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The Right Honourable

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromRt Hon)
Honorific prefix
Not to be confused withThe Honourable,The Most Honourable, orThe Much Honoured.
Thisengraving ofGeorge Cornewall Lewis includesThe Right Honourable in its caption, reflecting theHome Secretary position he held at the time of its creation.

The Right Honourable (abbreviation:The Rt Hon. or variations) is anhonorificstyle traditionally applied to certain persons and collective bodies in theUnited Kingdom, the formerBritish Empire, and theCommonwealth of Nations. The term is predominantly used today as a style associated with the holding of certain senior public offices in the United Kingdom,Canada,New Zealand, and, to a lesser extent,Australia andNepal.

Right in this context is anadverb meaning 'very' or 'fully'.[1] Grammatically,The Right Honourable is anadjectival phrase which gives information about a person.[2] As such, it is not considered correct to apply it in direct address, nor to use it on its own as a title in place of a name; but rather it is used in thethird person along with a name or noun to be modified.[3][4][a]

Right may be abbreviated toRt, andHonourable toHon., or both.The is sometimes dropped in written abbreviated form, but is always pronounced.

Countries with common or current usage

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United Kingdom

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Entitlement

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Queen Victoria holding a meeting of her Privy Council. All privy counsellors are styledRight Honourable (unless they are personally entitled to a higher style).
Theparliamentary robes of a baron, worn byLord Montagu of Beaulieu. Peers of the rank of baron, viscount or earl are entitled to the styleRight Honourable.
Gavyn Arthur, the 675thLord Mayor of London, was entitled to be styled "The Right Honourable Lord Mayor of London" during his year in office.

According to theBritish government,[5] the following persons are entitled to be styledRight Honourable:

Members of thePrivy Council
The Privy Council is notionally the body of formal advisers to the sovereign. Members of theCabinet, senior politicians, and some few other officials are appointed as members for life, and are personally entitled to be styledRight Honourable thereafter.[6][7]
Peers below the rank ofmarquess
Earls and countesses,[8]viscounts and viscountesses[9] andbarons and baronesses[10] who hold asubstantive title (whether hereditary or for life) are personally entitled to the styleRight Honourable.[11] A peer's wife or widow also has a legal right to the style of her husband.
Thelord mayors andlord provosts of certain cities (ex officio)
The lord mayors of London, Cardiff, Belfast, Bristol and York and the lord provosts of Edinburgh and Glasgow are styledRight Honourable while in office. However, the title is attached to the office, not to the name of the person.

Privy counsellors

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Privy counsellors are appointed by the sovereign on the advice of the prime minister, and remain members for life unless they resign or are expelled. In practice, membership of the privy council is granted to:

  • all members of the Cabinet (itself technically a committee of the Privy Council), and certain other senior ministers in the government;
  • senior members of theShadow Cabinet, the leaders of the major political parties in parliament, and theSpeaker of the House of Commons;
  • the first ministers of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, and the leader of the largest opposition party in theScottish Parliament;
  • the two archbishops of theChurch of England, who sit in the House of Lords ex officio;
  • senior judges, who fulfil the judicial functions of the Privy Council;
  • senior representatives of theCommonwealth nations; and
  • senior members of theroyal family.

A large proportion of the former and current prominent politicians of the United Kingdom are thus entitled to be styledRight Honourable.

No new appointments have been made to thePrivy Council of Northern Ireland since 1971, but surviving appointed members remain entitled to the style. Non-British Commonwealth-citizen judges appointed to theJudicial Committee of the Privy Council are also entitled to the style, although the appellation may be ignored in the judge's home country.

It is the current practice of the House of Lords[12] and the College of Arms to apply the styleRight Honourable to privy counsellors only.[13]

Peers

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All holders of a substantive peerage below the rank of marquess are entitled to be styledRight Honourable,[b] as are their wives and widows.[citation needed] However, a peer's heir who uses acourtesy title is not accorded the corresponding style.[citation needed] Peers above the rank of earl are entitled to different styles:dukes and duchesses are styledThe Most Noble orHis orHer Grace, andmarquesses and marchionesses are styled asThe Most Honourable.

In order to differentiate peers who are also members of the Privy Council—and therefore entitled to a style in both capacities—from peers who are not, thepost-nominal lettersPC can be used to identify the privy counsellors.[c] This applies to peers of all rank, as a holder of a dukedom or marquessate who becomes a Privy Counsellor retains their higher style and so could not be identified without the letters. In practice, in contexts where there might be confusion, official publications use the styleRight Honourable exclusively to identify privy counsellors.[27][13]

Lord mayors, lord provosts and other officers

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The lord mayors of London, Cardiff, Belfast and York; and the lord provosts of Edinburgh and Glasgow are all entitled to be styledRight Honourable while in office. The lord mayors of Belfast and Cardiff are so entitled by an explicit grant from the sovereign, and the others through ancient custom.[5] The style is used with the name of the office, not the personal name of the office-holder, e.g. "The Right Honourable Lord Mayor of London" or "The Right Honourable the Lord Provost of the City of Edinburgh".[28]

Other lord mayors may be styledRight Worshipful, and other lord provosts do not use a style. By the 1920s, a number of city mayors, including the Lord Mayor of Leeds,[29] were unofficially using the styleRight Honourable, and the matter was consequently raised in parliament. The Lord Mayor of Bristol at present still uses the styleRight Honourable, without official permission.[30][31] In guidance issued in June 2003, theCrown Office recommended that the lord provosts of Aberdeen and Dundee be styledRight Honourable in the same manner as those of Edinburgh and Glasgow.[28]

TheChairman of the London County Council (LCC) was granted the style in 1935 as part of the celebrations of thesilver jubilee of KingGeorge V.[32] The Chairman of theGreater London Council (GLC), the body that replaced the LCC in 1965, was similarly granted the style[33] until the GLC was abolished in 1986.

Right Honourable is also used as a style by theLord Lyon King of Arms in office,[34][35][36] preceding his title rather than his personal name, as with other applications ex officio.

In the House of Commons

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In theHouse of Commons, members usehonourable andright honourable when referring to one another.

In the chamber of theHouse of Commons,members are not permitted to address each other directly, nor to name other members, but must instead address thespeaker and refer to other members indirectly. This practice is intended to enforce a polite tone to maintain order and good honour.[37] Only the occupant of the Chair addresses Members by name. Members generally refer to one another as "myhonourable friend" if in the sameparty, and "the honourable gentleman/lady/member" otherwise. If needed, constituencies ("the honourable member for ...") or ministerial offices (e.g. "my right honourable friend the Prime Minister") can be used for clarity.[d]

Referring to one another ashonourable is merely a courtesy used within the House, and is not a style used outside the chamber. However, when a member is in fact entitled to be styledRight Honourable (in practice always through membership of the Privy Council), they are referred to as such in the chamber. Further embellishments are traditionally applied to clergy (reverend), military officers (gallant) and barristers (learned), a practice recommended to be abolished following a 2010 report of theModernisation Committee, but in practice continued.[38][39] In summary:

  • "Honourable" is used for members who are not privy counsellors.
  • "Right honourable" is used for members who are privy counsellors.
  • "(Right) honourable and reverend" may be used for clergy.[40]
  • "(Right) honourable and gallant" may be used for military officers.[41][42]
  • "(Right) honourable and learned" may be used forbarristers.[43][44]

Collective entities

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Right Honourable is added as a prefix to the name of various collective entities, including:

  • "The Right Honourable the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament Assembled", i.e. theHouse of Lords
  • "The Right Honourable the Lords of the Privy Council", i.e. thePrivy Council
  • "The Right Honourable the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty", i.e. the formerBoard of Admiralty

Canada

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Further information:Canadian honorifics

In Canada, occupants of only the three most senior public offices are styled asRight Honourable (Le/La très honorable in French). Formerly, this was by virtue of their appointment to thePrivy Council of the United Kingdom. However, Canadian appointments to the British Privy Council were ended by the government ofLester Pearson. Currently, individuals who hold, or have held, one of the following offices are awarded the style ofRight Honourable for life:

The Right Honourable is not to be confused withHis orHer Excellency, used by governors general during their term of office, orthe Honourable, used only while in office (except in Nova Scotia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Ontario, where honorary members of the Executive Council enjoy the title permanently) by provincialpremiers and cabinet ministers, and for life bysenators and members of theKing's Privy Council for Canada (chiefly cabinet ministers, as well as other figures such as party leaders or provincial premiers who may be appointed from time to time).

The title may also be granted for life by the governor general to eminent Canadians who have not held any of the offices that would otherwise entitle them to the style. This has been done on two occasions: to eight prominent political figures to mark the 125th anniversary ofCanadian Confederation in 1992,[e] and to longtime Member of ParliamentHerb Gray upon his retirement in 2002.

Living Canadians holding the styleThe Right Honourable
PersonBirthplaceOfficeBornGranted
Mark CarneyFort Smith, Northwest TerritoriesPrime Minister16 March 196514 March 2025
Justin TrudeauOttawa, OntarioFormer prime minister25 December 19714 November 2015
Stephen HarperToronto, Ontario30 April 19596 February 2006
Paul MartinWindsor, Ontario28 August 193812 December 2003
Jean ChrétienShawinigan, Quebec11 January 19344 November 1993
Kim CampbellPort Alberni, British Columbia10 March 194725 June 1993
Joe ClarkHigh River, Alberta5 June 19394 June 1979
Mary SimonFort Severight, QuebecGovernor general21 August 194726 July 2021
Julie PayetteMontreal, QuebecFormer governor general20 October 19632 October 2017
David JohnstonSudbury, Ontario28 June 19411 October 2010
Michaëlle JeanPort-au-Prince, Haiti6 September 195727 September 2005
Adrienne ClarksonHong Kong10 February 19397 October 1999
Edward SchreyerBeausejour, Manitoba21 December 193522 January 1979
Richard WagnerMontreal, QuebecChief justice2 April 195718 December 2017
Beverley McLachlinPincher Creek, AlbertaFormer chief justice7 September 19437 January 2000

Over the years, a number of prominent Canadians became members of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom and thus were entitled to use the styleRight Honourable, either because of their services in Britain (e.g. serving as envoys to London) or as members of theImperial War Cabinet, or due to their prominence in theCanadian Cabinet. These included all but three of Canada's early prime ministers (Alexander Mackenzie,John Abbott, andMackenzie Bowell), who governed before the title was used domestically.

New Zealand

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Previously in New Zealand theprime minister and some other senior cabinet ministers were customarily appointed to thePrivy Council of the United Kingdom and thus styledRight Honourable.[45]

Helen Clark did not recommend the appointment of any new privy counsellors during her tenure as Prime Minister, from 1999 to 2008. In 2009 it was announced that her successor,John Key, had decided not to make any further recommendations tothe Crown for appointments to the Privy Council.[46]

In August 2010, theQueen of New Zealand announced that, with immediate effect, individuals who hold, and those persons who after the date of the signing of these rules are appointed to, the following offices are awarded the styleRight Honourable for life:[45]

This change was made because the practice of appointing New Zealanders to the Privy Council of the United Kingdom had ceased. However, the change had little immediate effect, as all but two of the holders or living former holders of the offices granted the style had already been appointed to the Privy Council.[47][48]

The living New Zealanders holding the styleRight Honourable as a result of membership of the Privy Council are:

The living New Zealanders holding the styleThe Right Honourable for life as a result of the 2010 changes are:

NameReasonDate Granted
Sir Anand SatyanandFormer Governor-General2 August 2010
Sir John KeyFormer Prime Minister
Sir Lockwood SmithFormer Speaker of the House of Representatives
Sir Jerry MateparaeFormer Governor-General31 August 2011
Sir David CarterFormer Speaker of the House of Representatives31 January 2013
Dame Patsy ReddyFormer Governor-General28 September 2016
Sir Bill EnglishFormer Prime Minister12 December 2016
Dame Jacinda Ardern26 October 2017
Sir Trevor MallardFormer Speaker of the House of Representatives7 November 2017
Dame Helen WinkelmannChief Justice14 March 2019
Dame Cindy KiroGovernor-General21 October 2021
Adrian RurawheFormer Speaker of the House of Representatives24 August 2022
Chris HipkinsFormer Prime Minister25 January 2023
Christopher LuxonPrime Minister27 November 2023
Gerry BrownleeSpeaker of the House of Representatives5 December 2023

Africa

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During the periods of its existence, thePrime Minister of Kenya post was styledRight Honourable. In post-independence Kenya two people have been styled with the "right honorable" title. The country's founding presidentJomo Kenyatta who was the first prime minister of Kenya andRaila Amolo Odinga, who served as the country's second prime minister between 2008 and 2013.Raila Odinga also known as Baba (Political father and Enigma) is a towering icon in Africa, well known for hisPan-Africanism and championing for good governance. Theprime ministers of Namibia andUganda are both currently styled with the same honorific. The speaker and deputy speaker of theParliament of Uganda are also entitled to the style.

Caribbean

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The prime ministers ofBarbados,Grenada,Saint Lucia,Saint Vincent and the Grenadines andTrinidad and Tobago are styled asRight Honourable. TheWest Indies Federation prime minister was also styled as such during that office's short existence.

Malaysia

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In Malaysia, only thePrime Minister, his or herdeputy,four judges of the Federal Court[f] and MPs who are titledTun are styled asRight Honourable (Malay: Yang Amat Berhormat, Yang Amat Arif for judges) at the federal level. For the state level, all theMenteris Besar, Chief Ministers and Premier along with their deputies are also styledRight Honourable.

Nepal

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In Nepal, thepresident,vice president speaker of the House of Representatives,prime minister andchief justice are formally styledRight Honourable (Nepali:सम्माननीय,romanized: Sammānanīya). Ministers, members of parliament (Lower and Upper Houses and provincial parliaments) and Chief ministers of provinces are styled "Honourable" only. It is usually joked during informal discussions about the use of the word "Honourable" to differentiate senior and less senior government dignitories. It can also be spelled in English asThe Rt. Hon’ble.

South Korea

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InSouth Korea, thePresident,Prime Minister,Speaker of the National Assembly andChief Justice can use theRight Honourable style.[citation needed]

Spain

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In the Spanishautonomous community ofCatalonia, thepresident of the Generalitat de Catalunya and the president of theParliament of Catalonia are formally referred as theRight Honourable.

Countries with rare or historic usage

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Australia

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In Australia, thelord mayors ofAdelaide,Brisbane,Hobart,Melbourne,Perth andSydney are entitled to be styledRight Honourable while in office.

Historically, a number of Australians were entitled to the style as members of thePrivy Council of the United Kingdom. Appointment to the Australian equivalent of the Privy Council, theFederal Executive Council, does not entitle a person to the style. Typical appointees to the Imperial Privy Council included senior politicians and judges at state and federal level.Malcolm Fraser in 1976 was the most recent prime minister to accept appointment to the Privy Council and thus to be styledRight Honourable. Of his 21 predecessors, only four were not members of the Privy Council –Alfred Deakin (declined appointment),Chris Watson (never offered),Arthur Fadden (accepted after leaving office), andGough Whitlam (declined appointment). The last Governor-General to be entitled to the style wasSir Ninian Stephen, who left office in 1988. The last active politician to be entitled to the style wasIan Sinclair, who retired in 1998. The few Australian recipients of British peerages were also entitled to the style.

Present-day Australian governments no longer recommend Australians for elevation to the peerage or appointment to the Privy Council. However, some present-day Australian citizens either hold hereditary peerages (e.g.Malcolm Murray, 12th Earl of Dunmore).

Living Australians holding the styleThe Right HonourableReasonFormerly
Ian Sinclair, ACMember of thePrivy Council of the United KingdomFormerSpeaker of the Australian House of Representatives
Sir William Heseltine, GCB, GCVO, ACMember of the Privy Council of the United KingdomFormerPrivate Secretary to the Sovereign
Malcolm Murray, 12th Earl of DunmoreEarl of DunmoreFormerMember of the House of Lords
Robert Fiennes-Clinton, 19th Earl of LincolnEarl of Lincoln
Simon Abney-Hastings, 15th Earl of LoudounEarl of Loudoun
George Dawson-Damer, 7th Earl of PortarlingtonEarl of Portarlington
Keith Rous, 6th Earl of StradbrokeEarl of Stradbroke
Francis Grosvenor, 8th Earl of WiltonEarl of Wilton
Nicholas St John, 9th Viscount Bolingbroke, 10th Viscount St JohnViscount Bolingbroke
Charles Cavendish, 7th Baron CheshamBaron Chesham
James Lindsay, 3rd Baron Lindsay of BirkerBaron Lindsay of Birker
David Campbell, 7th Baron Stratheden and CampbellBaron Stratheden
David Baden-Powell, 5th Baron Baden-PowellBaron Baden-Powell

Ireland

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Members of thePrivy Council of Ireland were entitled to be styledRight Honourable, even after the Privy Council ceased to have any functions or to meet on the creation of theIrish Free State in December 1922. Nevertheless, theLord Mayor of Dublin, like some of his counterparts in Great Britain, retained the use of the honorific style as a result of its having been conferred separately by legislation; in 2001 it was removed, as a consequence oflocal government law reform.[citation needed]

Sri Lanka

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InSri Lanka (formerly known asCeylon) the British practice was followed with Ceylonese members of thePrivy Council of the United Kingdom were styledRight Honourable and were referred to asMahamanya inSinhala. Ceylonese appointees to the privy council includedD. S. Senanayake andSir John Kotelawala.[49]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^This is generally the case for all similar adjectival styles (e.g.The Reverend,The Right Excellent). In contrast, styles in the form of a noun (e.g.Majesty,Holiness) can be used with the corresponding possessive pronoun in direct address or in place of a name.
  2. ^Black'sTitles and Forms of Address claims[14] that the capitalisedThe before substantive peers' titles is an abbreviated form of their style. For example, "The Earl of Beaconsfield" would be short for "The Right Honourable Earl of Beaconsfield". However, this argument does not account for the secondThe in commonly-found formulations of the kind "The Right Honourable The Earl of Beaconsfield"[15] or "The Most Honourable The Marquess of Salisbury"[16]; and the argument is not corroborated by other guides which recommend the latter forms.[17][18][19]
  3. ^This practice is recommended byDebrett's Peerage and Baronetage[20][21][22] andCorrect Form,[23] and Hickey'sHonor and Respect;[24] and is applied consistently throughoutBurke's Peerage & Baronetage.[25] However, it is considered incorrect by Black'sTitles and Forms of Address, which holds that membership of the Privy Council results in no post-nominal letters because it is an office and not an honour.[26]
  4. ^InHansard, references to other MPs are expanded to include a constituency or ministerial office (and name in parentheses) as an aid to readers, whether or not this is what was actually said.Honourable is presently always abbreviated tohon.
  5. ^Martial Asselin,Ellen Fairclough,Alvin Hamilton,Paul Martin Sr.,Don Mazankowski,Jean-Luc Pépin,Jack Pickersgill, andRobert Stanfield.
  6. ^The four judges are the Chief Justice, the President of the Court of Appeal, and the Chief Judges of the High Court in Malaya and the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak

References

[edit]
  1. ^"right".Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. March 2022. (Subscription orparticipating institution membership required.)
  2. ^"Right Honourable".Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. March 2022. (Subscription orparticipating institution membership required.)
  3. ^Montague-Smith (1979), pp. 33–35, 80–82.
  4. ^Hickey (2013), pp. 365–372, 378–379, 396–402.
  5. ^abFerrers 1989, c.1116WA, "The Lord Mayors of Belfast and Cardiff and the Lord Provost of Glasgow are entitled to the style 'Right Honourable' by express grant of the Sovereign. The style is also taken by Privy Counsellors, Peers below the rank of Marquess (which includes ladies who are Peers in their own right), the Lord Mayors of London and York and the Lord Provost of Edinburgh by ancient prescriptive usage."
  6. ^"Privy Council members".Privy Council Office.Archived from the original on 6 December 2014. Retrieved15 June 2015.
  7. ^"Right Honourable".TheyWorkForYou.Archived from the original on 6 September 2017.
  8. ^"Earl and Countess".Debrett's. Archived fromthe original on 27 September 2014.
  9. ^"Viscount and Viscountess".Debrett's. Archived fromthe original on 31 July 2014.
  10. ^"Baron".Debrett's. Archived fromthe original on 13 May 2014.
  11. ^"The Honourable".Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica, inc. 10 August 2017.... earls, viscounts, and barons are 'right honourable', ...
  12. ^"Addressing members of the Lords".House of Lords. UK Parliament. Retrieved7 May 2022.
  13. ^abHome Office (30 January 2021).Titles: Guidance for Her Majesty's Passport Office operational staff on how to add and record titles and observations on a passport(PDF). Version 7.0.HM Government. p. 10. Retrieved5 May 2022.
  14. ^Black (1955), p. 44.
  15. ^"The Right Honourable the Earl of Beaconsfield (1804–1881), KG".Art UK. Public Catalogue Foundation. Retrieved7 May 2022.
  16. ^"At the Court at Buckingham Palace the 18th day of December, 1936".The London Gazette. No. 34351. 18 December 1936. p. 8187.
  17. ^Kidd & Williamson (1985),passim.
  18. ^Hickey (2013), pp. 396–402.
  19. ^Montague-Smith (1979), pp. 21–37.
  20. ^Kidd & Williamson (1985), p. 43, headings "Privy Counsellors" and "Rt Honourable".
  21. ^"Privy Counsellors and Crown Appointments".Forms of Address.Debrett's. Archived fromthe original on 28 May 2016. Retrieved15 June 2015.
  22. ^"Privy Counsellors".Titles.Debrett's. Archived fromthe original on 30 June 2015. Retrieved24 May 2015.
  23. ^Montague-Smith (1979), pp. 28, 35, 80–82.
  24. ^Hickey (2013), pp. 365–366.
  25. ^Mosley (1999),passim.
  26. ^Black (1955), pp. 44, 101–102.
  27. ^Ferrers (1989), cc. 1117WA–1118WA, "For official purposes, the style is omitted in many circumstances, owing to the need for brevity, clarity or informality, as the occasion dictates. For example, the style is omitted in lists of Ministers for Peers who fall below the rank of Marquess and who are not Privy Counsellors in order to distinguish them from Peers who are Privy Counsellors."
  28. ^abCrown Office (June 2003)."Forms of Address for Use Orally and in Correspondence".Department for Constitutional Affairs, UK Government. Archived fromthe original on 16 January 2006.
  29. ^"Reception by the Right Hon. the LORD MAYOR OF LEEDS and LADY MAYORESS (Mr. and Mrs. HUGH LUPTON) to the B.N.O.C. on the occasion of their visit to the Theatre Royal, Leeds – 2LS Leeds, 6 November 1927".Radio Times.Archived from the original on 9 March 2016. Retrieved9 March 2016.
  30. ^"The Title of Lord Mayor – Use of the Prefix 'Right Honourable'", inThe Times, 7 July 1932, p. 16
  31. ^"Lord Mayor of Bristol". Bristol City Council. Archived fromthe original on 21 March 2009. Retrieved26 December 2008.
  32. ^"Royal Guests of L.C.C. The Queen At The County Hall, Honour For Chairman".The Times. 1 June 1935. p. 16.
  33. ^"Home Office".The London Gazette. No. 43613. 30 March 1965. p. 3195.
  34. ^"The Lord Lyon". The Court of the Lord Lyon.Archived from the original on 29 November 2022. Retrieved10 May 2022.Dr Joseph John Morrow CBE QC LLD DL FRSE, The Right Honourable the Lord Lyon King of Arms
  35. ^"Other Notices".The Edinburgh Gazette. No. 26518. 2 September 2008. p. 3660.Anyone believing they have a better claim to the dignity of the Barony of Cartsburn should write to the Rt Hon Lord Lyon at H.M. New Register House, Edinburgh, EH1 3YT within 40 calendar days ...
  36. ^Callaghan, Jamie (7 May 2019)."Crail to be presented new coat of arms".Fife Today.Archived from the original on 12 August 2022. Retrieved10 May 2022.The Right Honourable the Lord Lyon King of Arms, the head of Lyon Court, is the most junior of the Great Officers of State in Scotland ...
  37. ^"Forms of address".BBC News. 1 September 2008. Retrieved14 May 2022.
  38. ^AfghanistanArchived 14 February 2022 at theWayback Machine.Hansard. (2021). An example of the use after recommended abolition.
  39. ^"Factsheet G7 – Some Traditions and Customs of the House"(PDF). House of Commons. August 2010. p. 2.
  40. ^Ross, William (4 February 1998)."Functions of the Commission".Hansard. House of Commons debates. Vol. 305. UK Parliament. c. 1154.My hon. and reverend Friend the Member for Belfast, South (Rev. Martin Smyth) ...
  41. ^Ansell, Caroline (11 November 2020)."Remembrance, UK Armed Forces and Society".Hansard. House of Commons debates. Vol. 683. UK Parliament. c. 967. Retrieved9 May 2022.... as raised by my right hon. and gallant Friend the Member for Bournemouth East (Mr Ellwood).
  42. ^Mitchell, Andrew (15 March 2022)."Ukraine".Hansard. House of Commons debates. Vol. 710. UK Parliament. c. 835. Retrieved9 May 2022.My right hon. and gallant Friend, who made such a great speech earlier ...
  43. ^Johnson, Boris (Prime Minister)."Engagements".Hansard. House of Commons debates. Vol. 704. UK Parliament. c. 909.I know that the right hon. and learned Gentleman is eligible for his booster.
  44. ^"Re-elected Bercow dragged to Speaker's chair".BBC News.Archived from the original on 27 November 2017. Retrieved1 May 2018. This video is of the speech of SpeakerJohn Bercow after his re-election as Speaker after the 2017 general election, referring to "the right honourable and learned gentleman, the member for Rushcliffe", i.e. Father of the HouseKenneth Clarke, who is a barrister.
  45. ^ab"The Right Honourable".www.dpmc.govt.nz. Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet.Archived from the original on 8 April 2017. Retrieved30 April 2017.
  46. ^"Honours Q and A"(PDF). 2009.Archived(PDF) from the original on 3 June 2011. Retrieved29 June 2009.
  47. ^"Use of the title 'The Right Honourable' in New Zealand, 2 August 2010". The Queen's Printer. 2 August 2010.Archived from the original on 5 August 2010. Retrieved3 August 2010.
  48. ^This did not apply to former governor-generals SirPaul Reeves, DameCatherine Tizard and DameSilvia Cartwright and former speakers SirKerry Burke, SirRobin Gray, SirPeter Tapsell, SirDoug Kidd andMargaret Wilson
  49. ^"D.S. Senanayake – A nation's father, undisputed leader of all time | Daily FT".www.ft.lk.

Sources

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External links

[edit]
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