166 THE EXECUTIVE GOVERNMENT [pART II
necessary for carrying that system into effect and operation
are transferred from the Sovereign, and are vested in the
representative of the Sovereign. I am aware that it has
been urged by those who have desired to uphold the Govern-
ment by the Colonial Office of these Colonies, and who have
therefore supported the Governor’s instructions in their
present form, that, although responsible government has
oeen created in the Australian Colonies by the Imperial
statutes, prerogatives and powers are from time to time
conferred on the Governor by the Crown, according to its
pleasure, by a separate instrument, and not by force of the
Act of Parliament. If the policy which the Colonial Office
has steadily pursued for the last thirty years has sprung from
a real but mistaken belief in this doctrine, and not, as has
been more probably conjectured, from the natural but very
censurable desire of irresponsible subordinate officers to
retain for their department by stratagem a power which they
know has been taken away from it by law, it is to be deeply
deplored that the Colonial Office has not during that long
period sought competent legal advice upon a subject which
concerns so nearly its own duties as well as the highest
rights and interests of these Australian communities. As
a legal proposition, I venture to affirm that the doctrine is
wholly untenable and false. If it were true, all the Colonial
Constitution Statutes would be a dead letter, and all public
rights of these communities would depend not upon the
orant of Parliament, but upon the will or caprice, exerted
from day to day, of the Imperial Minister. Responsible
government cannot exist unless some powers and prerogatives
are vested in the representative of the Crown, for the exercise
of which Ministers of the Crown, appointed by the Crown,
are responsible to Parliament.
The representative of the Crown had vested in him by
force of the Constitution Statute and by virtue of his appoint-
ment as Governor such powers and prerogatives of the
Crown, and only such as were necessary in the conduct of
the ordinary duties and functions of government, and the
administration of the existing laws within the Colony. The
Governor in his character of the Queen’s representative,
and exercising the powers and prerogatives of the Crown
vested in him by statute, was legally independent of all ex-
ternal influence and authority, and could be lawfully guided