The British Monarchy may be a very successful style of government, yet I still maintain that entirely too much power rests in a culturally enshrined "figurehead" for the good of the nation. Even if the powers of the Queen are never exercised.
I can see why a person might hold a negative view on such but for me I find it reassuring that there someone aside from the party-political merry-go-round who has the authority to call a halt to things.
I'm curious, Sukerkin, how much power does the Queen of England still maintain?
It depends to an extent on who you ask.
A Parliamentarian would say rather as Todd has about the House of Lords i.e. the Queen is a figure head who does what she is allowed.
A Monarchist will tell you that the powers held in reserve are still as real as they ever were - given that all oathes are sworn to the Crown, anyone breaking those oathes is guilty of treason.
Specifically - What are her holdings and total wealth? Is this a real number? How do you know?
The simple and unhelpful answer is I don't know. Other than the vague term of "LOTS!"

. There are some insights in my previous large post about how much money the Government leaches off the Crown each year (about four times what they give back). As with any huge financial organisation, only the accountants and lawyers will really know.
How much cultural influence does the Queen weild through her reputation and status as Queen? How much do her words influence your society?
Again, that depends on the individual and how brassed off with politicians they are. I've had a few educated friends of late wistfully pondering about a return to a 'proper' monarchy. I've done so myself in the past but have come to the conclusion that what we have now is best as it staves off the Jackboots on two fronts, preventing either Crown or Commons holding all the cards.
One thing to bear in mind is the Crown leaves us alone whilst the Commons screw up all our lives constantly whilst vigourously gouging us for taxes.
Also, the Royal PR machine has finally gotten around, in recent years, to making it more widely known just how hard the Monarchy works (I wouldn't want the Monarch's role that's for sure). So there has been a big resurgence of support. To be precise, that's for the Queen in particular rather than the Royal House as a whole - tho' Prince Phillip is pretty popular too {we love how he just takes no **** and says what he thinks and heaven take the hindmost :lol}.
The cultural influence is fairly deep actually, tho' I suspect that most people don't acknowledge a personal influence. That doesn't mean it's not there mind you. I was at Silverstone (race circuit) the other year with a friend of mine who's an artilleryman and when the national anthem was played at the end of a race, he stood up to attention. I didn't want him to feel embarassed standing there on his own, so I started to get up to stand with him ... only to realise that all about us a great many people were doing the same thing.
The Crown and the Country are One. As
Ahriman said earlier - people like stability. Governments chopping and changing all over the place, pulling in different directions and never getting anything done, that just pisses everyone off. The fact that the Crown is there, always, reassures us.
What are the actual legal powers of the Queen of England? I think you may have answered this above thread, but is there more?
I hope that this may lay out quite a bit of detail. I've not read in depth so don't hesitate to ask again if it doesn't:
http://www.royal.gov.uk/textonly/Page4691.asp
Lastly, how much control does the Queen of England have on the British Pound? I know that in the past, the Bank of England was literally a creature of the Crown. This was one of the major reasons for the American Revolution. How much has this changed?
If I recall correctly, the Bank of England is not owned by the Crown, nor is it owned by the Government. Technically it's owned by all of us but overseen by the Government whilst the Queen appoints it's governor. It was Nationalised in the 1940's but has been through a few changes since then with regard to it's role and how it's 'managed'.
My Economics degree equips me to say what it does but not how it's run

. I'll have to go back to data mining on that one but this link seems promising:
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts1998/ukpga_19980011_en_1
My first post was more general in nature formed by recycled bits of reading and pub conversation throughout the various countries that I've visited. I am, by no means, a serious scholar on this matter and I could be completely off base.
Don't worry my friend, it was part and parcel of my whole point with making this to get peoples views and opinions :tup:.
Addressing Todds re-iterated points about the legislated power of the House of Lords (
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld199798/ldbrief/ldwork.htm), I'm not going to try and argue per se.
My view is that the system is more finely balanced than you might think. It's not a binary situation where there either 1) is power or 0) isn't power. Democratic system don't work that way; it's all compromises and concessions.
Just because the Lord's cannot hold up a Bill for more than a year does not mean they have no influence. Timing is everything in some matters so the Houses have to play along to get along. Also, a government that forces Bills through regardless of the Lords is not a government destined for longevity.
As a post script about how more directly relevant the Crown used to be, this is a New York Times article from the late 19th Century:
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9E07EEDE123FEE3ABC4051DFB767838B699FDE