Luke Charters

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Luke Charters
File:Luke Charters Portrait - 2024.jpg
Official portrait, 2024
Member of Parliament
for York Outer
Assumed office
4 July 2024
Preceded byJulian Sturdy
Majority9,391 (18.4%)
Personal details
Born (1995-08-18) 18 August 1995 (age 30)
PartyLabour
EducationHuntington School, York
Alma mater
Websitelukecharters.co.uk

Luke Jonathan Charters[1] (born 18 August 1995) is a British Labour politician elected as Member of Parliament for York Outer in the general election held on 4 July 2024.[2]

Early life and career

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Early life and education

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Charters was born on 18 August 1995 in York, North Yorkshire, England.[3] He was educated at Huntington School, a comprehensive school in York. He studied philosophy, politics, and economics at the University of Oxford, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree in 2016.[3] He then studied political science at the University of Chicago,[4][5] graduating with a Master of Science (MSc) degree in 2017.[3]

Career

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Before his political career, Charters worked at the Bank of England and at the Financial Conduct Authority with a focus on fraud.[6] While at the Bank of England, Charters helped with the polymer banknote programme and contributed to the development of new payment infrastructure projects.[7] During the COVID-19 pandemic, Charters collaborated with the CEOs of several banks to ensure readily available access to cash.[6]

Charters subsequently worked in the fintech industry as a senior manager at the global payroll company Remote and led their fraud and compliance function.[8] In May 2022, Charters was appointed company director.[9] In March 2024 Charters resigned as a company director.[10] Charters was also a company director of Charters-Reid Surveyors Ltd between October 2014 and October 2017.[11] In July 2020, Charters was appointed a company director of Roots Local Ltd cocktail bar,[12][13] and resigned as a director in July 2022[14] before the company was placed in voluntary liquidation in 2023.[14]

Parliamentary career

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Charters first stood for election for York Outer (as Luke Charters-Reid) as the Labour candidate in the 2017 general election, when he was 21, coming second to the Conservative Party's incumbent MP Julian Sturdy.[15][16] Charters was subsequently elected as a councillor for the Wall End ward on Newham London Borough Council in 2022 prior to standing in York Outer.[17] He stepped down from the council in 2023.[3]

During the 2024 general election, Charters campaigned on several issues, including the regulation of the bailiff sector,[18] flood defences for York,[19] planning reform,[20] eating disorders in young men,[21] and removing restrictions on investing in UK defence companies.[22] Charters has also campaigned for the creation of a national anti-fraud centre.[23]

Elected with 45% of the vote, a positive swing of 15%, Charters temporarily appointed Labour donor Owen Trotter to set up and run his first parliamentary office.[24][25][26] On 17 July 2024, he made his maiden speech in the House of Commons in the debate following the King's Speech[27] and was elected as the Chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group for Food Security.[28]

In October 2024, Charters was elected to the Public Accounts Committee.[29] Previously, Charters served on the Crown Estate Bill Committee.[30] In November 2024, Charters voted in favour of the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill, which proposes to legalise assisted suicide.[31]

In March 2025, Charters held a Westminster Hall debate on "aggressive and unregulated bailiff practices".[32] Later that month, Charters supported government reforms of the existing "cliff-edge welfare system"[33] and was one of 36 signatories in an open letter of support for improving disabled employment support.[34] In May 2025, Charters introduced a Private Members' Bill for the regulation of bailiffs[35] "to get a grip on rogue bailiffs",[36] and proposed looking at the ban on alcohol during men's football matches.[37] Charters also serves as the current Chair of the FinTech All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG).[38]

In June 2025, Charters announced that he would be the first male MP to take extended parental leave and employ his office manager as locum during paternity leave.[39] This followed a campaign for improving UK paternity leave[40][41] that was backed by multiple MPs and the Women and Equalities Committee.[42]

Personal life

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Charters has a wife and two children.[5][43] They named their first son after his religious studies teacher at Huntington School.[44] They had their second son in summer 2025.[43] The family live in his constituency with two pets.[45]

References

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