Evening Standard

Don’t lose your voice: last chance to register to vote

- Ross Lydall

A LAST-DITCH bid to ensure Londoners don’t lose the chance to vote in the mayoral elections next month was launched today.

Comedian and TV presenter Amelia Dimoldenbe­rg, actor Paapa Essiedu, The Thick of It writer Armando Iannucci and Dear England playwright James Graham were among the stars urging Londoners to “give an X” and register to vote.

Outernet, the capital’s most visited cultural attraction, in Tottenham Court Road, displayed artworks and QR codes to make it easier to register.

The deadline is 11.59pm tonight to be able to take part in the mayoral and London Assembly elections on May 2. Just over six million Londoners are registered but it is thought that up to a million are not yet eligible to vote, many in the 18 to 24 age group. Turnout in the last mayoral elections in 2021 slumped to 40 per cent and there are concerns that new requiremen­ts to provide ID at polling stations could reduce participat­ion further, particular­ly among poorer Londoners, people with disabiliti­es aor those from minority ethnic background­s.

#Merky Books, the publishing imprint set up by Stormzy, said on Instagram: “USE YOUR VOICE … In this year of global elections it’s important to remember that you have a voice and your voice has power.”

People aged 18 or older on polling day can vote in the mayoral elections as long as they live in London and are British, Irish, an EU citizen or from a qualifying Commonweal­th nation. The Give an X campaign has been launched by youth organisati­ons My Life My Say, the #iWill Movement and Shape History.

Mete Coban, founder of My Life My Say and the Give an X campaign, said: “Through the Give an X campaign, we are igniting a movement to empower every voice, especially those often left unheard.

“This partnershi­p with the Campaign for the Arts is a call to action for a more inclusive democracy.”

IT struck me when I took my girlfriend on a trip to Kingston. Sound romantic? You may be imagining a plush hotel in Kingston, Jamaica. Imagine a Travelodge in Kingston upon Thames instead. So there we were, and it was my fault. As I sat on the bed, eating a brioche in the 6am dark of a very rainy Sunday (my girlfriend had wisely gone straight back to sleep after the hideously early alarm), I thought about out what was to blame.

The marathon. The London Marathon, to be precise, the one happening this Sunday. I started training hard six months ago and it was my spiralling obsession and her inexplicab­ly kind support that brought us to Kingston that morning in March — for a 20-mile warm-up race. Fun! No, really. I was buzzing.

But mid-pastry this thought occurred: yes, I knew the London Marathon training would change me. But not like this. Travelodge­s in Kingston? Trips to Stratford’s dreary Olympic Park on a cold Saturday just before Christmas? A 5.30am DLR on the way to the outskirts of Watford? As a catalogue of trips, it doesn’t exactly scream “sparks joy” does it? Unfortunat­ely (for my girlfriend), for me it does.

I tried to work out how that had happened. I realised that running had moved the goalposts for my definition of fun.

Fun to me used to mean work drinks on a Thursday evening, frittering away what little spending money I had on increasing­ly baroque orders of drinks.

Now I love nothing more than spending a Thursday night reading Runner’s World cover to cover. I leap into legsonly ice-baths with abandon. I daydream about runs and running constantly — and love it. If I could distil this feeling into a single word, that word would be: help. But who am I kidding? Far from avoiding this slippery slope, I’ve flung myself down it with glee. I’ve even employed the services of a coach (and wonderful it is).

Or take the sports watch I use. Some (wise) souls would hate the finger-wagging nature of these cupcake-sized wearables. “You’re stressed,” it whines, “your body battery’s low,” it wheedles (body battery? What does this thing take me for, a human electric toothbrush?).

As for me though, I am no wise soul: I love it. Its endless stream of often extraneous data is like a balm for my running-obsessed mind. Cadence, heart rate, stride length? Hit me! I did at least give the damn thing a human name (Clive) to try to make its diktats more palatable. When Clive says jump, I say how high. At least when the robots take over, I’ll be in my element. That’s what you call future-proofing.

I suppose the watch, though, is part of the bigger picture of how my own idea of happiness is changing. I must, like many others, love the regimentat­ion. The set number of runs in a week, the steady but sure increase in my speed and fitness. The simplicity of a life largely dedicated to a single goal. The clear sense that in my thirties I am, as I was not always in my teenage years and twenties, treating my body well.

Then again, I was looking forward to those results of marathon training. If I did not predict them, I hoped they would occur. It was the other stuff — becoming a Runner’s World subscriber, being excited about a huge plate of plain white rice (think of the carb replenishm­ent!), learning to love the joys of skimpy shorts and garish vests (so light, so freeing, so fetching) — that has taken me by surprise.

Now, with the London Marathon both terrifying­ly and excitingly close, some possible futures are flickering into view. One is the freedom path: get the time I hope for and leave all this business behind, having got through 10 pairs of shoes, ungodly amounts of pasta, and every last drop of the goodwill of friends and family forced to endure running chat. Or there’s the hardcore, hipster path: the running bug bites and next thing I know I’m a confirmed tarmacboth­erer doing 70-mile week training blocks, running marathons you’ve probably never even heard of.

But I’ve learnt one thing for sure. If your partner is devoted enough to agree to stay in a Travelodge in Kingston with you, next time, take them to Kingston in Jamaica instead. I’m willing to bet they deserve it.

• Robbie Smith is the Evening Standard’s comment and literary editor

If I could distil this obsession with times, races and heart rates into a single word, that word would be: help

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 ?? ?? Campaign: QR codes on Outernet, above. Right, actor Paapa Essiedu and comedian Amelia Dimoldenbe­rg
Campaign: QR codes on Outernet, above. Right, actor Paapa Essiedu and comedian Amelia Dimoldenbe­rg
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 ?? ?? Vibe shift: training for a marathon can lead to unexpected alteration­s to your life
Vibe shift: training for a marathon can lead to unexpected alteration­s to your life

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