Sir Christopher Packe, a Member of Parliament…
February 1657 CE
Sir Christopher Packe, a Member of Parliament and former Lord Mayor of London (chosen by those supporting Kingship as he is a less controversial character than the leaders of the Kingship party), on February 23, 1656, during the sitting of the Second Protectorate Parliament, presents the Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell with a remonstrance which becomes known as the Humble Petition and Advice, the second, and last, codified constitution of England after the Instrument of Government.
Although Packe presents it, he is not the author.
The remonstrance has come about largely as a result of the rise of the New Cromwellians, who in themselves are an expression of strong latent support for monarchy and the English traditional constitutional limits on its power, a desire to lose the military overtones of the earlier Protectorate and the increasingly small level of control Cromwell is able to exert due to ill health and frustration with a lack of revolutionary ideology among his subjects.
The Humble Petition and Advice wants to offer hereditary monarchy to Oliver Cromwell, assert Parliament's control over issuing new taxation, provide an independent council to advise the king, safeguard 'Triennial' meetings (every three years) of Parliament and reduce the size of the army in order to save money, among other things.
These have the effect of limiting, not increasing, Cromwell’s power.