the term Australian Government frequently and that the term was adopted to avoid confusion with the British Commonwealth. Happy to discuss. ] (]) 07:04, 28 February 2024 (UTC)


:I disagree with your summary of Twomey's argument. Under "Confusion and Reality" she firstly discusses the confusion about whether the the Royal Styles and Titles Act applied to the states due to the use of the ambiguous term "Australia". She then states "The Whitlam government, however, had a policy of using the term 'Australia' rather than 'Commonwealth' as a means of glossing over the differences between the Commonwealth and the States and attempting to aggregate power to the Commonwealth. Thus it was later argued that the 'Queen of Australia' must be advised by her 'Australian' Ministers..."
I refer you to: P Hanks, P Keyzer & J Clarke ''Australian Constitutional Law: materials and commentary'' 7th edn (Sydney: Butterworths, 2004) pp. 464-465.
:She does not state that the government had this policy "so that" the Queen would only consult Commonwealth ministers in relation to the states. She states the government had this policy and "thus it was later argued" that the Queen should only consult Commonwealth ministers. Your wording implies that the government had this policy in order to support arguments in relation to the Queen, where that was only part of a broader desire to increase Commonwealth power. This is seen in the first sentence, where the glossing of the terms "Commonwealth" and "Australia" in relation to the Royal Titles Act is an assertion of that Act's applicability to the states in a way that doesn't involve the issue of whether the Queen is to consult with British ministers regarding the states. ] (]) 06:36, 2 March 2024 (UTC)
::The problem is that whoever first wrote this sentence has taken an isolated sentence of Twomey out of context to imply that the Whitlam government's decision to adopt the term Government of Australia was a crude attempt to increase Cth power at the expense of the states. One needs to read the whole book and Justice McHughs introduction. Remember, we are talking about 1973. The question was whether when acting in relation to Australia (the Cth and states) the Queen should act on the advice of her British ministers or Australian ministers (Cth and State). Many state governments were lobbying the Queen to say that she should act on the advice of State Ministers in relation to state matters. The British Foreign Office was of the view that the Queen should act on the advice of her British Ministers and that British interests should override the interests of the Australian states. Buckingham Palace didn't want to be put in the situation where they were given conflicting advice from the Cth government and state governments so were happy to agree with the FO that the Queen should receive advice from the British FO. Whitlam argued that the Queen should be advised by the GG (who was in turn advised by the PM) on matters concerning the Cth and the states but that the GG would act on the advice of the states in matters concerning the states. The issue was only resolved by the Australia Acts of 1986. My preferred solution would be to drop the whole discussion because it is too technical and complicated for a high level article like this. All that needs to be said is that the Whitlam government officially adopted the term Government of Australia in 1973. ] (]) 10:22, 2 March 2024 (UTC)
:::I think you are adding too much of your own analysis. I think the the plain reading is the page is that Twomey is suggesting that the policy of the government was to use the term Government of Australia, at least in part in an attempt to increase federal power over the states. The page cited belongs to chapter 9, which discusses the Royal Styles and Titles Act, not the dispute you are talking about conflicting sources of advice to the Queen. There is nothing in the surrounding chapter that suggests that the policy change was made in relation to the dispute as to which ministers the Queen should seek advice from as the sentence currently suggests. I think we only risk getting too technical and complicated if we attempt to artificially seek to limit what Twomey is suggesting in the source. ] (]) 12:50, 2 March 2024 (UTC)
::::I doubt that Anne Twomey is so ingorant to think that the Cth government can increase its power over the states simply by rebranding itself the Australian Government: to do that it would have to gain a new head of power by referendum or convince the HCA to interpret an existing head of power more widely. Indeed Twomey doesn't mention the term "Government of Australia" or "Australian Government". Her examples are of "Queen of Australia" and "Australian ministers" and refer to the government's attempts to persuade Buckingham Palace to rely on the advice of the Australian government as opposed to the British Government in matters pertaining to the Australian states. You will note that I changed the page reference to pp 113-14 in which Twomey gives the examples of the seabed petitions and the Royal Styles and Titles Act and covers the broader point of British/Australin relations. The Whitlam government introduced the term "Government of Australia" in order to promote an Australian national identity in contradistinction to a British one. ] (]) 08:18, 3 March 2024 (UTC)
:::::What do you therefore suggest Twomey means in her paragraph on pg 113?. It begins with explaining that the application of the Royal Styles and Titles Act to the states is confusing, as the government used the term "Australia" instead of "Commonwealth of Australia and its territories". Directly following this, she states: "The Whitlam government, however, had a policy of using the term 'Australia' rather than 'Commonwealth' as a means of glossing over the differences between the Commonwealth and the States and attempting to aggregate power to the Commonwealth. Thus it was later argued that the 'Queen of Australia' must be advised by her 'Australian' Ministers..." It seems very unlikely that Twomey is suggesting that the phrase "Australia" was used in the Royal Styles and Titles Act solely in order to convince the British to transfer authority to the Commonwealth as that act had nothing to do with them. It seems far more likely that Twomey is referring to a general policy of the government that was also used in relation to the British.
:::::Also, I think your identification of the High Court interpreting powers more broadly is exactly how the use of the phrase "Australian Government" could increase the power of the federal government. Whitlam was relying on the newly interpreted "nationhood" power for the Royal Styles Act and was instrumental in popularising the expansive view of s 51 powers that was ultimately taken up by the court. An assertion of the federal government with the whole of Australia and not just the "Commonwealth" could lead to a more expansive interpretation of powers. Twomey could also be simply referring to a non-legal assertion of the importance and authority of the government to act in areas not traditionally seen as a federal responsibility.
:::::Additionally, if a source states that the Whitlam government introduced the term "Government of Australia" in order to promote a distinct Australian identity, that should be added to the page to avoid NPOV, but it shouldn't be used to give a restricted view of the Twomey source. That would involving favouring one source over another. ] (]) 09:58, 3 March 2024 (UTC)
::::::I think we are getting into constitutional matters rather than sources. I have reworded the sentence to focus on the actual use of the term "Government of Australia". I have added a source, John Curran's The Power of Speech. Entrenching the term Australian Government in legislation was inextricably linked to the whole "new nationalism" policy of the Whitlam government which was aimed at getting rid of "colonial relics" and forging a new Australian identity which wasn't based on race or subservience to Britain. But it's a long story which doesn't really belong here. Let me know if you have problems with the wording. ] (]) 10:36, 4 March 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Thanks for your edit. I’m happy with it. ] (]) 02:44, 6 March 2024 (UTC)


Hello all, apologies for the abrupt changes I am new to Misplaced Pages. I added the formal "HM Government in the Commonwealth of Australia" due to the Commonwealth Government being the Government of a Commonwealth realm, so I believe it is appropriate for it to be addressed in its formal style . Although it is used sparsely, I see no good reason why it shouldn't be addressed as such (see Government of Canada, Government of New Zealand). It is addressed as such in documents such as:
Thus, please stop changing "Queen of Australia" to "British Monarch". - ] 02:51, 25 May 2005 (UTC)
Agreement between His Majesty's Government in the Commonwealth of Australia and the German government regarding the release of property, rights and interests of German nationals (1944)


Trade Agreement between Australia and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (1932)
:This is basic stuff, but irrelevant. The Queen is styled the Queen of Australia, by Act of Parliament. Agreed. However, no Act may over-ride the Constitution, and the context within the article is that the Queen is a part of Parliament, as mentioned in Section 1 of the Constitution. ''1. The legislative power of the Commonwealth shall be vested in a Federal Parliament, which shall consist of the Queen, a Senate, and a House of Representatives, and which is herein-after called "The Parliament," or "The Parliament of the Commonwealth."'' I am not aware of any other Act or Regulation that makes the rather odd claim that the Queen is a part of Parliament.


Australian - New Zealand Agreement (1944)
:I take your point that the Covering Clauses, which describe all provisions referring to the Queen (Victoria) of the Constitution as ''extending to Her Majesty's heirs and successors in the sovereignty of the United Kingdom'' are no longer able to be modified by the British Parliament, but neither have they been modified by the Commonwealth. Furthermore, within the Constitution itself, the note to the Schedule directly refers to the usage of Queen Victoria by saying that ''the name of the King or Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland for the time being is to be substituted from time to time.'' Only we the people may amend those particular words, and we have not done so.


I believe it would be appropriate to add in the lead or the section regarding GG and Royal information.
:It is quite clear that within the normal governmental processes of the Commonwealth, the Queen, in that delightful description "Our Sovereign Lady, Queen Elizabeth II", is the Queen of Australia. Nobody disputes this. However, I say that in this precise meaning within the Constitution of the Queen as being a constituent part of the Parliament, and specifically stated as such in the article, the Queen is the Queen of the United Kingdom, because neither the Covering Clauses nor the Constitution itself has been amended to say otherwise.


Happy to discuss <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 04:40, 23 March 2024 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:I am not trying to make this a big deal. Quite frankly, I am picking at trivial details here. It is another one of those arcane and obsolete details of the Constitution that has never been amended because nobody thinks it necessary and it's such a bloody pain to change the thing anyway. Nevertheless, I pick at trivia because that is what I like doing, may God have mercy on my soul, and it amuses me to see people getting all hot and bothered and twisted up in knots when they can't provide a good clear verifiable source to throw in my nit-picking face.


:You are talking about antiquated usages from the 1930s and 1940s which even then were rarely used. The official name of the Australian Government is the Government of the Commonwealth of Australia. This is the name in the Australin constitution. However, Misplaced Pages favours common usage which is the Australian Government or Federal Government or Commonwealth Government. The policy is ]. Another editor has added your suggested alternative name to the Name section of the article where it logically belongs. However, I still think we need reliable secondary sources to establish that this was ever the official name of the government. ] ] (]) 04:53, 23 March 2024 (UTC)
:Having said all of the above, I think it has been made amply clear that Misplaced Pages does not exist for me to amuse myself at the expense of self-important fools, and I shall not continue to do so, nor attempt to modify the article to reflect nit-picking accuracy, rather than "close enough is good enough." ] 05:06, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

==Vote on contents of ]==

As previously advised (and not opposed by anyone), I am now proposing a formal vote on the following proposition:

*'''That in ], and in all other articles dealing with Australia's system of government, it should be stated that:
:'''1. Australia is a constitutional monarchy and a federal parliamentary democracy
:'''2. Australia's head of state is Queen Elizabeth II, Queen of Australia
:'''3. Under the Constitution, almost all of the Queen's functions are delegated to and exercised by the Governor-General, as the Queen's representative.
*'''That any edit which states that (a) Australia is a republic, (b) the Governor-General is Australia's head of state, or (c) Australia has more than one head of state, will be reverted, and that such reversions should not be subject to the three-reversions rule.
*'''Edits which say that named and relevant persons (eg politicians, constitutional lawyers, judges) disagree with the above position, and which quote those persons at reasonable length, are acceptable, provided proper citation is provided and the three factual statements are not removed.'''

], who has argued for a contrary position, was given an opportunity to present an alternative position but declined to do so.

:My position was stated previously - namely that normal Misplaced Pages processes are simple, adequate, and easily understood by all. You archived it, Adam. Thanks a lot. ] 05:13, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

:::Voting to determine the consensus is a normal Misplaced Pages process in cases where other methods have not worked. Sorry if it isn't as much fun as arguing endlessly. -] 05:16, May 25, 2005 (UTC)

::::It takes two to make an argument. Adam, for example, advised everyone to ignore and revert me without comment, but if you check, his participation is frequent and voluminous. Presumably he enjoys the process. ] 05:53, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

:::There ''five'' pages of archives on this matter, indicating a discussion which is many times longer than the article. If your proposal is in there somewhere, please find it and copy it here. Thanks, -] 05:18, May 25, 2005 (UTC)

::::I did. You just responded to it. I stated it last night as part of the discussion and Adam shunted it into those five pages of archives. Be fair, please. I have amended the voting headings to reflect this, seeing as how Adam's proposal is aimed squarely at me. ] 05:53, 25 May 2005 (UTC)
:::::I don't see any proposal about your preferred wording to describe the head of state roles of the Queen and the Governor General. Sorry for being so stupid. Please copy that proposal here again. Thanks, -] 06:22, May 25, 2005 (UTC)
::::::My position on that is that as an editor my personal opinion doesn't matter. I have stated this numerous times. ] 06:30, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

He made no proposal. ] 05:50, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

Be fair, please. I stated my position - namely that there should be no change to existing Misplaced Pages policies - and you ignored it despite posting several times including in this very call for votes that I have a contrary position. I think that having the voting heading to reflect both my position and the reality of a vote to disagree with your proposal is fair and reasonable. ] 06:30, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

I am posting a notice advising of this vote at ] and at ]. I propose that the vote remain open for 48 hours from now (2.30pm AEST 25 May), and that ten votes be required to produce a valid outcome, but I am open to other suggestions on this. ] 04:46, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

:Seeing as though the vote is not contrary to "existing Misplaced Pages procedures", I cannot see the reason for the revised vote titles. I support Adam's proposal, and will vote in favour, but I would first like to see the vote titles reflect what the vote is actually for. --] 09:24, 25 May 2005 (UTC)
::Thank you Adam.--] 09:37, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

:::Thanks. I've re-worded it. ] 09:44, 25 May 2005 (UTC)
::::And so the ''agent provocateur'' reveals himself&#8230; Pray, why must you continue your diversionary and disruptive ways? All have recognised you for what you are, and yet you continue. As the saying goes, &#8216;put up, or shut up&#8217;.--] 09:55, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

:::::This is pathetic. Not an ounce of fair play. What a shambles. ] 11:43, 25 May 2005 (UTC)
----

'''Votes for new Misplaced Pages policy stated above:'''
#] ] 07:25, 25 May 2005 (UTC)
#] 09:37, 25 May 2005 (UTC)
#] 10:45, 25 May 2005 (UTC)
#] 14:26, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

'''Votes against stated policy:'''

# I find Skyring's arguments unconvincing, but conduct should go through dispute resolution, not ad-hoc rulings. ] ] 13:09, 25 May 2005 (UTC)
#:Except, this is a matter of ''content''. ] 13:13, 25 May 2005 (UTC)
#::The idea of the factual contents of an article being subjected to terms like this is almost Orwellian. ] ] 14:38, 25 May 2005 (UTC)
#:::Have you reviewed the pertinent material? ] 22:13, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

'''Neutral'''
# As this is up in front of the ArbCom. Can the vote be delayed until they decide if they wish to hear it. It is pointless to do this and have an ArbCom ruling on the same issue. ] 09:38, 25 May 2005 (UTC)
#: I think that if four arbitrators read through one or two sections from the talk page and one or two edit diffs offered by each of the two parties, then, all four voted that the proposal seemed reasonable; and following that the needed support votes being attained &mdash; then the Committee can make it policy-as-in-remedy, instead of merely ritualegalistically going through all the RFAr motions. ] 10:25, 25 May 2005 (UTC)
# I agree with ]. ] and ] have picked this up so far. Best to let the process run. If ] thought it worth taking to ArbCom, I'll support that. --] (]) 12:47, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

'''Delayed votes'''
#It's time to move this to the next level, whatever that is. -] 10:57, May 25, 2005 (UTC)
#:Okay? ] 13:18, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

==Requests for arbitration==
I think that a more appropriate way to solve this given the ongoing nature of the dispute and the unwillness of Skyring to reach a resolution would be a request for arbitration. I have made a ] to prepare the case and will move it to ] when the parties have agreed to arbitraion and made their respective cases.--] 05:39, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

I think this will just lead to further weeks of pointless circular argument. But your'e welcome to try. ] 05:48, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

Interested editors please direct all comments to ], I have requested arbitration to get this underway. --] 06:40, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

Who are the members of the ArbCom? Are any of them Australian? Do any of them know anything about Australian history or politics? Are they really going to read through all the reams of circular argument that Skyring's trolling has forced upon us? I'm not opposed to arbitration in principle, but I want some assurances that the arbitrators have some knowledge of what they are arbitrating, and also that this will not just lead to further weeks of pointless argument over Skyring's crackpot theories, which (I point out) have found no support whatever among Australian Wikipedians. How much more cumbersome process do we have to go through to deal with one crank? ] 10:34, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

:] is a member of the ArbCom, and has already offered an opinion at the RfA page - but has said she would stand down if any should challenge her involvement--] 10:43, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

Ambi and David Gerard are both Australian Arbitrators. I tried to make it abundantly clear that there is little to no support for Skyrings position, so hopefully it can be a painless process--] 11:06, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't recall any of Skyring's edits ever being supported by any other editor. Anyway, if you think the ArbCom can deal with this in a satisfactory way reasonably quickly, I have no objection. There is the advantage that their determination will be "official" and thus carry more weight than the results of a poll, given Skyring's expressed contempt for majority opinion, and indeed for anyone's opinion except his own. ] 11:12, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

Hmmm. How many times have I said that my opinion doesn't matter? When will it sink in that I mean what I say? And if you could just back up that "expressed contempt" with a verifiable quote...? No? I didn't think you could. ] 11:52, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

Verifiable source for what <u>this time</u> ? Which ''expressed tautology'' are you demanding be verified this time? ] 12:05, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

Even if the arbitrators are not Australian, it shouldn't matter, and it might actually be a plus because they'd be neutral. I'm not fully neutral because I'm an Australian ex-pat (no, I'm not an arbitrator), but now that this is going to arbitration, my opinion probably doesn't matter right now. --]] 13:56, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

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Name

Hello all I have tried to rewrite this section from a more neutral POV. I have replaced the following sentence: "This and terms such as "Commonwealth Government" were used by the government itself until the Whitlam government implemented a policy of using the term "Government of Australia" as a means of blurring the distinctions between state and Commonwealth governments in an attempt to increase federal power" with the more neutral and factual sentence: "The term "Australian Government" was preferred by Robert Menzies in the 1960s and was officially introduced by the Whitlam government in 1973." The problem with the original sentence was that it was a political interpretation of the reason for the change in name sourced to one writer Anne Twomey. Moreover, the cited page of this source is referring specifically to the use of the term "Queen of Australia" in the Royal Styles and Titles Act. Other sources note that the Menzies government in the 1960s used the term Australian Government frequently and that the term was adopted to avoid confusion with the British Commonwealth. Happy to discuss. Aemilius Adolphin (talk) 07:04, 28 February 2024 (UTC)

I disagree with your summary of Twomey's argument. Under "Confusion and Reality" she firstly discusses the confusion about whether the the Royal Styles and Titles Act applied to the states due to the use of the ambiguous term "Australia". She then states "The Whitlam government, however, had a policy of using the term 'Australia' rather than 'Commonwealth' as a means of glossing over the differences between the Commonwealth and the States and attempting to aggregate power to the Commonwealth. Thus it was later argued that the 'Queen of Australia' must be advised by her 'Australian' Ministers..."
She does not state that the government had this policy "so that" the Queen would only consult Commonwealth ministers in relation to the states. She states the government had this policy and "thus it was later argued" that the Queen should only consult Commonwealth ministers. Your wording implies that the government had this policy in order to support arguments in relation to the Queen, where that was only part of a broader desire to increase Commonwealth power. This is seen in the first sentence, where the glossing of the terms "Commonwealth" and "Australia" in relation to the Royal Titles Act is an assertion of that Act's applicability to the states in a way that doesn't involve the issue of whether the Queen is to consult with British ministers regarding the states. Safes007 (talk) 06:36, 2 March 2024 (UTC)
The problem is that whoever first wrote this sentence has taken an isolated sentence of Twomey out of context to imply that the Whitlam government's decision to adopt the term Government of Australia was a crude attempt to increase Cth power at the expense of the states. One needs to read the whole book and Justice McHughs introduction. Remember, we are talking about 1973. The question was whether when acting in relation to Australia (the Cth and states) the Queen should act on the advice of her British ministers or Australian ministers (Cth and State). Many state governments were lobbying the Queen to say that she should act on the advice of State Ministers in relation to state matters. The British Foreign Office was of the view that the Queen should act on the advice of her British Ministers and that British interests should override the interests of the Australian states. Buckingham Palace didn't want to be put in the situation where they were given conflicting advice from the Cth government and state governments so were happy to agree with the FO that the Queen should receive advice from the British FO. Whitlam argued that the Queen should be advised by the GG (who was in turn advised by the PM) on matters concerning the Cth and the states but that the GG would act on the advice of the states in matters concerning the states. The issue was only resolved by the Australia Acts of 1986. My preferred solution would be to drop the whole discussion because it is too technical and complicated for a high level article like this. All that needs to be said is that the Whitlam government officially adopted the term Government of Australia in 1973. Aemilius Adolphin (talk) 10:22, 2 March 2024 (UTC)
I think you are adding too much of your own analysis. I think the the plain reading is the page is that Twomey is suggesting that the policy of the government was to use the term Government of Australia, at least in part in an attempt to increase federal power over the states. The page cited belongs to chapter 9, which discusses the Royal Styles and Titles Act, not the dispute you are talking about conflicting sources of advice to the Queen. There is nothing in the surrounding chapter that suggests that the policy change was made in relation to the dispute as to which ministers the Queen should seek advice from as the sentence currently suggests. I think we only risk getting too technical and complicated if we attempt to artificially seek to limit what Twomey is suggesting in the source. Safes007 (talk) 12:50, 2 March 2024 (UTC)
I doubt that Anne Twomey is so ingorant to think that the Cth government can increase its power over the states simply by rebranding itself the Australian Government: to do that it would have to gain a new head of power by referendum or convince the HCA to interpret an existing head of power more widely. Indeed Twomey doesn't mention the term "Government of Australia" or "Australian Government". Her examples are of "Queen of Australia" and "Australian ministers" and refer to the government's attempts to persuade Buckingham Palace to rely on the advice of the Australian government as opposed to the British Government in matters pertaining to the Australian states. You will note that I changed the page reference to pp 113-14 in which Twomey gives the examples of the seabed petitions and the Royal Styles and Titles Act and covers the broader point of British/Australin relations. The Whitlam government introduced the term "Government of Australia" in order to promote an Australian national identity in contradistinction to a British one. Aemilius Adolphin (talk) 08:18, 3 March 2024 (UTC)
What do you therefore suggest Twomey means in her paragraph on pg 113?. It begins with explaining that the application of the Royal Styles and Titles Act to the states is confusing, as the government used the term "Australia" instead of "Commonwealth of Australia and its territories". Directly following this, she states: "The Whitlam government, however, had a policy of using the term 'Australia' rather than 'Commonwealth' as a means of glossing over the differences between the Commonwealth and the States and attempting to aggregate power to the Commonwealth. Thus it was later argued that the 'Queen of Australia' must be advised by her 'Australian' Ministers..." It seems very unlikely that Twomey is suggesting that the phrase "Australia" was used in the Royal Styles and Titles Act solely in order to convince the British to transfer authority to the Commonwealth as that act had nothing to do with them. It seems far more likely that Twomey is referring to a general policy of the government that was also used in relation to the British.
Also, I think your identification of the High Court interpreting powers more broadly is exactly how the use of the phrase "Australian Government" could increase the power of the federal government. Whitlam was relying on the newly interpreted "nationhood" power for the Royal Styles Act and was instrumental in popularising the expansive view of s 51 powers that was ultimately taken up by the court. An assertion of the federal government with the whole of Australia and not just the "Commonwealth" could lead to a more expansive interpretation of powers. Twomey could also be simply referring to a non-legal assertion of the importance and authority of the government to act in areas not traditionally seen as a federal responsibility.
Additionally, if a source states that the Whitlam government introduced the term "Government of Australia" in order to promote a distinct Australian identity, that should be added to the page to avoid NPOV, but it shouldn't be used to give a restricted view of the Twomey source. That would involving favouring one source over another. Safes007 (talk) 09:58, 3 March 2024 (UTC)
I think we are getting into constitutional matters rather than sources. I have reworded the sentence to focus on the actual use of the term "Government of Australia". I have added a source, John Curran's The Power of Speech. Entrenching the term Australian Government in legislation was inextricably linked to the whole "new nationalism" policy of the Whitlam government which was aimed at getting rid of "colonial relics" and forging a new Australian identity which wasn't based on race or subservience to Britain. But it's a long story which doesn't really belong here. Let me know if you have problems with the wording. Aemilius Adolphin (talk) 10:36, 4 March 2024 (UTC)
Thanks for your edit. I’m happy with it. Safes007 (talk) 02:44, 6 March 2024 (UTC)

Hello all, apologies for the abrupt changes I am new to Misplaced Pages. I added the formal "HM Government in the Commonwealth of Australia" due to the Commonwealth Government being the Government of a Commonwealth realm, so I believe it is appropriate for it to be addressed in its formal style . Although it is used sparsely, I see no good reason why it shouldn't be addressed as such (see Government of Canada, Government of New Zealand). It is addressed as such in documents such as: Agreement between His Majesty's Government in the Commonwealth of Australia and the German government regarding the release of property, rights and interests of German nationals (1944)

Trade Agreement between Australia and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (1932)

Australian - New Zealand Agreement (1944)

I believe it would be appropriate to add in the lead or the section regarding GG and Royal information.

Happy to discuss — Preceding unsigned comment added by Royalaustraliannerd (talkcontribs) 04:40, 23 March 2024 (UTC)

You are talking about antiquated usages from the 1930s and 1940s which even then were rarely used. The official name of the Australian Government is the Government of the Commonwealth of Australia. This is the name in the Australin constitution. However, Misplaced Pages favours common usage which is the Australian Government or Federal Government or Commonwealth Government. The policy is WP:COMMON NAME. Another editor has added your suggested alternative name to the Name section of the article where it logically belongs. However, I still think we need reliable secondary sources to establish that this was ever the official name of the government. WP:VERIFY Aemilius Adolphin (talk) 04:53, 23 March 2024 (UTC)
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