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Colbert says his US presidential run is no joke

Posted on 2007.10.24 at 21:44
Colbert says his US presidential run is no joke

REUTERS
Reuters North American News Service

Oct 21, 2007 13:41 EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Comedian Stephen Colbert insisted Sunday that his ambition to run for president was no joke -- then joked he would consider disgraced Republican Sen. Larry Craig as a vice presidential running mate.

"I don't want to be president. I want to run for president. There's a difference," the host of Comedy Central's "The Colbert Report" said in a television interview.

"I'm far realer than Sam Brownback, let me put it that way," he told NBC's "Meet the Press" in a reference to Republican Sen. Sam Brownback of Kansas, who dropped out of the 2008 White House race Friday.

Colbert, whose pugnacious egomaniacal TV persona routinely mocks conservative talk shows, hopes to run in both the Republican and Democratic primaries in his native South Carolina "because I'd like to lose twice."

Colbert said he had not spoken to Craig, who is embroiled in a sex scandal after being snared in an airport men's room by an undercover officer who said Craig had solicited him for sex.

Colbert explained his strategy was to win enough votes to receive a single South Carolina delegate to next year's Democratic presidential convention.

"Why else run as a favorite son if you're not going to broker a convention? And if I get a delegate, it will be a brokered convention -- unless they offer me to let me speak, then maybe I would turn over my delegate," he said.

South Carolina's The State newspaper reported that Colbert has already affected the campaign. His solicitation to viewers for donations to a Web site to help state schoolteachers has raised more than $13,000, dwarfing donations in the names of two top Democratic rivals -- Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York and Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois.

Source: Reuters North American News Service

Comments:


offdutydane
[info]offdutydane at 2007-10-25 02:05 (UTC) (Link)
South Carolina's The State newspaper reported that Colbert has already affected the campaign. His solicitation to viewers for donations to a Web site to help state schoolteachers has raised more than $13,000, dwarfing donations in the names of two top Democratic rivals -- Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York and Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois.

That. Is pretty awesome. It's a shame that *so much money* goes towards advertising for campaigns when it could go towards *so many other things*. I guess in a way that money used for a campaign *could* benefit the nation as a whole, eventually, but yanno, there will be millions wasted on candidates who don't win D:

If it didn't totally crush his soul, I would vote Colbert on a local level.
Isolation ≠ alienation
[info]halo_ov_fire at 2007-10-27 15:23 (UTC) (Link)
I wish he'd really have a go at becoming President.

I'd vote for him.
offdutydane
[info]offdutydane at 2007-10-28 16:56 (UTC) (Link)
I thought you might like to know that the 1,000,000 Strong for Stephen T Colbert group on facebook has reached 1,000,000 members within a week, whereas 1,000,000 Strong for Barack Obama and 1,000,000 Strong Against Hillary Clinton are at one third and one half that, respectively, and it's taken them months to get those numbers.

Granted, it's just a facebook group and people are more likely to join something if it's less serious, but it still shows the mindset of a lot of young people - they want someone who's critical of the political system, not someone who will keep up the status quo.
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