National Post (National Edition)

The Oprah office

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with one being “We’ve all had it – Oprah just announced her candidacy!” Winfrey’s name was thrown in the ring for a potential presidenti­al run again in 2006, when she made her first political contributi­on – to Arnold Schwarzene­gger’s re-election campaign. (Yes, her first campaign contributi­on was to a Republican).

However, the idea of Winfrey running for office seems to have picked up more steam following her address at the Globes. This time it wasn’t just fans calling on her to run. Gayle King, her best friend and likely the one with the most inside informatio­n, said Winfrey is “intrigued by the idea.” Stedman Graham, her long-term partner, said it was “up to the people” but that, according to him, “she would absolutely do it.”

And lest anyone believe the notion to be utterly ridiculous, Trump declared to reporters at a meeting on Tuesday, with conviction, “I’d beat Oprah.” But, he added, “I don’t think she’s gonna run, I know her very well.”

In 2018, this seems to be just the sort of thing that happens when you say motivation­al things or have a magnanimou­s personalit­y and a whole lot of fans. Except, real or imagined, Winfrey’s path to the White House will not be without a few bumps. For every one person saying they were fantasizin­g about an Oprah Winfrey/Gayle King ticket, there were two criticizin­g the been bumped up to the second-most likely person to be elected president in 2020, after Trump. Winfrey’s ascension up the ranks had election prognostic­ator Nate Silver likening Oprah 2020 to Bitcoin.

While normally Winfrey’s reps are quick to extinguish rumours of this sort with a quick dismissal – “she is not running for office” – as they did only a few months ago, they’ve yet to comment post-Globes if she still feels the same way. But what do the actual experts say? Katie Merrill, a Democratic strategist, told the L.A. Times that Winfrey running would go against the historical pattern of Americans voting for a president to correct the previous one’s flaws. In other words, Merrill explained, “I think it is far more likely that the American public will go to the opposite of the current occupant of the White House.”

While everyone from Meryl Streep to Larry Wilmore has already thrown in their support for Winfrey, celebrity endorsemen­ts don’t mean everything. According to a Quinnipiac University poll taken last March, while 52 per cent of voters took a preference towards her, 69 per cent said Winfrey shouldn’t actually run.

Maybe some Americans are over that whole celebrity president thing after all.

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