Harriett Baldwin


Harriett Mary Morison Baldwin is a British Conservative Party politician serving as Member of Parliament for West Worcestershire since 2010.
Prior to her parliamentary career, she worked for the investment bank JPMorgan Chase. She served as joint Minister of State at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and the Department for International Development from 2018 to 2019 until new Prime Minister Boris Johnson sacked her from these positions.

Early life and career

Harriett Mary Morison Eggleston was born on 2 May 1960 in Watford, Hertfordshire to Anthony Francis Eggleston and Jane Morison Buxton. Her father was a former headmaster of the independent Felsted School and the Campion School in Athens. During his tenure as headmaster at Felsted School, he allowed the admission of girls to the sixth form in 1970. Her childhood was spent in Cyprus and in the village of Felsted in Essex. Her early education was at the Friends' School, Saffron Walden, and Marlborough College in Wiltshire.
Baldwin studied French and Russian at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford. She also obtained an MBA from McGill University in Montreal, Canada.
Baldwin joined the investment bank JPMorgan Chase in 1986, becoming managing director and head of currency management at their London office in 1998. She later became a pension fund manager at the bank before leaving in 2008. She served as vice-chair of Social Investment Business between 2008 and 2012.

Parliamentary career

At the 2005 general election, Baldwin contested the Stockton North constituency. She came second to incumbent Labour Party MP Frank Cook.
Following the retirement of Michael Spicer at the 2010 general election, she was elected to the safe Conservative seat of West Worcestershire. During the coalition government headed by Prime Minister David Cameron, she was a member of the Work and Pensions Select Committee until she was appointed Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Minister of State for Employment Mark Hoban at the Department of Work and Pensions in 2012. Baldwin was also a member of the UK's delegation to the NATO Parliamentary Assembly.
In 2013, she attempted to claim a £50 donation to a local hospice as an expense. This was rejected by the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority. From 2010 to 2018, Baldwin successfully claimed £1.1 million in expenses.
In February 2014, Baldwin became an assistant government whip and in the government reshuffle in July, she was promoted to the role of Government Whip, Lord Commissioner of HM Treasury.
After the 2015 election, in which the Conservative Party won an overall majority, she was promoted to Economic Secretary to the Treasury. Baldwin was also appointed as the Prime Minister's Trade Envoy to Russia. She supported the United Kingdom remaining within the European Union in the 2016 membership referendum.
In July 2016, Baldwin was appointed as the Parliamentary Under-Secretary and the Minister for Defence Procurement at the Ministry of Defence as part of the Government reshuffle by new Prime Minister Theresa May.
In January 2018, Baldwin was promoted to Minister of State for Africa at the Foreign Office and also became Minister of State at the Department of International Development. She voted for then Prime Minister Theresa May's Brexit withdrawal agreement. In July 2019, she was sacked from her ministerial roles by new prime minister and party leader Boris Johnson. In the 2019 Conservative Party leadership election, which Johnson had won, Baldwin had supported Jeremy Hunt.
Baldwin has been a member of the Treasury Select Committee and Finance Committee since March 2020.
On 26 May 2020 in an Interview with BBC Politics Midlands, she called on the Prime Ministers chief Advisor Dominic Cummings to resign, following a breach of Lockdown rules.

Personal life

Harriet married James Stanley Baldwin in 2004; she has two stepdaughters and a son from a previous marriage.