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The Baby of the House is the unofficial moniker given to the youngest member of the House of Commons in the Parliament of the United Kingdom. There are no specific duties associated with the honour.

Becoming the Baby of the House is regarded as something of an achievement, and for example, Jeffrey Archer falsely claimed to have been the youngest MP at the time of his election. However, some MPs who have held the position for a considerable period - Matthew Taylor was the Baby of the House for over ten years - have found it somewhat embarrassing, as it may suggest that they have a lack of experience, although a perusal of the list shows that many babies in fact went on to enjoy long, significant and distinguished parliamentary careers. From August 1999 to September 2001, all three of the leaders of the main political parties had been the youngest MPs in the party when they began their political career (William Hague, Tony Blair, Charles Kennedy).

List of Babies of the House of Commons


Elected Name Constituency Party Age
1904b Edward Turnour Horsham 21
1906 John Wodehouse Mid Norfolk 22
1910 Charles Thomas Mills Uxbridge 22
1912b Philip Sassoon Hythe 23
1915b John Esmonde North Tipperary 21
1916b Patrick Whitty North Louth 21
1917b Edward Stanley Liverpool Abercromby 22
19181 Joseph Aloysius Sweeney West Donegal 21
1919b Esmond Harmsworth Isle of Thanet 21
1922 Henry Arthur Evans Leicester East 24
1923 Charles Arthur Uryan Rhys Romford 24
1924 Hugh Lucas-Tooth Isle of Ely 21
1929 Frank Owen Hereford 23
1931 John Roland Robinson Widnes 23
1933b Lord Willoughby de Eresby Rutland and Stamford 25
1935b Charles Taylor Eastbourne 24
1935 Malcolm Macmillan Western Isles 22
1940b John Profumo Kettering 25
1941b George Charles Grey Berwick-upon-Tweed 22
19442 John Profumo Kettering 29
1945b Ernest Millington Chelmsford 29
1945 Hon. Edward Carson Isle of Thanet 25
1948b Roy Jenkins Southwark Central 27
1950 Peter Baker South Norfolk 28
1950b Thomas Teevan Belfast West 23
19513 Tony Benn Bristol South East 26
1954b John Eden Bournemouth West 28
1955 Philip Clarke Fermanagh and South Tyrone 21
19554 Peter Kirk Gravesend 27
1957b Robert Cooke Bristol West 26
1958b Patrick Wolrige-Gordon Aberdeenshire East 23
1959b Paul Channon Southend West 23
1964 Teddy Taylor Glasgow Cathcart 27
1965b David Steel Roxburgh, Selkirk and Peebles 26
1966 John Ryan Uxbridge 25
1967b Leslie Huckfield Nuneaton 24
1969b Bernadette Devlin Mid Ulster 21
1974 Dafydd Elis-Thomas Merioneth 27
1974 Hélène Hayman Welwyn and Hatfield 25
1979b David Alton Liverpool Edge Hill 28
1979 Stephen Dorrell Loughborough 27
19815b Bobby Sands Fermanagh and South Tyrone 27
19812 Stephen Dorrell Loughborough 29
19815b Owen Carron Fermanagh and South Tyrone 28
1983 Charles Kennedy Ross, Cromarty and Skye 23
1987b Matthew Taylor Truro 24
19976 Christopher Leslie Shipley 24
2000b David Lammy Tottenham 27
2003b Sarah Teather Brent East 29
2005 Jo Swinson Dunbartonshire East 25

b by-election.
1 Joseph Aloysius Sweeney did not take his seat; the youngest MP actually sitting in the House of Commons was Oswald Mosley (Conservative, aged 22)
2 Became the youngest MP for a second time, on the death of the previous youngest MP.
3 Tony Benn was first elected at the Bristol South East by-election, 1950, aged 25, but only became the youngest MP from the 1951 general election, on the defeat of Teevan.
4 Peter Kirk was first elected at the 1955 general election, when he became the youngest MP to take his seat, but only became the youngest MP with the disqualification of Philip Clarke later in the year.
5 Bobby Sands and Owen Carron did not take their seats; Stephen Dorrell remained the youngest MP actually sitting in the House of Commons.
6 Although several sources claim Claire Ward was the youngest MP during this period, she was 50 days older than Christopher Leslie.

See also


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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Baby of the House".

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