- Steve Baker has advertised for three unpaid six-month interns to work in Parliament and his constituency office.
- Baker received more than £23,000 in donations to pay for a part-time consultant since March 2021.
- One MP told Insider Baker was "exploiting young people" and he should "pay the going rate".
Senior backbench Conservative MP Steve Baker has been accused of "exploiting young people" for advertising unpaid internships lasting six months in his Parliamentary and constituency offices.
The unpaid positions come despite Baker declaring £23,400 in donations since March 1, 2021 to pay for the cost of a part-time media and strategic campaign consultant.
Job listings on the Working for an MP site show Baker, a former Brexit minister, is currently offering a "constituency volunteer internship", lasting six months. Responsibilities include working on Baker's casework from his Wycombe constituents with issues they hope his office will be able to address. The role is unpaid and has no expenses attached.
Earlier this year in March, Baker advertised a six-month "Parliamentary volunteer internship", with "reasonable expenses considered". Seven months earlier, in August 2021, he advertised another six-month unpaid internship in Parliament with the same expenses policy.
Expenses for the Parliamentary role would only cover travel, food, and non-alcoholic drink, leaving interns to find their own support for the high cost of accommodation in London. Baker suggests for all three internships that they may like to do the role "around a part-time job".
Despite the unpaid roles, Baker has received support worth £23,400 to pay for the part-time services of a media and strategic campaign consultant since March 2021.
Ed Barker, a former Conservative parliamentary candidate, is working to support Baker's Covid Recovery Group, a group of MPs critical of the government and coronavirus lockdown restrictions.
The donations Baker has received is greater than the annual minimum salary of a paid Parliamentary intern of £17,901.
One MP, who has recently tried to introduce legislation banning unpaid internships longer than four weeks, told Insider unpaid internships such as those offered by Baker were "exploiting young people".
Alex Cunningham, a Labour MP, said: "Unless it's part of an education or training course, or short-term work shadowing and experience, then there's no good reason to advertise for unpaid internships lasting six months. If there's a need to increase staffing – as it appears is the case from Mr Baker's job adverts – then they should be paid the going rate.
"The days of exploiting young people by failing to pay them for the work they do during long internships must come to an end."
Unpaid internships are increasingly rare in Parliament. The only other MP on the Working for an MP website recently advertising such a role is Conservative MP Daniel Kawczynski.
Baker's office did not respond to a request for comment.