Medical career From 1959 to 1961, Taylor was
pre-registration house officer at Westminster, Kingston and London Chest Hospitals in
London. A medical officer in the
Royal Air Force from 1960 to 1964, he was a
registrar and
senior registrar for appointments in London hospitals (1964–1972). Taylor latterly worked as a
consultant physician at
Kidderminster General Hospital from 1972 to 1995.
Military service On 1 October 1960, he was commissioned as a
flying officer in the
Medical Branch of the
Royal Air Force. On 1 April 1964, he was transferred to the reserve, ending his full-time service.
Parliamentary career Before entering politics, Taylor was a member of his local health authority, chairman of
Kidderminster Hospital League of Friends (1996–2001), and a committee member of the Save Kidderminster Hospital Campaign (1997–2001). Standing for Parliament as an
Independent Kidderminster Hospital and Health Concern candidate at the
2001 general election, Taylor campaigned largely on a single issue, that of restoring the Accident & Emergency department of
Kidderminster Hospital, which had been closed in 2000 due to cuts in the NHS. Taylor won with a majority of 18,000, defeating the incumbent
Labour MP and junior minister,
David Lock. The
Liberal Democrats decided not to put up a candidate against him. The Liberal Democrats had previously stood down when faced with another independent candidate,
Martin Bell in
Tatton in
1997. Taylor was re-elected at the
2005 election with a reduced majority of 5,250.
Conservative candidate
Mark Garnier took second place and Labour were pushed into third in the constituency. This made Taylor the first independent MP to retain a seat in the
House of Commons in a second election since
Frank Maguire in
Fermanagh and South Tyrone in
1979. He was a member of the
Health Select Committee (2001–2010) and also became co-chair of the All Party Local Hospital Group, Vice Chairman of the All Party Group on Cancer, Vice Chairman of the Associate Parliamentary Flood Prevention Group, and Secretary of the All Party Group on Patient and Public Involvement in Health. While his speeches in the Commons were mostly confined to the health service, Taylor also laid out an atypical collection of political views. These non-health policies included support for the
renationalisation of the
British railway system, and the availability of
cannabis as a controlled drug. He also opposed the
Iraq war and student top up fees. Taylor lost his seat in the
2010 general election to the Conservative candidate,
Mark Garnier, At the election, Taylor finished fourth with 7,221 votes. He did not stand in the
2017 general election. In June 2022, Taylor announced that his Party (now called Independent Health Concern) would not be standing in future elections and recommended that its supporters consider voting for independent candidates. ==Personal life==