David Lammy: I’ve had imposter syndrome my whole life- until now

David Lammy: I’ve had imposter syndrome my whole life- until now

From a working-class childhood in Tottenham to the Cabinet table, David Lammy’s path to becoming Foreign Secretary was anything but straightforward. Raised by a single mother after his father disappeared when he was twelve, David’s early life was shaped by absence, ambition and a fierce sense of justice.

In this deeply personal conversation with James O’Brien, David opens up about the chaos of his childhood, the teachers and parish priests who changed his life, and the duality of growing up between two worlds- North London and a Peterborough choir school. He reflects on the trauma of police harassment, the fear of prison that haunted his youth, and the rage and hope that drove him to become a barrister and, eventually, an MP.

They discuss what it means to represent a place like Tottenham, the emotional toll of public service, and the long shadow of imposter syndrome- even as a Cabinet minister. With disarming honesty, David revisits his father's alcoholism, the moment he chose not to see him before he died, and how he finally shook off the feeling he didn’t belong- only when he became Foreign Secretary.

From LA Law dreams to Harvard halls, David charts the improbable course that brought him to Number 10. And he reveals why, despite the calls for him to run for PM, he’s convinced he’s exactly where he’s meant to be.

Now at the heart of British foreign policy during a time of global instability- from Ukraine, to Sudan and the continuing crisis in Gaza- David also shares the limits and frustrations of diplomacy, the responsibility of not being complicit, and the moral weight of trying to end a war that feels impossible to stop.

Avsnitt(309)

David Harewood

David Harewood

Homeland star David Harewood talks to James O'Brien about racism in Hollywood.

11 Mars 20211h 2min

Elizabeth Day

Elizabeth Day

Podcaster Elizabeth Day, who stormed the zeitgeist with her novel 'How to Fail' joins James O'Brien on this week's episode of Full Disclosure

4 Mars 202152min

Nicky Campbell

Nicky Campbell

Nicky was adopted at just four-days-old, leaving him with a “fragile” identity growing up and at times feeling he was “living a lie”. In this week's Full Disclosure, James and Nicky share their experiences of growing up adopted.

25 Feb 202156min

Eliot Higgins

Eliot Higgins

Eliot Higgins

18 Feb 202151min

Sathnam Sanghera

Sathnam Sanghera

British journalist and author, Sathnam Sanghera, joins James O'Brien to talk about his new book: Empireland.

11 Feb 202154min

Tim Roth

Tim Roth

From south London to LA, Tim Roth has been Hollywood royalty for almost three decades. Speaking to James right the end of Donald Trump's premiership, Roth gives his thoughts on the outgoing President, Brexit and the COVID-19 response

5 Feb 202146min

Rachel Clarke

Rachel Clarke

Palliative care doctor & campaigner Rachel Clarke, better known as @doctor_oxford on Twitter, is on this week's episode of Full Disclosure with James O'Brien. In her most recent book, ‘Breathtaking: Inside the NHS in a time of Pandemic’, Dr Clarke writes what it was really like inside the NHS for patients, staff and families during the first wave of Covid-19. Rachel joins James on the day the UK reached 100,000 COVID related-deaths.

28 Jan 202151min

Jack Monroe

Jack Monroe

Last week, social media was full of images of food parcels sent to parents to feed their children. They were not substantial. James speaks to journalist and food writer, Jack Monroe about campaigning on poverty issues.

21 Jan 202158min

Populärt inom Samhälle & Kultur

podme-dokumentar
en-mork-historia
p3-dokumentar
svenska-fall
aftonbladet-krim
mardromsgasten
badfluence
killradet
creepypodden-med-jack-werner
rattsfallen
nemo-moter-en-van
skaringer-nessvold
flashback-forever
radiosporten-dokumentar
hor-har
p1-dokumentar
aftonbladet-daily
rss-verkligheten
rss-sanning-konsekvens
vad-blir-det-for-mord