This blog has been set up to commemorate and celebrate the life of Malcolm Campbell. Malcolm was an excellent Comrade and friend to many -he will be fondly remembered by all. This website has been set up with the blessing of Malcolm’s family so that the many trade unionists, comrades and friends who knew and valued him can have somewhere to post their remembrance. Email your contributions to Marshajanethompson@yahoo.co.uk ; jonrogers1963@gmail.com and seanphilfox@aol.com
Sunday, 3 May 2009
George Binette
I came to know Malcolm largely through our shared involvement in UNISON's United Left in London and later through the shared misery of the union's national conferences.For me he embodied a profound decency - generous to a fault to his foes and loyal - albeit constructively critical - to his friends. His trade union militancy was tempered, like the best steel, rarely yielding to anger yet persistent and ultimately often effective. I think in his quiet, self-effacing way Malcolm left a fine legacy for this battered movement of ours, not least in Croydon and London as a whole. Like many others, I shall miss him personally over the weeks and months ahead, not least during conference lunch-times when we managed to somehow avoid a worthy fringe meeting and sneak off for an all to hurried pint (or two) given him the chance to impart something of his knowledge of real ale and latter-day English folk and for me to wax more or less lyrical about The Clash, whom he actually appreciated.
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