Member of Parliament Young was elected to parliament at the
February 1974 general election as MP for
Acton with a majority of 1,300, defeating the sitting
Labour Party MP,
Nigel Spearing (who was returned to Parliament a few weeks later after winning a
by-election in
Newham South). Young was re-elected as MP for Acton at the
October 1974 general election with a majority of 808. He continued to represent Acton (renamed
Ealing Acton in 1983) for the next 23 years, until the seat was abolished in
boundary changes. He was selected for the safe Conservative seat of
North West Hampshire prior to the
1997 general election to replace the retiring MP
Sir David Mitchell (the father of
Andrew Mitchell whom Young would, in 2012, succeed as Chief Whip). Young was elected with a majority of 11,551, and served as the MP for North West Hampshire until his retirement in 2015.
Posts From 1976 to 1979 Young served as an opposition
whip. When the Conservative Party won the
1979 general election, he was appointed
Parliamentary under-secretary of state at the
Department of Health and Social Security. From 1981 to 1986, Young served as the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State at the Department for the Environment. On the backbenches from 1986 to 1990, Young was among the leaders of the rebellion within the Conservative Party against the implementation of the
poll tax. Shortly before leaving office in 1990, Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher brought Young back into government as a whip (
Comptroller of the Household) as part of her attempts to reunite the party. When
John Major became prime minister in November 1990, he gave Young the role of Minister for Housing and Planning. Shortly after, during an interview for
BBC Radio 4's
Today programme in June 1991, Young described the homeless as "the people you step over when you come out of the opera". In 1992 when asked during parliamentary discussions of the
Armley Asbestos Disaster for financial assistance in surveying local housing in the Armley area for residual asbestos, Young responded that the government would not provide financial assistance to the home owners or the council to pay for decontamination as this "would not be a justifiable use of public funds". Young then served as
Financial Secretary to the Treasury from 1994 to 1995, and in Cabinet as
Secretary of State for Transport from 1995 to 1997. He was appointed a
privy counsellor in 1993. Following the Conservative Party's defeat in 1997, Young was appointed
Shadow Defence Secretary by the new party leader,
William Hague. In 1998, Young became Shadow Leader of the House of Commons. In 1999, he was given additional responsibilities as Spokesman for Constitutional Affairs. He was a member of the Modernisation Select Committee and of the
House of Commons Commission from 1998 to 2000. Young resigned from the
Shadow cabinet in September 2000 in order to stand for election as
Speaker of the House of Commons. Fourteen MPs put their names forward to succeed the retiring
Betty Boothroyd, and many observers considered Young to be the favourite. He had support from both the Conservative and Labour leadership; however, many backbench MPs, particularly those from the Labour Party (who held a large majority in the House at the time), viewed Young as someone who had too recently been a member of his party's
front bench team and was thus not sufficiently in touch with ordinary MPs. In the end, Young was not elected as Speaker, the members of the House choosing instead Labour MP
Michael Martin. From 2000 to 2009, Young remained on the backbenches. He was elected chairman of the House of Commons
Committee on Standards and Privileges in 2001, and was re-elected to that role in 2005. Young stood again for the position of Speaker of the House of Commons in 2009, finishing second in the ballot of MPs to fellow Conservative MP
John Bercow. In the first ever secret ballot of MPs to choose the new Speaker, Bercow defeated Young in the final round of voting by a margin of 322 to 271. On 8 September 2009, Conservative party leader
David Cameron appointed Young to the front bench again, taking up his former role of Shadow Leader of the House of Commons, replacing
Alan Duncan who had held the post since January 2009. He became
Leader of the House of Commons and
Lord Privy Seal on 12 May 2010 after the Conservative Party formed a coalition government with the
Liberal Democrats following the
2010 general election. In this role, he attended Cabinet meetings, but not as a full member. Young left government in the
reshuffle of September 2012, and David Cameron recommended his appointment as a
Member of the Order of the Companions of Honour. However, his return to the backbenches was short-lived, as following
Andrew Mitchell's resignation as
Chief Whip the following month, Cameron chose Young to replace him. Young is Patron of the
Tory Reform Group and the
All-Party Parliamentary Group on Cycling. In October 2012 it was reported that Young supported a new group of Conservative MPs established to reconnect the Tories with working class voters. The Blue Collar Conservatism group aims to develop policies to attract "aspirational" voters on average incomes whose support is "vital" to winning a Commons majority. On 29 November 2013 Young announced he would stand down as an MP at the
2015 general election. He again retired from the cabinet at the
2014 reshuffle, replaced as Chief Whip by
Michael Gove. Gove described Young as 'distinguished' and 'honourable'. One measure proposed by Young was to make grants and subsidies available to minimize "some of the disadvantages of living on estates containing tower blocks." He described tower block housing as "an economic and social disaster" and said he would "like an assurance that loan sanction would not be given for any more."
Domestic violence In February 1975 Young was appointed to the newly formed
select committee on Violence in the Family. The committee's terms of reference were "To consider the extent, nature and causes of the problems of families where there is violence between the partners or where children suffer non-accidental injury: and to make recommendations." The committee issued an interim report in September 1975 and was instrumental in setting up several government research reports into domestic violence. In 1976 he sponsored the Sexual Offences (Amendment) Bill which allowed victims of rape to remain anonymous.
Cycling In 1982 Young and his children appeared on a
British Rail poster alongside
Jimmy Savile to promote new measures to allow people to take their bicycles on trains more easily. In September 2016, he was named to serve as Treasury spokesman in the House of Lords. On 29 August 2019, Young
resigned as a whip in the House of Lords in protest at Prime Minister
Boris Johnson's decision to
suspend parliament. ==Personal and family life==