But obviously, ever since Jimmy Carter convinced Americans that they needed an outsider to clean up D.C., the swing voters have been voting for the opposite of that. I think the Democrats do need to grapple with that in a way they never have in the last forty years.
Did you refer to voters as moral degenerates, then accuse Bernie supporters of being white supremacists? Or did you make a sardonic crack about how a Jewish humanist can’t win over Trump’s base?
He broke an expensive spaceship, crashed a plane into the ocean and ditched another plane into a river, so if we elect him president, we would have to keep him away from flying things.
I think I mentioned Tom Hanks in another thread asking who the Dems should run in 2020. I thought of him because he seems down to earth and intelligent, the opposite of Trump’s weaknesses. He’s also famous and popular and appealed to some because he wasn’t the same old establishment politician, the same as Trump’s strengths (at least back during the campaign). I would support him if he picked a good Vice President and good advisors. His choices for cabinet positions can only be an improvement on what we have now.
Trump’s supporters will stick with him in 2020 and you’re kidding yourself if you think otherwise. I don’t think people are ready to vote for a woman yet, so no to Oprah and Elizabeth.
Thinking about it, Al Franken seems like a better choice to me.
Reagan was an actor too, but then he was governor of California for eight years before becoming President. Al Franken was a comedian, but he wrote two books about politics, then ran for Senator; if he runs for President in 2020, he’d have 12 years in the Senate under his belt.
If Tom Hanks wants to be President someday, that’s the way to do it.
How about Tom Hanks for president and the other Bosom Buddy for VP? Donna Dixon could be Secretary of Sunny, Sunny, Sunny.
Or, and I’m just spitballing here, maybe have an actual politician? Corey Booker saves people from burning buildings. Al Franken would be great at the Correspondent’s Dinner.
Funny I think this will be his most unfortunate legacy. We’d never have had Bloomberg as mayor of NYC if experience was a prerequisite. A smart guy/woman with a good staff could easily cover the gaps of inexperience, and a self-financed president unbeholden to special interests would be a godsend afaic.
^ This.
That said, the profession of acting rewards the best pretenders before a camera with the most fame. All I really know of him is that he reads scripts really well from “those pale people who ride the subway… umm… writers…”
I’m uber-wary of any candidate that might be another pretender for the crowd in public, but a screaming and mindlessly entitled sociopath in private.
(Once bitten twice shy. )
I’d have to reserve judgement until I know a hell of a lot more than just how well he holds a ‘Tommy-gun’ in ‘The Road To Perdition’.
(I’d like to say that I’d have to meet him in order to support him, but that might be a curse. The only two presidents that I’ve ever seen with my own two eyes were arguably the two single worst presidents in the last 90 years.
By next Christmas they may both have in common being forced to resign because of ‘abuse of power’.)