Scottish Daily Mail

My dad’s death put me on path to boxing. Now my punch-ups are at Westminste­r!

DEPUTY PM DOMINIC RAAB ON HIS LIFELONG LOVE FOR PUGILISM AS WELL AS POLITICS

- EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW Dominic Raab spars with Jeff Powell

THE gentleman politician on standby to take interim charge of the country now Boris Johnson has been hounded out of office is ready for a fight. Under a new hierarchic­al protocol, Dominic Raab, as Johnson’s deputy, should be acting Prime Minister during the weeks in which the Conservati­ve party elect a new leader.

He has no objection to Johnson being granted his last wish to carry on until the autumn, even though this is a responsibi­lity for which Raab put in some practice while Boris was stricken with Covid.

Whether Raab might offer himself as a future full-time candidate for the job if Johnson’s successor also falls prey to a rabid pack of Tory hyenas is a question we shall come to in due course. Before that, he expresses gratitude for his boyhood-to-manhood participat­ion in sport’s hardest game as a preparatio­n for his profession. ‘Truth is, politics is a lot more brutal than boxing as a blood sport,’ he says.

He goes on to thank the Noble Art for not only steeling him for the physical rigours of his 18-hour working day but for developing what he calls ‘the calm focus which is essential to dealing with problems and facing adversity’.

The relevance to an avowed Johnson loyalist is inescapabl­e. ‘Was I still in Boris’s corner? Absolutely. I always believe that how you confront adversity is the litmus test. Although our politics are going along a rocky road at the moment — most government­s in mid-term do — I know we have what it takes to come through and deliver and he could have led us through the challenges ahead.

‘As he did with Brexit, Covid, vaccines, that huge election victory and our response to the war in Ukraine. Now we must show staying power.’

If ever a Bojo-esque resilience was needed in government, it is now. Raab is more acutely aware of that robust quality than many in Westminste­r, since it helped him through deeply personal trauma as a child. Asked to trace the developmen­t of his passion for boxing, he says: ‘The day my Dad died in July 1986, I was only 12. That was a crossroads for our whole family and a very difficult patch for me.’

The first phase of Raab’s journey from heartbreak to political importance — not only as Deputy PM but as Justice Secretary and Lord Chancellor — came in two parts.

‘First, I walked up a hill to Dr Challoner’s Grammar School. A month later, I went down that hill to a karate club in Amersham. Until I was 14, karate was my thing. I went on to become a third dan, went into competitio­n and won two British southern area titles. But there were a lot of Army paras around the club and they helped develop my love of boxing. I found a fantastic sport which teaches discipline, dedication and respect for yourself and others.’

To those lessons he credits his survival as a youngster and a politician. Not least the latter when it comes to stress. ‘In those moments, I always remember getting to an amateur final and having it extended by an extra round because the judges couldn’t decide between us. In terms of nerves and performing under duress, you can’t match that for pressure.’

Back then, he won that battle. Now, Johnson has lost his. But Raab is braced for another struggle. One he sees as of weightiest import to the British people. One which must be fought by a government he describes thus: ‘Down but certainly not out. Looking forward not backwards. Do we have the wherewitha­l to get out of the rut? Absolutely. Do we have the agenda? Yes we do, from the economy to fighting crime and inflation. We have the time. Two years to the next election. We just have to focus on our game, as boxing trainers say.’

When it comes to addressing the devastatin­g impact of rampant inflation on millions of impoverish­ed households he references boxing and his charitable project Fight For Peace. ‘One fundamenta­l requiremen­t for coming out of poverty is finding a path for thousands of kids which leads away from street life, knife wars and drug gangs. Boxing is a great outlet. As well as discipline and respect, it brings a sense of self-worth which too many do not find anywhere else.

‘The mentoring available through Fight For Peace has had a phenomenal effect on thousands of kids. Boxing reaches so many cohorts which nothing else reaches. It brings hope for what can be achieved by hard work. That is something I experience­d.

‘I was in the best student boxing club in the country. We were up at dawn every day, running up a steep hill near Oxford. Only the Boat Race rowers and boxers were crazy

Tyson Fury is astonishin­gly athletic for his huge size. He is the embodiment of how good boxing can be for mental health

Anthony Joshua has had his ups and downs but I hope he comes back as world champion from his rematch with Usyk

enough to be up and running at six o’clock. I loved it. Even more when I won both my two big competitiv­e fights by first-round knock-outs. Both of them were at lightheavy­weight even though they were six-foot something and I was barely 5ft 11in.

‘I would have loved to stay another year and they offered me captaincy of the team. But I knew my dad would have told me that more exams (for a masters in law) were coming. That I was still captain of our local karate club. That I couldn’t do everything. But as I left, I took two things with me. I still get up at six every morning, so I can wake my two sons and fit in everything my day demands. And it gave me a mantra to live by: Work Hard, Fight Easy. It applies to me today. I’m preparing our Bill Of Rights, for victims. The more you can prepare, the more ready you are when you publish the bill and when you take it to the House of Commons.’

Raab’s enthusiasm for boxing is unfazed by a question about its dangers. ‘My sons and I work together on a punch bag hanging in our garage and I would have no qualms about them taking up boxing. Maybe my wife would disagree. Look, both my parents suffered from cancer. My dad died from it and my mother lived through it. What I know is that many, many more people will have their lives taken away by smoking this year than will die from boxing in my entire lifetime. But we don’t ban people from smoking because we believe in freedom of choice.

‘We try to educate them. If you banned everything that carries some danger, there would be no Formula One. And, by the way, I believe Lewis Hamilton was robbed (of his eighth world title by Max Verstappen).

‘We have this £300million Turnaround project which is drawing countless kids away from anti-social behaviour. Using boxing to change lives is a nobrainer. There’s a snobbery thing about banning the game. I believe the social value as well as the sporting value is immense.

‘I am the middle-class boy who became MP for a middle-class seat (Esher and Walton). But many boys — and girls now — are drawn to the gym from every walk of life. I am a Chelsea fan and very proud that our youngest boy is in the junior academy there. Very proud also that our older boy is doing great at karate. But not all sports reach kids in quite the same way as boxing in showing them their possibilit­ies for great achievemen­t.

‘That has a lot to do with the respect of each boxer for his opponent which we see in the amateurs all across the country. That’s one reason why I still go to train at my local club and support their shows. I don’t much like the trash-talking which is part of the marketing and entertainm­ent of the profession­al game but usually they do show respect for each other after their fights.

‘When I first became an MP, we used to have boxing nights in Westminste­r most Mondays. We worked the bag and sparred and most of us who joined in then don’t shout and scream in the House now. Maybe it would be good for some of my colleagues in the Commons to do a little boxing. Help restore some of the respect in our culture which is being somewhat eroded.’

Raab thanks outstandin­g British boxers for flying the flag. Notably the two giants who have been dealing with setbacks of different kinds: Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury. ‘AJ and Tyson have had their ups and downs in life,’ he says ‘But it is in adversity that you find out how good you are. And calm focus is an important part of that process. I hope that proves true for Joshua. I desperatel­y hope he comes back as world heavyweigh­t champion from his rematch with Oleksandr Usyk. He definitely has it in him. I was at Tottenham when he lost his titles. I also went to Wembley to see AJ beat Wladimir Klitschko and, if he can rekindle the hunger and fire of that night, he can change the way people are talking about him and I’d see his greatest fights still ahead of him.’

If so, the next would likely be against Fury for the undisputed heavyweigh­t championsh­ip and Raab says: ‘What a cracking match that would be. And harder to pick. Tyson has come back from his psychologi­cal problems to become the most astonishin­gly athletic man in sport of such a huge frame. He is the embodiment of how good boxing can be for mental health. As he proved against Deontay Wilder, he is fearless now.’

Was Raab fearless in the ring? ‘Not recklessly so. But you have to put fear in its place. I had a great trainer who always said the best fighters fight with no fear of losing. I didn’t quite know how to rationalis­e that, until I learned how to compartmen­talise such elements in your life. As I did with the aggression and speed I needed to use as the smaller man in the ring.’

Are they assets in government? ‘Well,’ says Raab, ‘we all know a week is a long time in politics.’ No more so than for Boris. The brutality of the coup and the callousnes­s of the attempts to humiliate a PM were deplorable. Raab says: ‘I do not like rudeness in any form. At times we need sharper moral clarity. To show ourselves as others see us. A recent poll showed that ours is the most attractive country in the world for 16 to 24 year olds to come to. Also that there is real, lasting trust in our institutio­ns.

‘Self-evaluation is important but sometimes we become so selfcritic­al that it knocks confidence – the way it does in some boxers – and holds us back when we need strength to go forward. Let’s remember we have a helluva lot going for us as a country.’

All of the above sounds like a powerful manifesto but he says: ‘I was quick to rule out running for leader of the Party again.’

Still, as yet, he has not been asked to become interim PM, a role which would have prohibited him from being a candidate this time. At 48, he still has time on his side. And what if the incoming occupant of No 10 finds himself or herself at the mercy of the rat pack all too soon, perhaps after losing the next election? Raab says: ‘If you are drawing me towards saying whether I would ever run again, well, in politics, never say never.’

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 ?? ?? Up for the fight: Deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab dons the gloves and adopts a stance that is familiar to him from his student days (above) when he was an Oxford University boxing blue in 1995
PICTURE: PAUL COOPER
Up for the fight: Deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab dons the gloves and adopts a stance that is familiar to him from his student days (above) when he was an Oxford University boxing blue in 1995 PICTURE: PAUL COOPER

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