London Marathon the best of British

  • Post

  • 10 April 2010

  • Posted by Alastair Campbell

  • 6

An election free blog! How's that for variety? Oh ok, the Tories' plans on National Insurance Contributions are unravelling, and Brown and Darling have more economic credibility in their eyebrows than Cameron and Osborne possess in the entirety of their Bullingdon brains. But that is all I am saying on the election. Vote Labour to secure the recovery and protect frontline services. Instead I want to come to the defence of the London Marathon, traduced in last night's Despatches programme on Channel 4. If I had to list my top ten experiences in life, completing the London Marathon 2003 would be in there somewhere. Partly it was the emotion of the day, which despite all the warnings from people who had done it before me took me by real surprise. It was also the fact that I managed to raise half a million quid for Leukaemia and Lymphoma Research, in memory of my best friend John Merritt. But it was also the fact that it was a superbly organised, fantastically managed event of which Britain should be incredibly proud. Alas modern TV documentaries tend not to  do the 'of which Britain should be incredibly proud' thing. So Despatches did their worst trying to present the Marathon organisers as money-grubbing chancers taking charities along for a ride. Since doing that run when I was still in Downing Street, I have become chairman of fundraising of LLR and done many sporting events in different parts of the world. Very few get even close to the Marathon in terms of scale or impact, and I know I am not alone in the charity world in being appalled at the misrepresentation of a fantastic event which is so important to so many good causes, and which raises cash for good causes itself. I know Despatches have in the past tried to do over  Mother Theresa and Seb  Coe, so clearly they like to go for popular targets. There is something curiously British about the British media's desire to tear into really good things. The London Marathon is a really good thing. It is why virtually everyone who runs anywhere in the world wants to do it. It is why it is so hard to get into. It is why charities rushed to its defence last night. It seems perverse to me to attack an institution that gives away all of its profits to charity and which in 30 years has helped to raise over half a billion pounds. The former journalist in me also wonders why there was no proper space within the programme for the Marathon to respond to the programme's claims. The good news is that the event, in a few weeks' time, will be a great success. So will next year's, by which time Despatches will probably have moved on to exposing Santa Claus as a paedophile. *** Buy The Blair Years online and raise cash for Labour http://www.alastaircampbell.org/bookshop.php

6 responses to “London Marathon the best of British”

  1. The British media is almost always very negative and on the attack.

    It seems to be built into the mind of every editor that the only news worth printing or broadcasting is bad news.

  2. Totally agree re sentiments aroused by marathon. I did my first same day as yours and I remember overtaking you – sorry – at Tower Bridge. You looked to be struggling but you broke four hours so well done. I saw you being interviewed at the end and you were emotionally drained as we all were. I remember your kids surrounding you and I could see they shared it too. Didn’t see the programme but agree it is right up there in lifetime experiences. Have done eleven since but that was the best. Only New York gets near

  3. The Marathon is a fabulous event to watch too. I go every year and cheer them on at Greenwich. It is the best of British and the best of humankind. I love it. why the media feel they have to attack it like this is perverse.

  4. Ha – love your first paragraph – you’ve lost the plot.

    Do Labour have any policies yet? Or do they not really want to win as they know what has to be done?

  5. I listened to the Reunion on R4 about the start of the London Marathon in 1981. Its a unique event with such large numbers of people participating it got me thinking. Its strange to say but it somehow reminds me of Princess Diana’s funeral. All that mass suffering for good causes. It also has a religion-like over-tone. Runners as mendicants self flaggelating to take themselves closer to some desired state of being. Its all a bit bonkers.

Leave a Reply to Mark Cooke Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

488. Is Iran on the Edge of Revolution?

Could the Iran protests finally break the Supreme Leader’s brutal reign, or will the regime's deadly crackdown contain the unrest? If the US intervenes militarily, what would a Trump-style plan for ... Continue

13 January 2026

Post

Posted by Goalhanger

170. President of Moldova, Maia Sandu: Holding the Line Between Democracy and Putin

How did Maia Sandu fight Russian disinformation in Moldova? What is it like to have a war in the country next door? Will the European Union accept Moldova with Russian troops in the country?  Rory a... Continue

12 January 2026

Post

Posted by Goalhanger

China Vs USA: Who Will Win the AI Race?

Who really controls AI; governments, corporations, or no one at all? Is AI becoming a new kind of global arms race? And, can we keep humans in charge of systems that move faster than we do? Rory and ... Continue

8 January 2026

Post

Posted by Goalhanger

487. Is Starmer Rethinking His Approach to Europe? (Question Time)

What do Keir Starmer’s comments on 'closer alignment' with the EU single market actually mean? After the Bondi terror attack, how can a centrist government respond to national trauma without fuellin... Continue

8 January 2026

Post

Posted by Goalhanger

486. Does Maduro’s Capture Put Greenland at Risk?

Is Venezuela the start of something bigger? If this isn’t regime change, what does Trump actually want? And, has Trump just handed Putin a win?  Join Rory and Alastair as they answer all these ques... Continue

6 January 2026

Post

Posted by Goalhanger

169. Jimmy Wales: Wikipedia vs. Musk, AI, and the Battle for Truth

Who gave us an encyclopedia in our pockets? Why is the statement that Donald Trump is the "worst president in US history" allowed on his Wikipedia page? How do Brazilians and Americans differ on the... Continue

5 January 2026

485. Trump Says America will Run Venezuela

Trump has announced that Venezuela will now be run by Washington as US forces have captured Nicolás Maduro and taken him to stand trial in New York. After months of escalating tension, Trump launched... Continue

3 January 2026

484. War in Europe, Trump’s Destruction of Institutions, and Britain’s National Treasures (Question Time)

Will Europe go to war with Russia in 2026? Should National Service be introduced next year? How will AI continue to develop? Should the G20 be moved? And how else will politics change next ye... Continue

1 January 2026