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For Her Majesty's Government in the United Kingdom, see Government of the United Kingdom. The phrase Her Majesty's Government (His Majesty's Government during the reign of a male monarch) is a synonym for the governments of various jurisdictions within the Commonwealth realms. In use since at least the height of the British Empire, the phrase has been inherited and integrated into the countries that emerged from that polity.
[edit] HistoryIn the British Empire, the term His (or Her) Majesty's Government was originally only used by the imperial government in London. As the Empire developed into the Commonwealth of Nations, the former Dominions came to be seen as realms of the sovereign equal in status to the United Kingdom, and, from the 1920s and 1930s, the form His Majesty's Government in... began to be used by United Kingdom and Dominion governments to differentiate between independent jurisdictions, such as His Majesty's Government in the Irish Free State.[1] Colonial, state, and provincial governments, on the other hand, continued to use the lesser title Government of [region], and eventually the phrase used in the former Dominions altered to mirror that of the UK, becoming, for example, Her Majesty's Australian Government. [edit] Usage The wordmark for the Government of the United Kingdom, showing the abbreviation HM for "Her Majesty's". The term is employed in order to signify that the government of a Commonwealth realm, or, less commonly, a division thereof, belongs to the reigning sovereign, and not to the cabinet or prime minister,[2][3] though individual governments (also known as ministries) may be identified by reference to the prime minister who chairs the cabinet at the time; the Attlee government, or Manley government, for example. Today, however, most Commonwealth realm governments, other than that of the UK (where the abbreviation HMG is frequently used), have reverted to predominantly using the form Government of [region], with Her Majesty's Government being typically employed for formal occasions, and a national qualified added to disambiguate (such as Her Britannic Majesty's Government). In Canada and Australia, this applies at both the federal and provincial or state levels; for instance, in a 1989 Canadian Supreme Court decision, one of the Justices referred to "Her Majesty's Government for the Province of Nova Scotia."[4] [edit] See also[edit] References
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