Kissing hands

To kiss hands is a constitutional term used in the United Kingdom to refer to the formal installation of Crown-appointed British government ministers to their office.

Overview

In the past, it referred to the requirement that the office-holder actually kiss the hands of the Sovereign as a symbol of personal fealty and loyalty to the Sovereign, that fealty and loyalty being a requirement to serve in the King's or Queen's government.

In modern times, office-holders are not expected physically to kiss the hands of the Sovereign before assuming the role. Simply being received by the Queen is taken to validate the selection, with this meeting being described in the Court Circular as "kissing hands". The invitation issued to a party leader to form a government is sometimes still described as "an invitation to kiss hands". The metaphorical kissing of hands (i.e. the appointment) does not legally take place until the subsequent meeting of the Privy Council, when the new minister is formally appointed as a member of the Council.[1]

When appointing a Secretary of State (the top rank in the UK government), the protocol also involves the delivery by the Sovereign of the seals of office into the hands of the appointee. This is also valid for other officers who are keepers of seals, such as the Lord Privy Seal or the Lord Chancellor, who is also keeper of the Great Seal of the United Kingdom.

Ordinarily the ceremony will take place in Buckingham Palace, but it has been known to happen in Windsor Castle or Balmoral Castle. More unusually, when H. H. Asquith took the premiership after the ailing Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman's resignation in April 1908, King Edward VII controversially summoned Asquith to Biarritz, France, where he was on holiday at the time.

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References

  1. Alan Cowell, ‘The Queen’ Got It Wrong: No Hands Are Kissed, New York Times, 27 June 2007; the royal web page mentioned in the article (part of the official website of the British Monarchy) was archived from the original at 14 April 2010.
  • Rodney Brazier (1997). Ministers of the Crown. Oxford University Press. pp. 28, 81–85. ISBN 0-19-825988-3.


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