« on: February 07, 2017, 09:32:02 AM »
Found this via Drudge.
No Joke: Al Franken for President?
After years of shunning the spotlight in the Senate, Minnesota’s junior senator is in the limelight—and would be a formidable candidate for the Democrats.
Feb. 5, 2017, 6 a.m.
Al Franken isn’t a punch line in the Senate anymore. He’s emerged as one of the Democrats’ most aggressive and effective questioners of President Trump’s Cabinet nominees. He’s generated numerous made-for-TV clips as one of the few Democrats willing to go full-bore against his party’s top targets—Jeff Sessions, Tom Price, and Betsy DeVos. He’s finally showing some personality in the Senate, punctuated by his laugh-out-loud exchange with Energy Secretary-designate Rick Perry. And he’ll be one of nine Democrats on the Judiciary Committee questioning Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, Neil Gorsuch. This is Al Franken’s moment in the spotlight, and if he chooses, he could parlay his good fortune into a bid for the presidency in 2020.
To be sure, Franken, 65, may not be the Democrats’ strongest candidate in the general election. His deeply liberal politics and long-standing dismissiveness of Republicans turn off many voters in the middle. But with Democrats looking for strident opposition to Trump in the early days of his presidency, they’re probably not going to be in a pragmatic mood in the primaries. So far, much of the liberal excitement has centered around Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders, but they will be 71 and 79, respectively, during the general election. Neither has shown any ability to win support outside the most progressive precincts. Franken, at least, can point to a record of electability with groups that Democrats will need to win over.
I experienced Franken’s political potential firsthand after traveling to Minnesota to cover his reelection bid in 2014. That year, Republicans swept nearly every competitive Senate race—even giving Sen. Mark Warner a run for his money in Virginia. But Franken comfortably prevailed against a well-funded GOP businessman, one of the few targeted Democrats to run against the tide. He accomplished that by winning the rural, working-class Iron Range, an area that swung dramatically to Trump last November. Like Trump, he championed buy-American legislation for iron and steel companies, and helped secure new trade protections and tariffs against Chinese steel. A Franken adviser told National Journal he’s likely to find “some common ground” with Trump on trade issues. He’s akin to Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio, with more star power to excite the millennials and nonwhites who make up so much of the Democratic Party’s base.
Franken’s biggest vulnerability was that he was better known for his comic turns on Saturday Night Live than for his legislative record. But he’s no ordinary comedian: He went to the prestigious Blake School in Minnesota and graduated from Harvard. And in the age of Trump, being a television celebrity isn’t nearly the vulnerability that it once seemed. His handlers took great pains to avoid the media during his first term, avoiding interviews with Washington-based reporters. But these days, Franken is acting a lot more authentically, with his propensity to lighten the mood during tense hearings as common as his hair-trigger temper.
Franken is coming out with a memoir this year on Memorial Day, another sign he’ll be getting more attention in the months to come. A Franken spokesman said the senator remains focused on Minnesota, and brushed off any speculation about a future presidential campaign. But with many Democrats arguing that they need their own famous face to challenge Trump, Franken fits the bill as well as anyone.
Stuart Smalley reruns, anyone?

The rest of this is here:
https://www.nationaljournal.com/s/647681?unlock=K36E7XFBC11I1KQ7

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Chase her.
Chase her even when she's yours.
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