Authors: Ned Boulting
A week later, as Stage One of the Tour de France got underway, I watched the live coverage coming from our stretch of road in South-East London, hoping to catch a poignant glimpse of Kath and my girls waving at the Tour (and, by extension, at me, off for another month apart), and I couldn't help but notice how empty it was.
It is an ugly stretch of road, the very same part that the BBC never show on their coverage of the marathon, cutting out the first five miles of Woolwich and Charlton: âHere they are at the start on Blackheath . . .' And then, the next thing you see: âOh, look, it's the
Cutty Sark
.'
It is a very deprived part of the Borough of Greenwich. The passage of the Tour meant precious little to anyone there, and not many of the kids had bothered to walk to the end of their road to witness the spectacle. Not even for the free Haribos that I'd told them would rain down on them, like a gelatine act of God. It was a shame.
It had been surprisingly easy to achieve, getting the Tour to London. Cheap, relatively, and uncontroversial: an idea so simple that it seems perplexing that no one had managed to bring it to life before Ken Livingtone's administration pulled the Lycra rabbit out of the aero helmet.
One freezing December day in 2011, just as the mayoral election of 2012 was gaining momentum, I was finally invited, after some badgering, to share an audience with Ken Livingstone at Labour's London headquarters in Victoria. I arrived by bike, filled up with a sense of appropriate sustainability in my transport choices, to be met by an enthusiastic political aide, a chap called Joe. He had no idea where I could lock it up. âWe don't normally get people visiting by bike. I don't know what to suggest really. Do you want a cup of tea? Ken's waiting.'
âYes please.' I said, trying to look (or at least
feel
) like a hard-bitten political hack. I left my bike chained up to a lamppost outside, and untucked my jeans from my socks.
Ken and I had a little previous. Not that he'd remember.
The last time I had interviewed Livingstone was in Paris at the end of the 2007 Tour. He was a little bit the worse for wear, and slurring his words. London's mayor, after an extremely boozy lunch at the Jules Verne restaurant in the Eiffel Tower, had just been shown a Vélib, the Parisian bike hire scheme. He was impressed, and no doubt emboldened by the sunshine and the volume of Pauillac swilling around inside him, declared to his staff that he wanted the same thing for London. And so it was that the Boris Bike was born. The incoming mayor would later inherit a project hatched over lunch near the Champs-Elysées in 2007.
We interviewed him about it. Or at least we tried to.
Woody had to fabricate a fault in the sound and ask him politely to do it again, in the hope that it would be less slurred the second time around. It wasn't, he wasn't. So we thanked him politely and watched on as he swayed his way back to the Tribune Présidentielle to catch Floyd Landis parading the yellow jersey.
Now, a few years later, and with Ken Livingstone no longer in power, I was sitting in a bland meeting room with a giant 3D Labour logo pinned to the wall opposite an oil painting of him in his last mayoral incarnation. The man himself was wearing an off-white suit to match his off-white suit in the portrait. He was in the middle of an election campaign and he struck me as looking completely knackered. Before we got started though, he summoned up the energy to lambast the state of journalism, and the state of television generally, after I told him what I did for a living.
âThere is a general degradation in the reporting world, and television is a tide of crap, with nothing you want to see.' I nodded my agreement, and smiled apologetically, writing the words âtide of crap' in my notebook.
He continued. âAnyway, that's my rant about the decline of your industry. What can I do for you? I don't know what we're going to talk about really. I don't do bicycles.'
âI'm not sure this is going to be of much use in your campaign. I have no idea when the book might get published.' I felt it was best to be honest. I saw his aide look up from his BlackBerry and then glance at his watch. Besides, I was way outside my comfort zone, having no idea how to interview politicians, and felt that the best way to get beyond the spin of an electioneering career politician was to confess that I had no intention really of putting any of the interview into the public domain.
Yet none of this seemed to bother Ken Livingstone. Not even the glaringly obvious reality of the fact that he had granted half an hour of his time to talk to no one in particular on a subject he knew little about, and cared for still less. An hour later, we were still talking, even though our starting point had been inauspicious.
âYou're not interested in sport?' I ventured.
âAbsolutely completely uninterested.' He smiled that famous wide-mouthed grin back across the table, delighting in his perversity. âWhen I was leader of the GLC, I had only ever been to one sporting event. The mayor of Lambeth took me to a test match at the Oval, and I fell asleep.'
He was never that kind of outdoorsy type. He'd never been bothered. His city of birth wasn't made for it. âIn the 1950s, 60s and 70s London's weather was very much wetter than it now is.' Livingstone recalls a London of his youth that seems to echo with post-war drips from gutters and the stifling swish of wet mackintoshes on buses. It was a black-and-white world, where most people aspired to buying a car. Not a bike.
âIt was a thing about status. You wouldn't have a bike. Losers had bikes.'
Yet, despite his bookish reluctance to join the boisterous masses on the games field, Livingstone did, at some undefined point in his Tulse Hill childhood, briefly have access to a pushbike. And he rode it, too.
âMy parents wouldn't let me and my sister have a bike because it was too dangerous. So I used to borrow my mate Dave's. I thought I was getting somewhere in demonstrating to my parents that it was safe, and then I ran into the front of a car and staggered home all covered in blood and after that I didn't have a chance. So that was that.'
His flirtation with the bicycle went straight from short-lived to non-existent. These days, he has other ways of keeping fit; he tells me with not inconsiderable pride about how much weight he has lost. âI've lost a stone and a half as a combination of campaigning against evil incarnate . . .' (Boris Johnson, it seems) â. . . and walking the dog. My doctor almost had an orgasm when I had my annual medical.'
But cycling? No way. âThere are so many Jeremy Clarkson clones who'd just run over me and say it was an accident. “Oooh, was that the mayor? Sorry about that!”' And with that imagined assassination attempt, the
former
mayor of London throws his head back and roars with laughter.
But, he protests too much. Things did change during those years, and, wittingly, or unwittingly, his administration played its part. It's odd. Here I am playing at being a political journalist, full of âbalance' and âcaution' and âpinches of salt', determined to see through any blatant politicking, and I find myself trying to remind him how well he did. Something tells me I am no Paxman.
âCycling had dwindled to the absolute minimum you can get, in terms of the number of people cycling and the quality of the experience. It was the all-time low point.' His team are keen to arm me with statistics about GLA budgets and TfL surveys. But frankly, the numbers don't make the hair stand up on the back of your neck, not like the memory of the London Grand Départ does. It is to that subject that I wish to return. Although, Livingstone's recollections of schmoozing the ASO officials from Paris are, perhaps understandably, sometimes a little hazy.
âThe old guy who was just giving up and handing over to Prudhomme, who was that?' He is talking about Jean-Marie le Blanc, the legendary director of the Tour, who was just about to retire when Livingstone bought the Grand Départ.
âJean-Marie le Blanc,' I remind him. His face lights up.
âYeah, he was great. Working with them was a joy. You had a rule [with the Olympics] that you could only take the IOC members out for one meal during their visit. And so that had to be with the Queen, not down at my favourite Indian or something. But with the Tour officials we went out to a restaurant, we drank too much, we had a good laugh. It was such a pleasure to work with them.'
âYou took them to Le Pont de la Tour, didn't you?' I had been told that they had eaten at the same place Tony Blair had chosen to impress Bill Clinton. Bernard Hinault, the five times winner of the Tour de France, had flown in especially for that particular piece of negotiation. âDo you remember that dinner?'
âYea-ah.' He looks a little vacant. âI don't recall . . . it blurs. I think they carried me out at the end of it.'
He goes on to tell me that Boris Johnson had failed to take up the option of a return to London for the Tour de France in 2010 or 2011.
âWhy didn't he?' I ask. This is the first time I have heard this.
âBecause he's lazy. That's why.'
According to Livingstone, they'd âshaken hands on it' with the organisation of the Tour. (The next day, in a fit of journalistic diligence, I telephone the Conservative Assembly member Andrew Boff, who has special responsibilities for cycling, and ask him if this is true. He tells me he has no idea, but he will find out, and get back to me. I hear nothing more from him. After a month, I chase him up by email. He never replies. So I guess we'll have to make up our own minds about that.)
I have one more soft question to ask, and, even as I ask it, I think I know what the answer is going to be.
âWhat is your proudest contribution to cycling in London?'
Ken Livingstone thinks long and hard about this. Then he answers. âTransparent bike sheds.'
I start scribbling notes.
âWe wanted kids to start cycling. So we worked with schools. The real problem is you've got to have somewhere to put the bikes, so we offered schools bike sheds. But there was a real resistance from them because they imagined everyone getting pregnant behind the bike sheds or doing drugs. That's where the teachers all got laid at school, you know? People who are teachers now had their first sexual encounters behind the bike sheds, when they were at school! They weren't having the old-style bike sheds. So we actually built bike sheds that were transparent.'
âSpoiling everybody's fun?'
âYeah, yeah. That's my favourite cycling story out of the eight years.'
Not the Tour de France, then.
I thanked him, got him to sign a copy of his book for my father-in-law who detests him, and took my leave.
I ONCE HOSTED
an event at which I had to interview two bike riders who had completed circumnavigations of the planet Earth. On the face of it, this is fairly remarkable. Or so you might think.
One had ridden all the way round the world simply because he'd wanted to. The other, an environmental activist, had done it with some sort of charitable agenda, which involved raising awareness of solar power or a similar thoughtful endeavour. To my great surprise, and considerable disappointment, I found their stories quite deadening, although I marginally favoured the account of the bloke who just did it because he could. They had traversed vast tracts of the planet alone, on a bike, and yet they had returned to the fold of us mortals with a few holiday snaps and long list of reasonably interesting encounters, rendered somehow dull in the retelling. A snake in Morocco. A terrible toilet in India. Hitting a cow in Texas. Some skirmish with border guards near China, which they had patently obviously survived otherwise they wouldn't have been standing there next to me at a trade fair in Surrey.
Amazingly, these self-appointed adventurers had turned an astonishing achievement, a colossal enterprise, into something you had to follow on a PowerPoint presentation, wondering how many more pages there were to reveal. Perhaps I had misjudged the mood, but the general shuffling in the auditorium suggested that they'd lost their audience by the time they'd crossed into Iran. The mean-spirited green-eyed amateur rider in me railed at their good fortune in having been able to devote a year to such a singular and, yes, pointless, pursuit.
It is with a certain amount of resignation that I read of the charity rides, however noble the cause (and they are often extremely noble). Be it Land's End to John O'Groats, London to Paris or simply Round The World, this is a burgeoning pastime in Great Britain. Cycling seems to have embraced this impulse more widely than other sports. The moral legitimacy of the sponsored act of sweaty endurance, well, who could argue with that? Ever since that somewhat less-than-honest chap Lance Armstrong struck fundraising gold with his Livestrong bracelets, the charities have started to mine the same seam. It clearly yields dividends.
It has become a peculiarly British phenomenon. These islands in particular are home to a bewildering array of causes. Over recent years the proliferation of organised charity-sponsored fundraising rides has ballooned beyond measure. They take out adverts in the broadsheets. They plaster themselves over Tube stations. They loom at you from illuminated bus stop signs. Timelines on Twitter sometimes silt up and grind to a halt with the relentless re-distribution of worthy causes. Just Giving tweets and emailed links to fundraising pages have become the new virtual âchugging'.
To be, it seems, is to fundraise.
They are all chasing the same money, surely. The marvellously self-delusional, comfortably seated cyclist (for there are many of them) is easy prey. The charity fundraisers have worked out their demographic and established that every office with, say, ten or more workers, will by now, statistically speaking, have at least one cycling nut who would leap at the chance of spending four days riding to Paris to see the final stage of the Tour de France. Then the rest of the office, if only to get the cycling nut off their case, and to avoid having to speak to them about it endlessly in the canteen, will feel obliged to chip in online, probably donating at least fifty pounds each. That's five hundred pounds for the chosen cause without even turning a pedal.