UK royal succession law ends gender bias
The Commonwealth nations on Friday agreed to scrap centuries-old laws barring first-born daughters or anyone married to a Roman Catholic from inheriting the British throne.
British Prime Minister David Cameron said the agreement, unanimously backed by all 16 nations where Queen Elizabeth II is head of state, represented an “historic moment” for the monarchy. He said the changes, which will have to be formally approved by the affected nations, would sweep aside “outdated rules (that) just don’t make sense to us anymore”.
“We will end the male primogeniture rule so that in future the order of succession should be determined simply by the order of birth,” Mr Cameron told reporters at a meeting of Commonwealth leaders here. “We have agreed to scrap the rule which says that no one that marries a Roman Catholic can become monarch.” Mr Cameron has the political support to make the changes in Britain but needed approval from the 15 other Commonwealth realms, including Canada, Australia, New Zealand and smaller nations in the Caribbean and the Pacific.
The succession debate intensified with the April wedding of Prince William, second in line to the throne, and Kate Middleton. “Put simply, if the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge were to have a little girl, that girl would one day be our Queen,” Mr Cameron said.
He said the monarch would still have to be Protestant because he or she heads the Church of England. Roman Catholics, or anyone who weds a Catholic, were barred from ascending to the throne by the 1701 Act of Settlement. That law also formalised the policy of male primogeniture, although the tradition dates back even further to feudal times and beyond.
— AFP
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