Deputy lieutenant
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In the United Kingdom, a deputy lieutenant is a Crown appointment and one of several deputies to the lord lieutenant of a lieutenancy area: an English ceremonial county, Welsh preserved county, Scottish lieutenancy area, or Northern Irish county borough or county.
In formal style, the postnominal letters DL may be added: e.g. John Brown, CBE, DL. Should the subject have numerous more important honorifics these postnominals may be omitted, although this is rare.
Deputy lieutenants are nominated by a lord lieutenant, to assist with any duties as may be required: see the Lieutenancies Act 1997; deputy lieutenants receive their commission of appointment via the appropriate government minister by command of the Queen.[1] In England and Wales, since November 2001, the minister responsible for most appointments is the Lord Chancellor, with exceptions such as the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster.[2] In Scotland, since July 1999 it has been the Scottish Ministers.[3]
Decades ago, the number of deputy lieutenants for each county could be as few as three. Today, however, there may be well over a dozen that are appointed as the number of DLs today correlates with the population of each respective county. DLs tend to be people who either have served the local community, or have a history of public service in other fields.[4]
DLs represent the lord lieutenant in his or her absence, including at local ceremonies and official events, from opening exhibitions to inductions of vicars (as requested by the Church of England). They must live within their ceremonial county, or within seven miles (11 km) of its boundary.[5] Their appointments do not terminate with any change of lord lieutenant,[6] but they are legally required to retire at age of 75.
One of the serving deputy lieutenants is appointed to be vice-lieutenant,[7] who in most circumstances will stand in for the lord lieutenant when he or she cannot be present. The appointment as vice-lieutenant does, however, expire on the retirement of the lord lieutenant who made the choice. Generally, the vice-lieutenant would then revert to DL.[8]
Unlike the office of lord lieutenant, which is an appointment in the gift of the Sovereign, the position of deputy lieutenant is an appointment of the Sovereign's appointee, and therefore not strictly speaking a direct appointment of the Sovereign.
See also
- Custos rotulorum
- Deputy Lieutenants of Aberdeen
- Deputy Lieutenants of Aberdeenshire
- List of Deputy Lieutenants of Durham
- Duchy of Lancaster
- Lord Lieutenant of the City of London
References
^ Lieutenancies Act 1997 (c. 23), section 2(4). Retrieved 2010-02-01.
^ The Transfer of Functions (Miscellaneous) Order 2001 (SI 2001/3500).
^ The Scotland Act 1998 (Transfer of Functions to the Scottish Ministers etc.) Order 1999 (SI 1999/1820).
^ Lieutenancies Act 1997, section 2(2)(a).
^ Lieutenancies Act 1997, section 2(2)(b)
^ Lieutenancies Act 1997, section 2(5).
^ Lieutenancies Act 1997, section 3.
^ Lieutenancies Act 1997, section 3(2).
External links
- Opsi.gov.uk: The law governing Deputies and Lords Lieutenant
- Department for Constitutional Affairs (now Ministry of Justice): Explanatory notes for Deputy Lieutenants