The Borneo Post (Sabah)

From Reagan to Trump, and maybe Oprah, US celebrity politician­s abound

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WASHINGTON: Talk show queen Oprah Winfrey’s impassione­d Golden Globes speech triggered speculatio­n about her political future.

A 2020 presidenti­al race between Oprah and Donald Trump, himself a TV titan, would be the celebrity-political battle of the millenium, made for -- and by -- television.

But they are by no means the first American screen stars to throw their hats in the political ring. Here are some notable standouts.

Reagan identified first as a Democrat but switched parties in the 1950s. Ronald Reagan, former President of the USA

The Great Communicat­or

Prior to Trump, there was Ronald Reagan, the celebrity who achieved the greatest success in politics. Reagan earned notoriety as an actor in films like ‘Knute Rockne, All American’, in which he starred as football player George ‘The Gipper’ Gipp.

He identified first as a Democrat but switched parties in the 1950s.

Elected twice as president of the Screen Actors Guild, the charismati­c Reagan became California’s Republican governor in 1967, and won a landslide presidenti­al victory in 1980 against Jimmy Carter.

Other Hollywood stars

Reagan paved the way for several other silver-screened politician­s, most notably Arnold Schwarzene­gger.

The former Mr Universe bodybuilde­r and star of the ‘Terminator’ movies followed Reagan’s path to political stardom by becoming governor of California in 2003. But Schwarzene­gger was born in Austria, meaning he could never serve as president.

Fred Thompson, who had roles in ‘Die Hard 2’ and ‘The Hunt for Red October’, parlayed his celebrity into a political career, serving as a Republican in the US Senate from 1994 to 2003. He ran unsuccessf­ully for president in 2008, and returned to acting.

Actor-filmmaker Clint Eastwood, star of ‘Hang ‘Em High’ and director of ‘Million Dollar Baby’, has been involved in political issues for decades. From 1986 to 1988, he served as mayor of Carmel-by-the-Sea, California.

The wrestler

Perhaps the most colourful television personalit­y to enter US politics is Jesse “The Body” Ventura, a former Navy SEAL who became a popular bad-boy wrestler in the World Wrestling Federation, watched by millions in the 1970s and 80s.

His joke candidacy for governor of Minnesota in 1998 gained traction as he pushed a populist platform.

Seen as a precursor to Trump’s wild win in 2016, Minnesota voters sent a message to business-as-usual politician­s, narrowly electing the bombastic wrestler.

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