What Nigel says and what he does (Master Investor Interview, Jim Mellon Oxford billionaire) . . . two different things. I don't see any English voices in Reform . . . do you? Or advance ?. . .
But I do see The English in Restore Britain. Britons and British are two different things! @RestoreBritain_
Here's a reference that should be bookmarked and used to shut down silly billies when they gleefully claim that:
We don't have a constitution, or;
We do have one but it's the British Constitution, not the English Constitution.
This reference comes from the same authoritative source as relied on by the legal profession, namely 'The Laws of England, Being A Complete Statement Of The Whole Law Of England.' by the Earl of Halsbury; commonly known as 'Halsbury's Laws of England'.
I believe the edition of this legal literature to be the first, published in 1909 200+ years after Great Britain and British governance was legislated into existence.
This source being the second paragraph of the section entitled 'Constitutional Law'; proving that we do indeed have a constitution, and that it forms part of the English law: and, as the first sentence confirms, "the law of the English constitution is to be sought, ... " the Constitution is in fact the English Constitution.
As it is English and it is Law, it is the birthright of our English People. 🏴
@englishexit@MCRReiners
'455. As legally enforceable by the courts, the law of the English constitution is to be sought, not in any particular written document, but from the ordinary sources from which the substantive law of the land is derived, namely, Acts of Parliament, or quasi Acts of Parliament, and the rules and orders made thereunder; prerogative rules and orders made and issued by the Crown, acting in exercise of the power intrusted to it by virtue of the common law, and embodied in Orders in Council, treaties, charters, proclamations relating to the Colonies, and other executive documents; and the common law, which is largely embodied in judicial decisions.' - [Halsbry's Laws of England, https://t.co/O00X5TLVuP, (1907). p.316]
English constitutional law, Act of Settlement [1700], section 3:
English = 'born of English parents'; only 'native English' to hold positions of power; etc.
Explained here: 👇
1. https://t.co/7nfwfIt9co
2. https://t.co/Zj0m0NLreo
3. https://t.co/vkqg7fxKuW .
@RupertLowe10