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Derek William Draper (15 August 1967 – 3 January 2024) was an English political lobbyist and psychotherapist.

Key Information

As a political advisor, he was involved in two political scandals: "Lobbygate" in 1998, and another in 2009 while he was editor of the LabourList website. He authored two books, Blair's 100 Days and Life Support.

Draper made headlines in March 2020 when he contracted COVID-19 during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic in England, and became seriously ill with an exceptionally serious case of long COVID; he was hospitalised for over a year and continued to require round-the-clock care upon release. He returned to hospital with extreme complications in December 2023, during which time he sustained a cardiac arrest and died on 3 January 2024.

Early life

[edit]

Derek William Draper was born in Chorley on 15 August 1967.[1] He was educated at Southlands High School until 1984. He later attended Runshaw College in Leyland and the University of Manchester. While at the university, Draper provided hospitality for Ken Livingstone, who had missed his train after a Labour Club meeting. Livingstone was reportedly astonished to find a large poster of Labour's deputy leader Roy Hattersley displayed in Draper's student room.[2] At around this time, he first met Charlotte Raven and later dated her.[3]

Career

[edit]

Draper began his political career in 1990, when he became the constituency secretary for Nick Brown. In 1992, he left this job and went to work as a researcher for the MP for Hartlepool, Peter Mandelson. In 1996, he became a director of a lobbying firm called GPC Market Access, and was employed by them until early 1999. While working at GPC Market Access, he set up the New Labour organisation Progress with Liam Byrne.[4] During the late 1990s, Draper worked as the Political Editor of the Modern Review, was briefly a columnist for the Daily Express, and a presenter on Talk Radio UK.[5]

Seen as a close ally of Mandelson, and as an insider in the New Labour project, he was viewed by political journalists as well-connected, influential, colourful and gregarious, and was nicknamed "Dolly" in Westminster circles.[6][7]

Lobbygate

[edit]

In 1998, while still working as a director at GPC Market Access, Draper was caught on tape, with Jonathan Mendelsohn, boasting to Greg Palast (an undercover reporter from The Observer posing as a businessman) about how they could sell access to government ministers and create tax breaks for their clients.[8] When the press got hold of the story, they dubbed it "Lobbygate".[9] On the recording, Draper said that "there are 17 people who count in this government ... [to] say I am intimate with every one of them is the understatement of the century."[10] Palast also wrote that Draper said, regarding his motivation: "I just want to stuff my bank account at 250 pounds an hour."[10] According to Palast, "Draper was nothing more than a messenger boy, a factotum, a purveyor, a self-loving, over-scented clerk."[10] Although he denied the allegations and accused The Observer of attempting to entrap him, he was widely ridiculed in the aftermath.[11] Palast later wrote that the subsequent media coverage had over emphasised the role of lobbyists in the story at the expense of New Labour's "obsessional pursuit of the affections of the captains of industry and media ... twisting law and ethics to win the approval of this corporate elite".[12]

Following his involvement in the "Lobbygate" scandal, Draper was sacked from his job at the Daily Express and generally shunned by Labour insiders. His friend Peter Mandelson said that Draper "has a fine intelligence, but sometimes I am afraid he misuses that intelligence. He gets above himself. But now he has been cut down to size and I think probably he will learn a very hard lesson from what has happened."[13]

It was following this scandal that the phrased "cash for access" emerged and entered common political parlance.[14]: 184 

After politics

[edit]

After leaving politics, Draper retrained as a psychotherapist, obtaining an MA in clinical psychology after what he described as "three years in Berkeley, California". While in Berkeley, he worked as "the development director of a community counselling centre"; later, he claimed to have entered "private practice in Marylebone, London".[15] He subsequently clarified that he had studied at the Wright Institute of California, a graduate school in the town of Berkeley, founded by Nevitt Sanford. (He was also reported in a Guardian gossip column as studying at the Tavistock Clinic.)[16] Draper responded to the controversy surrounding his claimed psychotherapy degree, by denying the allegations completely and saying that this was "a brazen attempt to smear me by Guido Fawkes and David Hencke". He stated in 2009 that he was considering taking legal action against them.[17]

Draper was a member of the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy (BACP).[15] He wrote an occasional column for the Mail on Sunday newspaper on psychotherapy issues, and also wrote monthly columns in the magazines Psychologies[16] and Therapy Today. He was also the author of a chapter in The Future of the NHS.[15]

In response to a formal complaint the BACP announced on 24 November 2009 that it had

considered complaints received against Mr Draper concerning his involvement in an email scandal earlier this year which brought his profession as a psychotherapist into the public domain and therefore the name and reputation of BACP. An independent Appeal Panel was convened to consider the matter and decided, in the light of all the evidence and the commitments of Mr Draper, that his membership of this Association would not be withdrawn.

It further clarified Draper's qualifications:

Derek Draper has the following qualifications: An M.A. in Psychology from the Wright Institute in Berkeley (2004) and a second M.A. in the Foundations of Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy from the Tavistock Centre, London / Essex University (2009). The former was the result of three years' full-time study, the latter of two years of part-time study. As part of his first M.A. he undertook an extensive clinical training, undertaking over 1500 hours of supervised clinical work with different client populations and therapeutic modalities.[18]

During the 2005 general election campaign, Draper urged people to vote tactically against Labour, saying, "I don't want my vote to be used as vindication for Tony Blair, I'd like him to wake up after the election and feel like a hunted man".[19]

On 7 June 2009, emails that were highly critical of Gordon Brown that Peter Mandelson sent Draper in January 2008 were leaked to the News of the World which claimed that Brown was "insecure" and a "self-conscious person, physically and emotionally".[20]

LabourList

[edit]

During 2008, Draper made a return to British politics. He was described on the BBC television current affairs programme Newsnight, on 12 September 2008, as a Labour Campaign Advisor.[21] Draper's position at that time was as an unpaid adviser to Ray Collins, the then General Secretary of the Labour Party.[22]

Draper was the founder and editor of the LabourList website, which was launched in January 2009.[23] He explained that he started the website in response to the increasing role that the internet was playing in British politics and so that Labourites would have their own place in the blogosphere.[24] Contributors to his website included David Lammy, Peter Mandelson, James Purnell and Piers Morgan. Although LabourList was generally supportive of the Labour Party, it claimed to publish articles and views critical of the Labour government.[25]

On 11 April 2009, it was reported by The Daily Telegraph that Gordon Brown's special adviser, Damian McBride, had sent a series of emails to Draper discussing plans to set up a blog which would be used to post false rumours about the private lives of senior or prominent members of the Conservative Party and their spouses. These smears would have included sexual and personal fabrications against MP Nadine Dorries, Conservative leader David Cameron and his wife, Samantha, and Shadow Chancellor George Osborne and his wife Frances.[26][27]

The emails, which had been sent from the Downing Street Press Office, found their way to Paul Staines, who brought them to the attention of the media. McBride resigned later the same day, and 10 Downing Street issued an apology for the "juvenile and inappropriate" emails.[28] Gordon Brown sent personal letters to those who had been mentioned in the emails,[29] expressing his regret over the incident,[30] but Conservative politicians called for him to make a public apology.[31] Brown apologised a few days later while on a visit to Glasgow, saying that he was sorry about what had happened.[32]

Draper later apologised for his part in the affair. Although in his reply to McBride's email he had described the idea as "absolutely totally brilliant", Draper claimed that he only responded to the email to gain favour from Downing Street for LabourList.[33] A closer examination of Draper's emailed reply shows the plot was far more advanced, with Draper knowing that the controversial Red Rag blogsite had already been set up and offering to sort out the technology with trade union official Andrew Dodgshon.[34]

In the wake of the incident, Labour sought to distance itself from Draper's LabourList blog, saying that his website is not owned by the Labour Party.[35] Draper also came under pressure to resign his post as editor of LabourList,[36] which he did in early May, saying "I regret ever receiving the infamous email and I regret my stupid, hasty reply. I should have said straight away that the idea was wrong."[37]

Personal life

[edit]

Draper married television presenter Kate Garraway in 2005.[38] They had two children together.[39]

COVID-19 and death

[edit]

Draper was hospitalised with COVID-19 in March 2020, and was admitted to an intensive care unit.[38] He was still in critical condition, in an induced coma, after two months.[39] The following month, he had opened his eyes, but remained in hospital in a serious condition. He was still in hospital one year later.[40]

Draper returned home on a trial basis in April 2021; the following month, Garraway gave an update, saying that he was still devastated by COVID-19 and immobile.[41][42] In September 2021, she reported that he was still receiving round-the-clock care and sleeping 20 hours a day.[43] That month, she won a National Television Award for her ITV documentary Finding Derek, which chronicled his experiences with long COVID and the effects on their family.[44][45] He received treatment in Mexico in February and March 2022.[46] Garraway revealed in April 2022 that Draper was struggling to speak and that "he can understand, sometimes do odd words, but can't express himself".[47] Draper required round-the-clock care.[48] In December 2023, he suffered a cardiac arrest and was admitted to hospital again in what was called "very serious condition".[45]

Draper died on the night of 3 January 2024 at a north London hospital,[49][50][51][52] from COVID-19 complications, at the age of 56, almost four years after he first contracted the disease.[53][54] He was said to be one of the UK's longest-suffering COVID-19 patients.[51]

Draper's funeral took place at the Church of St Mary The Virgin in Primrose Hill on 2 February 2024. Among the attendees were former prime minister Tony Blair, Labour leader Keir Starmer, Elton John, Myleene Klass, Fiona Phillips, and former Good Morning Britain presenter Piers Morgan. The current Good Morning Britain stars were also in attendance including Ben Shephard, Susanna Reid, Richard Madeley, Robert Rinder, Sean Fletcher and Richard Arnold.[51][52]

Also see

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Derek William Draper (15 August 1967 – 5 January 2024) was a British political advisor, lobbyist, and later psychotherapist prominent in the New Labour era.[1] Born in Chorley, Lancashire, to a working-class family—his mother a cleaner and father a factory worker—he studied politics at the University of Manchester before entering Labour Party politics as a researcher.[2] Draper advanced rapidly, working as a constituency aide to MP Nick Brown in 1990 and later as a key aide in Peter Mandelson's office at the Millennium Dome, where he contributed to New Labour's media strategy and internal organization against left-wing rivals.[2][3] His tenure as a lobbyist at GPC International ended abruptly in 1998 amid the "Lobbygate" scandal, triggered by secretly recorded conversations in which he bragged to an undercover Observer reporter about his influence over 13 Downing Street officials and promises of policy access for clients, prompting his dismissal, resignation from editorial roles, and a public apology after treatment for depression.[4][5] This episode highlighted tensions between New Labour's modernizing spin operations and perceptions of undue corporate sway, though Draper attempted a partial political return via a 1997 book on the government's early days before the fallout.[6] Post-scandal, he shifted to psychotherapy, qualifying after training and founding a practice while authoring works on personal development and mental health.[1] Draper's later years centered on severe health decline after contracting COVID-19 in March 2020, which induced a coma, organ damage, and repeated hospitalizations—including for sepsis in 2022—requiring round-the-clock care until a December 2023 cardiac arrest precipitated his death at age 56 from lingering complications.[7][8] Married to broadcaster Kate Garraway since 2005, with whom he had two children, his protracted illness amplified scrutiny of long COVID effects, though his earlier political footprint—as a combative insider embodying New Labour's pragmatic edge—remained his defining legacy amid the controversies that curtailed his influence.[9][10]

Early life and education

Upbringing and family background

Derek Draper was born on 15 August 1967 in Chorley, Lancashire, into a working-class family rooted in traditional Labour politics.[2][1] His mother, Chrina Draper (née Walkingshaw), was of Scottish origin and worked as a cleaner, while his father, Ken Draper, was a shop steward at British Leyland, reflecting the industrial union background prevalent in the region during that era.[1][2] The family's political engagement aligned with the Labour movement's shopfloor activism, which influenced Draper's early exposure to left-wing organizing in a post-industrial Lancashire community.[1]

University studies and early influences

Draper studied economics at the University of Manchester following A-levels at Runshaw College in Leyland.[1][2] At the university, he immersed himself in student politics, serving on the student union executive while opposing Trotskyite dominance within it; his tenure ended after he poured paint over a critical article in the student newspaper.[2] His early political influences stemmed from a working-class family background, with his father as a shop steward at British Leyland and maternal grandfather a miner, fostering traditional Labour sympathies reinforced by the 1984–85 miners' strike.[1] During his studies, Draper displayed affinity for moderate Labour figures, displaying a poster of Roy Hattersley—whom he later supported in the 1988 deputy leadership contest—and hosting Ken Livingstone after a Labour Club event when the latter missed a train.[1][3] These experiences oriented him toward pragmatic, anti-hard-left Labour activism, shaping his subsequent entry into party roles.[2]

Political career

Entry into Labour politics

Derek Draper first became involved in Labour Party activities during Roy Hattersley's unsuccessful campaign for the party's deputy leadership in 1988, shortly after completing his university studies.[1] In 1990, he secured his initial full-time political role as constituency secretary for Nick Brown, the Labour MP for Newcastle upon Tyne East, relocating to Newcastle for the position.[1][2][3] He held this administrative and organizational post for two years, supporting Brown's constituency work amid Labour's internal debates following the 1980s electoral defeats.[3] Draper's career advanced in 1992 when, having impressed Peter Mandelson during the latter's successful general election campaign in Hartlepool, he moved to London to serve as Mandelson's research assistant in the House of Commons.[1][2] This role, lasting approximately four years, positioned him within the emerging modernizing wing of the party, though it built on his earlier ties to more traditional figures like Hattersley and Brown.[1]

Role in New Labour and key associations

Derek Draper entered Labour politics in 1990 as a constituency assistant to Nick Brown, the MP for Newcastle upon Tyne East and later chief whip under Tony Blair.[2] In 1992, after the general election, he joined Peter Mandelson's office as a research assistant, shortly after Mandelson's election as MP for Hartlepool.[1] Mandelson, a central figure in reshaping Labour into New Labour, relied on Draper for advisory support during this period, including backing Blair's 1994 leadership bid over Gordon Brown.[6] Draper's strategic contributions included co-founding Progress in 1996 with Liam Byrne, a Blairite organization designed to advance moderate, reformist policies and counter left-wing resistance within the party.[11] This effort aligned with New Labour's modernization drive, aiding the party's preparation for the 1997 general election, which resulted in a landslide victory with 418 seats for Labour.[11] Following the win, he authored Blair’s 100 Days, launched in September 1997, which chronicled the initial policy implementations of Blair's administration.[1] His key associations centered on New Labour's leadership core: Mandelson as his direct superior and mentor; Blair, through Progress and shared strategic goals; Byrne as a co-founder; and Brown as an early employer, reflecting Draper's navigation of the party's centrist factions amid internal rivalries.[1][2] These ties positioned him as a backroom operative in the Blair-Mandelson axis, emphasizing pragmatic electoral tactics over ideological purity.[6]

Lobbying activities and the Lobbygate scandal

Following his departure from direct political advisory roles, Derek Draper became a director of the lobbying firm GPC Market Access in 1996, where he specialized in providing "political intelligence" and facilitating introductions to senior New Labour government officials for corporate clients.[11] In this capacity, he offered services such as sharing advance details on policy decisions, including informing a client on 11 June 1998 that Chancellor Gordon Brown had set a public spending cap at 2.75% rather than the expected 2.5%, describing it as "inside information" that could yield financial gains if acted upon.[12] He also promised access to figures like Paymaster General Geoffrey Robinson and special adviser Ed Balls, including arranging meetings or task force positions, often for fees such as £250 per hour or sponsorship deals.[12] The Lobbygate scandal erupted in July 1998 after undercover journalist Greg Palast, posing as an American business representative, recorded Draper during meetings from 8 to 25 June 1998.[12][4] In these discussions, Draper boasted of his proximity to power, stating, "There are 17 people who count in this government... [to] say I am intimate with every one of them is the understatement of the century," and demonstrated connections by showing pager messages from advisers like Balls and Liz Lloyd.[12][4] He offered to leverage these ties for client benefits, including policy influence and direct access to Downing Street via Lloyd or Roger Liddle, while naming officials such as Peter Mandelson, Margaret Beckett, and Michael Meacher.[12] Fellow lobbyist Jonathan Mendelsohn participated in some conversations, emphasizing the firm's ability to secure "tea with the minister."[5] The Observer published the tapes on 5 July 1998, igniting accusations of "cash for access" and cronyism within the newly elected Labour government.[12][4] Draper initially denied impropriety, accusing the newspaper of entrapment and asserting no actual access was sold, only exaggerated claims made to impress a prospective client.[4] Prime Minister Tony Blair responded by insisting his administration must appear "purer than pure," while some Labour figures called for Draper's party membership to be revoked.[4] No criminal charges resulted, as the recordings captured boasts rather than executed improper deals, though the episode highlighted early concerns over lobbying influence post-1997 election.[12] Professionally, Draper faced immediate repercussions: he was suspended from GPC on 6 July 1998 and dismissed shortly thereafter, lost his column at the Daily Express, and was removed as editor of the Labour magazine Progress.[5] The fallout contributed to a personal breakdown, prompting his temporary withdrawal from public life.[5] In later reflections, such as a 2003 interview, Draper conceded, "It was fair enough that I got caught being a bigheaded boaster," acknowledging the hubris in his statements without disputing the factual basis of his government contacts from prior roles.[5]

Post-political career

Media contributions and personal recovery

Following his departure from frontline political roles in the late 1990s, Draper contributed to media outlets as a commentator on Labour politics and related issues. He served as political editor for Modern Review, a cultural and political magazine, where he analyzed contemporary political developments.[13] He also wrote a column for the Daily Express, offering insights into New Labour dynamics, until his dismissal in 1998 amid the Lobbygate scandal, in which he was recorded boasting about undue influence over government appointments.[2] Additionally, Draper appeared as a presenter on Talk Radio, discussing political topics during this period.[13] The Lobbygate revelations, exposed by a Guardian sting operation on 7 March 1998, triggered a severe personal crisis for Draper, exacerbating underlying depression that he later attributed to stressors dating back to around 1996.[14] He experienced a breakdown shortly thereafter, withdrawing from public life and undergoing a four-week inpatient stay at the Priory Clinic, a private mental health facility.[5] Following discharge, Draper pursued outpatient therapy, which he credited with facilitating his emotional stabilization and eventual career pivot away from politics.[15] By the early 2000s, Draper had regained sufficient stability to author Life Support: A Survival Guide for the Modern Soul (2004), drawing on his experiences with depression to advocate for proactive mental health management amid societal pressures.[16] This work reflected his emerging interest in psychological self-help, bridging his media commentary with personal introspection, though it received mixed reviews for blending anecdotal recovery narratives with broader therapeutic advice.[17] His recovery process, rooted in professional intervention rather than public redemption, distanced him from Labour circles initially, setting the stage for later professional retraining.[5]

Founding of LabourList and the Smeargate controversy

In early 2009, Derek Draper founded LabourList, an online platform intended to engage Labour Party supporters and provide commentary on political issues, modeled as a left-leaning equivalent to Conservative Home.[18] The site was conceived in late 2008 during exploratory meetings, with Draper serving as its inaugural editor from January until May 2009.[19] LabourList aimed to foster discussion among Labour activists without a significant budget, relying on volunteer contributions and grassroots input.[18] Draper's tenure ended amid the Smeargate scandal, which erupted in April 2009 after the leak of emails between him and Damian McBride, a special adviser to Prime Minister Gordon Brown.[20] McBride had emailed Draper on March 13, 2009, proposing content for a planned gossip website called Red Rag—affiliated with LabourList—that included unsubstantiated personal attacks on Conservative leaders, such as false claims that David Cameron suffered from a brain tumor or past drug addiction, George Osborne engaged in cocaine use and extramarital affairs, and other Tories faced fabricated financial or personal scandals.[20] [21] The emails, obtained and published by political blogger Guido Fawkes, revealed an organized effort from Downing Street to undermine opponents through character assassination rather than policy critique.[22] Draper responded by stating he had rejected McBride's suggestions and would not publish smears, emphasizing that LabourList focused on legitimate political debate.[23] However, the controversy prompted McBride's immediate resignation on April 11, 2009, and intensified scrutiny on Labour's internal operations, with critics including former Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott calling for Draper's disassociation from party-affiliated platforms.[24] On May 6, 2009, Draper stepped down as LabourList editor, issuing a statement expressing "mortification" over his involvement, admitting he deserved punishment, and urging Labour unity behind Brown despite the damage to the party's reputation.[23] [25] [21] The incident highlighted tensions within New Labour circles and contributed to perceptions of aggressive, ends-justify-the-means tactics in defending the government.[26]

Retraining and establishment as a psychotherapist

Following periods of personal crisis, including depression treated with therapy after the 1998 Lobbygate scandal, Derek Draper decided to pivot from politics to psychotherapy, viewing it as a means to apply insights from his own therapeutic experiences.[27][5] He relocated to the United States for specialized training, enrolling in a full-time master's program in clinical psychology at the Wright Institute in Berkeley, California, a graduate school focused on psychoanalytic and psychodynamic approaches.[27][28] This three-year intensive course equipped him with foundational skills in psychological assessment, therapeutic techniques, and clinical practice.[27] Upon completing his MA in clinical psychology, Draper returned to London and established himself as a private psychotherapist, initially basing his practice in Soho before relocating to Bloomsbury.[1][29] He secured membership with the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy (BACP), affirming his adherence to professional standards for ethical practice and client welfare.[28] Complementing individual therapy, Draper co-founded CDP Leadership Consultants, where he served as CEO, offering executive coaching and business psychology services to corporate clients, blending psychotherapy principles with leadership development.[30] This dual focus on personal therapy and organizational consulting marked his professional reorientation, with Draper contributing articles on psychological topics to outlets like Psychologies and Therapy Today.[31]

Psychotherapy practice

Professional qualifications and client work

Draper completed a three-year full-time training program in psychology, counselling, and psychotherapy at the Wright Institute in Berkeley, California, from 2001 to 2004, earning an MA in Psychology and accumulating over 1,500 hours of clinical practice.[29][27] The Wright Institute holds accreditation from the American Psychological Association for its clinical psychology program.[32] Following his training, Draper established a private psychotherapy and executive coaching practice in London, initially in Soho and later in Bloomsbury, under the banner of CDP Leadership Consultants, where he served as CEO.[29] His practice specialized in addressing emotional and psychological issues stemming from work-related stress and interpersonal relationship difficulties.[2] Among his clients were executives from organizations including Unilever, with Draper providing tailored coaching and therapy sessions focused on leadership development and personal resilience.[29] At least one former client credited Draper's interventions with profound personal impact, describing the therapy as life-saving amid severe emotional distress.[33] His work in this field was described by associates as successful and well-regarded prior to his health decline.[6]

Ethical investigations and professional criticisms

In April 2009, amid the "Smeargate" scandal, the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy (BACP), of which Draper was a member, received multiple formal complaints alleging that his endorsement of emails proposing personal smears against Conservative politicians breached the organization's ethical framework, particularly principles of integrity, respect, and non-maleficence.[34] The complaints stemmed from leaked correspondence between Draper, then editor of the LabourList website, and Damian McBride, a special adviser to Prime Minister Gordon Brown, in which McBride outlined plans to disseminate unsubstantiated allegations about figures including Nadine Dorries and Michael Gove, and Draper responded approvingly, describing the ideas as "brilliant."[21] Critics, including political opponents and commentators, argued that such conduct undermined public trust in psychotherapy, portraying therapists as impartial healers rather than partisan actors, and questioned Draper's suitability for a profession requiring emotional maturity and ethical detachment.[35] The BACP acknowledged the complaints publicly, stating it would process them "seriously" in line with its Professional Conduct Procedures, which include assessing whether actions outside clinical practice reflect on professional competence or bring the field into disrepute.[34] No formal sanctions against Draper were announced, and he maintained his accreditation, continuing private practice in executive coaching and psychotherapy through his firm, CDP Leadership Consultants, until health issues curtailed his work in 2020.[5] Professional defenders of the field, in responses to media coverage, cautioned against conflating Draper's political missteps with therapeutic efficacy, emphasizing that ethical codes apply primarily to client interactions and that isolated lapses do not invalidate clinical skills.[36] Broader criticisms of Draper's psychotherapy career highlighted perceived conflicts between his high-profile political past and therapeutic neutrality, with some observers suggesting his "New Labour" associations and history of scandals, including the 1998 Lobbygate affair, eroded credibility among potential clients seeking unbiased support.[5] Draper himself reflected on the Smeargate fallout as a deserved "punishment," admitting in interviews that his enthusiasm for the emails reflected poor judgment, though he framed his subsequent focus on therapy as personal redemption through helping others address emotional challenges.[21] No verified client-specific complaints or further regulatory probes emerged post-2009, though the episode fueled debates on regulating psychotherapists with public personas, given psychotherapy's voluntary self-regulation in the UK at the time.[36]

Personal life

Relationship and marriage to Kate Garraway

Derek Draper met television presenter Kate Garraway in 2004, when they were introduced by mutual friend Gloria De Piero, a former GMTV political editor, during a group outing for drinks.[37] [38] Friends described the encounter as "love at first sight," leading to a rapid romantic development despite initial perceptions of Draper as politically mismatched for Garraway.[39] [40] The couple's relationship progressed quickly, with Draper proposing after several months of dating.[41] They married on 10 September 2005 in a low-key ceremony at St Mary the Virgin Church in Camden, North London.[42] [43] The wedding was attended by a small circle, including Strictly Come Dancing professional Brendan Cole, though Garraway later noted she was unaware of his presence at the time.[44] Their union, following Garraway's divorce from her first husband Ian Rumsey in 2001, marked a stable partnership amid Draper's evolving career from politics to psychotherapy.[39] [45]

Family and children

Draper was the son of unnamed parents from Chorley, Lancashire, where he was born on 15 August 1967.[1] He had two sisters, Susan and Dianne.[1] Draper and his wife Kate Garraway had two children: a daughter, Darcey Mary Draper, born on 10 March 2006, and a son, William Draper (known as Billy), born on 28 July 2009.[46][38] The family resided in north London.[47]

Health decline and death

COVID-19 infection and initial hospitalization

Derek Draper contracted COVID-19 towards the end of March 2020, during the early stages of the pandemic in the United Kingdom.[48] [49] He initially experienced symptoms such as numbness in his hand, breathlessness, and headaches while at home.[50] On March 30, 2020, Draper was rushed unresponsive to a London hospital after testing positive for the virus.[51] [52] [53] Following admission, Draper's condition worsened quickly due to severe respiratory distress, prompting his transfer to the intensive care unit by April 3, 2020.[48] He became one of the earliest documented severe cases in the UK requiring prolonged hospital care, with his wife, Kate Garraway, reporting that he was placed on a ventilator shortly thereafter to support breathing.[9] [54] At the time, Draper, aged 52, had no widely reported major pre-existing comorbidities that would typically predict such acuity, though the virus's impact varied widely across patients in the initial outbreak phase.[55]

Long COVID complications and treatments

Following his discharge from hospital on April 9, 2021, after 214 days of treatment including a four-month induced coma and mechanical ventilation, Derek Draper experienced persistent and severe long COVID complications that necessitated round-the-clock care at home.[56][57] These included brain inflammation resulting in symptoms such as confusion, headaches, and white patches visible on brain scans indicative of vascular dementia-like effects, alongside slowness of thought and limited communication ability—his first word after seven months in hospital was "pain."[57][9] Kidney failure impaired filtration functions, causing fatigue and shortness of breath, while liver and pancreas damage stemmed from the viral assault, contributing to multi-organ vulnerability.[57] He also suffered significant weight loss of eight stone (approximately 112 pounds/51 kilograms) due to muscle wasting and metabolic disruption.[9] Draper's condition led to recurrent hospitalizations, including a July 2022 admission for life-threatening sepsis triggered by a kidney infection, and a November 2023 readmission to address mobility impairments.[56] Neurological and physical deficits rendered him bed-bound or wheelchair-dependent, with profound impacts on speech, swallowing, and independent movement, reflecting widespread damage to the central nervous system and peripheral organs.[57] In December 2023, he experienced a cardiac arrest linked to cumulative heart damage from the infection, marking the onset of his final decline.[56][9] Treatments focused on rehabilitation and experimental interventions amid limited established options for such severe cases. Post-discharge, he underwent ongoing physical and occupational therapy to mitigate mobility loss, though progress remained minimal.[56] In February 2022, Draper traveled to a specialist clinic in Monterrey, Mexico, for a ground-breaking medical trial aimed at regenerating damaged tissues, with an initial stay followed by a planned 28-day follow-up to assess brain, liver, and lung functions; early scans suggested potential benefits, but he required continuous monitoring and remained dependent on caregivers.[58] Sepsis episodes were managed with antibiotics and supportive hospital care, while his final hospitalization involved palliative measures to ensure comfort, prioritizing dignity over curative efforts.[56][57] These approaches highlighted the challenges in treating profound long COVID sequelae, where viral-induced inflammation and organ fibrosis often resisted standard protocols.[9]

Final illness, death, and public aftermath

In early December 2023, Draper suffered a cardiac arrest, a condition worsened by the persistent organ damage from his March 2020 COVID-19 infection, leading to his admission to a north London hospital.[7] His weakened systems ultimately failed to sustain him, marking the culmination of nearly four years of severe health decline characterized by multiple hospitalizations for complications including sepsis in August 2022.[8] Kate Garraway, his wife, remained by his side throughout this period, documenting aspects of his struggle in ITV productions that highlighted the profound physical toll. Draper died on 5 January 2024, aged 56, with Garraway holding his hand during his final hours as he passed peacefully surrounded by family.[7] In her public statement, Garraway described the event as a "heart-breaking" conclusion to his enduring battle, emphasizing the irreversible harm inflicted by the virus despite extensive medical interventions. His death was confirmed by multiple outlets citing family sources, underscoring the rarity and severity of his case as one of the longest-surviving COVID-19 patients in the UK, with over 184 days in hospital care post-infection.[9] Public reaction focused on tributes to Draper's resilience and Garraway's advocacy for long COVID sufferers, with former Prime Minister Tony Blair leading condolences by recalling their shared political history and Draper's determination.[59] Gordon Brown similarly praised his "brave struggle," while media figures including Susanna Reid and Piers Morgan expressed sorrow on Good Morning Britain, highlighting Draper's transformation from lobbyist to psychotherapist amid personal adversity.[60] Garraway acknowledged the outpouring of support in subsequent statements, noting it eased the "raw pain of grief" as she navigated family mourning.[61] His funeral, attended by political contemporaries like Blair and Brown, featured personal reflections on his life, though details remained private to respect family wishes.[62]

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