Nothing wrong with our Rashford report | Letter

The editor of the Mail on Sunday, Ted Verity, responds to an article which criticised his paper’s coverage of Marcus Rashford’s purchase of buy-to-let homes

The premise of Jonathan Liew’s article (Mail on Sunday v Marcus Rashford: a sinister attack on a young black man, 16 November) seems to be that our writing about Mr Rashford purchasing buy-to-let homes is (a) somehow racist, and (b) part of some rightwing plot to discredit him. But these claims are as offensive as they are wrong and ignore several important points.

First, last month (25 October) our columnist Sarah Vine wrote a stinging article about the government’s disastrous response to Mr Rashford’s free school meals campaign. While she had only hostile words for the government, she described Mr Rashford as a “role model” and “a sincere young man who understands the issues from his own experience and who is trying in a dignified way to bring them to the fore”. The following week, we carried a 1,000-word piece across two pages from Mr Rashford himself about his campaign, which, as our headline said, has “inspired the nation”.

We wrote about Mr Rashford’s buy-to-let homes for exactly the same reason we’ve previously written about other high-profile footballers such as Robbie Fowler who’ve invested in this way – it’s simply an interesting story. Of course, we also mentioned Mr Rashford’s campaigning – that’s the reason he’s so much in the public eye.

Incidentally, it’s only people on the left who think there’s anything wrong with becoming a buy-to-let landlord. My view is the same as Mr Rashford’s – he’s in a profession with a notoriously short lifespan and he’s extremely wise to be making preparations for the future.
Ted Verity
Editor, Mail on Sunday

Letters

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Mail on Sunday’s hypocrisy on wealth | Letters
Letters: Dennis Clegg and Alex Palmer respond to a letter from Ted Verity, Mail on Sunday editor, that defended his paper’s coverage of Marcus Rashford’s property investment portfolio

Letters

19, Nov, 2020 @5:30 PM

Article image
Taking inspiration from Marcus Rashford | Letters
Letters: Readers respond to the government’s U-turn on free school meals, after a campaign supported by the Manchester United striker

Letters

17, Jun, 2020 @4:59 PM

Article image
Marcus Rashford understands what the government does not | Letters
Letters: Ruth Lister and Austen Lynch on how the government is failing children, and Les Bright on why minsters will learn the hard way that pride comes before a fall

Letters

26, Oct, 2020 @5:22 PM

Article image
Marcus Rashford scores another goal for social justice | Brief letters
Brief letters: Social security | Dominic Raab | Sudoku | Nonfiction books | Young country diary | Daddy longlegs

06, Sep, 2021 @4:12 PM

Article image
The Guardian view on Marcus Rashford's triumph: a political masterclass | Editorial
Editorial: By persuading the government to extend the free meal voucher scheme, the Manchester United footballer has taught the prime minister a lesson on solidarity

Editorial

16, Jun, 2020 @5:31 PM

Article image
Marcus Rashford’s book goal is commendable | Letter
Letter: Hilary Clarkson supports the footballer’s efforts and despairs that child book poverty is no longer a government priority

Letters

24, May, 2021 @5:15 PM

Article image
Give families cash, not paltry food parcels | Letters
Letters: Cash transfers puts the needs of recipients first, and gives people the autonomy to buy necessities as they see fit, writes John Bryant, while Catherine Rose says credit should be given to all those who brought the issue to the public’s attention

Letters

14, Jan, 2021 @5:51 PM

Article image
Staving off hunger with statistics and humanity | Letters
Letters: Rosie Boycott, Frank Field and Andrew Forsey of Feeding Britain on the reforms needed to end the reliance on food banks. Plus letters from Elizabeth Roberts, John Gaskin and Ariella ListerDirector, Feeding Britain

Letters

11, Nov, 2020 @5:54 PM

Article image
Voting against free school meals shames Britain | Letters
Letters: Readers respond after the government voted against extending free school meals to disadvantaged children during the holidays

Letters

23, Oct, 2020 @4:06 PM

Article image
The Guardian view on food parcels: stop these hunger games | Editorial
Editorial: Inadequate lunches are the latest scandal from a government that continues to shirk its responsibility to ensure that schoolchildren are fed

Editorial

12, Jan, 2021 @7:00 PM