Alastair Campbell

Activist

Birthday May 25, 1957

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Keighley, West Riding of Yorkshire, England

Age 66 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 1.91 m

#5617 Most Popular

1957

Alastair John Campbell (born 25 May 1957) is a British journalist, author, strategist, broadcaster and activist, known for his political roles during Tony Blair's leadership of the Labour Party.

Campbell was born on 25 May 1957 in Keighley, West Riding of Yorkshire, son of Scottish veterinary surgeon Donald Campbell and his wife Elizabeth.

Campbell's parents had moved to Keighley when his father became a partner in a local veterinary practice.

Donald was a Gaelic-speaker from the island of Tiree; his wife was from Ayrshire.

Campbell grew up with two older brothers, Donald and Graeme, and a younger sister, Elizabeth.

He attended Bradford Grammar School for a short period of time, followed by City of Leicester Boys' Grammar School and the University of Cambridge where he was an undergraduate student of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge.

He studied modern languages, (French and German), gaining an upper second (2:1) degree.

Following graduation from Cambridge, he joined the Mirror Group training scheme and spent a year at a local weekly paper.

He became the sports editor at the Tavistock Times, writing a column called 'Campbell's Corner'.

He published Inter-City Ditties, his winning entry to a readers' competition in Forum, the journalistic counterpart to Penthouse magazine.

This led to a lengthy stint writing pieces for the magazine.

1980

Campbell was Political Editor at the Daily Mirror newspaper in the 1980s and of Today in the 1990s.

He is the editor-at-large of The New European and chief interviewer for GQ.

He acts as a consultant strategist and as an ambassador for Time to Change and other mental health charities.

He was an adviser to the People's Vote campaign, campaigning for a public vote on the final Brexit deal.

Since his work for Blair, Campbell has continued to act as a freelance advisor to a number of governments and political parties, including Edi Rama, the Prime Minister of Albania.

In 2022 he launched the podcast The Rest is Politics with Rory Stewart, which has been the top politics podcast in the UK in the Apple rankings since its launch.

He has written eighteen books, with his most recent one, But What Can I Do? (2023).

1981

His first piece for mainstream news journalism was coverage of the Penlee lifeboat disaster in December 1981, while a trainee on the Plymouth-based Sunday Independent, then owned by Mirror Group.

1982

In 1982, Campbell moved to the London office of the Daily Mirror, Fleet Street's sole remaining big-circulation supporter of the Labour Party.

1986

He became a political correspondent, then in 1986 moved to Today, a full-colour tabloid newspaper, where he worked as a news editor.

His rapid rise and its accompanying stress led to alcohol abuse.

In 1986, while accompanying MP Neil Kinnock on a tour of Scotland, Campbell had a nervous breakdown.

Campbell stayed in Ross Hall Hospital, a private BMI hospital in Glasgow.

Over the next five days as an in-patient, he was given medication to calm him.

After seeing a psychiatrist, he realised that he had an alcohol problem.

Campbell said that from that day onwards he counted each day that he did not drink alcohol, and did not stop counting until he had reached thousands.

He experienced a period of depression and he was reluctant to seek further medical help.

He eventually cooperated with treatment from his family doctor.

Campbell returned to the Daily Mirror, where he eventually became political editor.

He was a close adviser to MP Neil Kinnock, and Daily Mirror publisher Robert Maxwell.

1987

While at Tavistock Times he met his partner Fiona Millar, with whom he has three children; two sons (born November 1987 and July 1989) and a daughter, comedian Grace Campbell (born May 1994).

1991

Shortly after Maxwell drowned in November 1991, Campbell punched The Guardian journalist Michael White after White joked about "Captain Bob, Bob, Bob...bobbing" in the Atlantic Ocean, referring to where the tycoon's body had been recovered.

Campbell later put this down to stress over uncertainty as to whether he and his colleagues would lose their jobs.

1993

After leaving the Daily Mirror in 1993, Campbell became political editor of Today.

1994

Campbell worked as Blair's spokesman and campaign director in opposition (1994–1997), then as Downing Street Press Secretary, and as the Prime Minister's Official Spokesperson (1997–2000).

In 1994, shortly after Tony Blair was elected as Leader of the Labour Party in 1994, Campbell left the Today newspaper to become Blair's press secretary.

In his autobiography, Blair would later state that Campbell had coined the name "New Labour" and described Campbell as a "genius".

2000

He then became Downing Street's director of communications and spokesman for the Labour Party (2000–2003).

2005

He returned as campaign director for the 2005 general election in Blair's third win.