Asked by berlanda

As part of the Magna Carta, England’s Parliament had the power to

approve or reject the king’s proposals.
pass legislation so long as the king approved it.
choose a new king if it was dissatisfied with the monarch’s actions.
pass legislation even if the king did not like it.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
approve or reject the king’s proposals.

Explanation: Magna Carta (1215) required that certain taxes and levies not be imposed without the “common counsel of the realm,” effectively giving the barons (and later Parliament) the right to consent to or refuse royal demands—not the modern power to override the king on all legislation or to depose him.