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Chris Mullin

Thursday 18th May 2023

Venue
Topping & Company Booksellers of Edinburgh, 2 Blenheim Place, Edinburgh EH7 5JH
Doors Open
7.10pm
Start Time
7.30pm
Chris Mullin

N.B. This event has now been rescheduled to the 18th May. If you had made a previous booking for the last date, we will be contacting you separately via email and your booking will be automatically carried over to the new date.

Chris Mullin was Labour MP for Sunderland South from 1987 until he stood down at the 2010 general election. As a journalist in the 1980s, he successfully campaigned for the release of the Birmingham Six. In Parliament, he chaired the Home Affairs Select Committee and was a minister in three departments. He is the author of three widely acclaimed diaries, a memoir, Hinterland, and four novels, including the classic A Very British Coup. He joins us this April to talk about his latest collection of diaries, ranging across the tumultuous years of the coalition, Brexit, the Indy Referendum, Brexit, Corbyn and Johnson.


"When I retired from Parliament in April 2010, I ceased keeping a diary, on the assumption that life would no longer be of sufficient interest to justify doing so. It soon became apparent that I was wrong... I am under no illusion, however. Despite the occasional moment in the sunshine, I have never been much more than a fleabite on the body politic. On a visit to Parliament a couple of years after retiring, I came across a former colleague. He peered at me over the top of his glasses and said, 'Didn't you use to be Chris Mullin?'"

Picking up where he left off in 2010's Decline and Fall, celebrated diarist Chris Mullin returns with his trademark irreverence and keen eye for the absurd to chronicle the turbulent last decade of the second Elizabethan era. Didn't You Use to Be Chris Mullin? charts the collapse of New Labour, the long years of austerity politics, the highs and lows of Brexit, the rise and fall of Jeremy Corbyn and no fewer than four Tory Prime Ministers, culminating in the death of the Queen. Wise, witty and deeply perceptive, Mullin paints a vivid portrait of our recent political history.