Red box (government)
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A ministerial box or document box or informally, a "red box", is a red wooden briefcase used by the British government to pass important documents from one department (or person) to another. Government ministers use these on a daily basis, and it is regarded as a mark of prestige and high office. Red is an official colour used historically to signify British state ownership - it is also used in traditional designs for postal pillar boxes, public buses, and public phone boxes. In the late 1990s, a Whitehall initiative began to replace document boxes with computer-equipped and networked boxes.
Perhaps the best known red box is the 'Budget Box', which is held up for a photo-shoot outside of 11 Downing Street, when the Chancellor of the Exchequer announces his annual budget plans. The first Budget Box was made for William Ewart Gladstone around 1860 and is lined in black and covered with scarlet leather. That particular box had been used by every Chancellor since, with the exceptions of James Callaghan and the current Chancellor, Gordon Brown, who both had new ones commissioned in 1965 and 1997 respectively, as the original is beginning to wear away. The Budget Box of 1997 is made of yellow pine with a brass handle and lock, covered in scarlet leather and embossed with the Royal Cypher of E II R and the words 'Chancellor of the Exchequer' directly beneath it.
Other red boxes of note are the ones delivered to the British Sovereign every day (except Christmas Day and Easter Sunday) by government departments, via the Page of the Presence. These boxes contain Cabinet and Foreign and Commonwealth Office documents, most of which the monarch must sign and give Royal Assent to, before they can become law (an essential part of the role of a constitutional monarch).
External links
- ["Whitehall gets wired"], BBC News, 7 April 1998
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