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The sovereign has the authority to interpret the laws from "summary" of Hobbes: Leviathan by Thomas Hobbes

In the exercise of the sovereign power, which is the supreme power of making laws, there is no judge of what is right or wrong, just or unjust, equal or unequal, but the sovereign itself. For the sovereign is the public soul, giving life and motion to the commonwealth. And just as the soul gives life and motion to the body, so too does the sovereign give life and motion to the laws. The interpretation of laws belongs to him who makes them. And since the sovereign is the maker of the laws, he is also the interpreter of them. To interpret the laws is not a distinct power from making them, but the application of them to particular cases. Just as the application of a rule to a particular case is not a distinct act from the making of the rule itself, but the exercise of the same power in a different manner. The sovereign's authority to interpret the laws is necessary for the preservation of order and the common good. For if there were no final arbiter of the law, every man would be a judge in his own case, and there would be no end to disputes and conflicts. Without a common authority to interpret the laws, there would be no law at all, but only the arbitrary will of individuals. The sovereign's interpretation of the laws is binding on all subjects, for it is the will of the sovereign that gives the laws their force and validity. And just as the will of the sovereign is the will of the people, so too is the interpretation of the laws by the sovereign the interpretation of the people. To disobey the sovereign's interpretation of the laws is to disobey the laws themselves, and to rebel against the authority of the commonwealth. In the exercise of his authority to interpret the laws, the sovereign is not bound by any external rule or standard. For if there were such a rule or standard, it would be superior to the sovereign, and the sovereign would not be sovereign. The sovereign's authority is absolute and unlimited, subject only to the laws of nature and reason, which are the foundation of all law and authority.
    oter

    Hobbes: Leviathan

    Thomas Hobbes

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