Charity

Alastair is heavily involved in mental health charities. Prior to the Tory government cutting funding, he was a leading ambassador for Time to Change, the campaign to break down the stigma and taboo of mental illness. He remains an ambassador for , Mind and Rethink. He was voted Mind Champion of the Year for 2009, following an award winning documentary on his breakdown in 1986. He has written a novel around themes of mental illness, All In The Mind, and two personal accounts of depression, The Happy Depressive, and Living Better. His novel, My Name Is, tells the story of a young girl’s descent into alcoholism. He has since publication become an ambassador for Alcohol Concern.

He continues to support Blood Cancer UK, and has personally raised well over seven figures for the charity through sport and other events. He chose the charity because his best friend, former Mirror colleague John Merritt, died of leukaemia in 1992. John’s daughter Ellie died from the same disease six years later, aged nine. When he took up running in 2002, he decided to do the 2003 London Marathon for the charity, whilst still working in Downing Street. He raised half a million pounds. He then switched to triathlon and captained the charity’s triathlon team, the biggest in the country. For several years he has presented the charity’s annual sports awards, and co-hosted with his agent Ed Victor – a leukaemia survivor – a series of arts events attracting entertainers as varied as Mel Brooks, Stephen Fry, Billy Connolly, Kevin Spacey, Michael Palin, Miranda Hart and Jo Brand.

To coincide with the charity’s 50th anniversary, he made a short film for the BBC on the moving story of how – through one family’s determination to remember a little girl – the charity started, and has grown. Where once childhood leukaemia was a death sentence, now there is a 90 per cent chance of survival, in large part thanks to research funded by the charity.