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How will the next Archbishop of Canterbury be appointed? Eight-month process to replace Welby explained

The King and Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer both have roles to play in the process of appointing the new archbishop.

Holly Evans
Wednesday 13 November 2024 10:46 GMT
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Justin Welby resigns as Archbishop of Canterbury

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Justin Welby has resigned as the Archbishop of Canterbury after coming under sustained pressure over his handling of a Church of England-linked abuse case.

The independent Makin Review concluded that barrister and Christian camp leader John Smyth might have been brought to justice had the archbishop formally alerted authorities in 2013.

Yet the process for electing his successor is far from simple. While several senior Church figures have been touted, it is unlikely that they were be named until the late spring, as multiple consultations, shortlisting and interviews are set to take place.

Here we look at the process for choosing the new archbishop:

Who appoints the archbishop?

The King ā€“ the defender of the faith and supreme governor of the Church of England ā€“ formally appoints archbishops, bishops and deans.

Mr Welby sought permission from the King before he announced his intention to resign.

Once a candidate has been decided, their name is passed on to Downing Street, who subsequently passes it on to Buckingham Palace for approval.

Justin Welby with the King at his coronation
Justin Welby with the King at his coronation (PA Archive)

Who recommends the appointment?

The Crown Nominations Commission (CNC) is responsible for appointing the next archbishop, but a period of consultation is first needed to set up this body.

The CNC examines the candidates, holds interviews, and puts forward a name to the Prime Minister, who then passes it to the King.

There will be 17 voting members of the CNC: an Anglican in public life chosen by the Prime Minister, a bishop, the Archbishop of York, three representatives elected from the Diocese of Canterbury, six from the General Synod ā€“ three ordained and three lay ā€“ and five Anglican communion representatives.

In addition, the secretary general of the Anglican Communion, the prime ministerā€™s appointments secretary and the archbishopsā€™ secretary for appointments are non-voting members of the Commission.

Once the King has approved the chosen candidate and they have indicated a willingness to serve, 10 Downing St will announce the name of the archbishop-designate.

The college of canons of Canterbury Cathedral then formally elects the new archbishop.

What will happen to Mr Welby?

The Archbishop said he would honour his existing ā€œconstitutional and church responsibilitiesā€, so exact timings for his departure will be decided ā€œonce a review of necessary obligations has been completedā€.

Previous archbishops have received a life peerage to sit in the House of Lords.

Archbishops must retire at the age of 70, with Mr Welby previously telling The Times in 2022 that he intended to retire in January 2026 on his 70th birthday.

Martyn Snow

The 54-year-old Bishop of Leicester has been in his current posting since 2016. He was born in Indonesia and also worked as a vicar and youth chaplain in West Africa.

He has been the Churchā€™s lead bishop in its Living in Love and Faith program, which grapples with questions of sexuality and doctrine.

Graham Usher

The Bishop of Norwich is outspoken on issues relating to climate change, and most recently called on the government to hit major polluters with higher taxes in the run-up to this weekā€™s COP29 summit in Azerbaijan.

Guli Francis-Dehqani has been tipped as a possible successor to Justin Welby
Guli Francis-Dehqani has been tipped as a possible successor to Justin Welby ( )

Guli Francis-Dehqani

The Bishop of Chelmsford was born in Iran, where her father was an Anglican bishop, but fled the Middle Eastern country with her family as a result of the Islamic revolution, in which her brother was killed, in 1980.

She is outspoken on justice issues, and recently called on western governments to address Palestinian dispossession in occupied territories.

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