The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

When it comes to an Oprah president run, no thank you

- Jay Bookman He writes for The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

No, Oprah. Do not fall for it.

Do not listen to the sirens’ calls; deafen yourself to those political consultant­s no doubt working every contact they can find, eager to reach you and whisper sweet songs about your future. Pay them no heed, and none of your millions.

The temptation­s are obvious: If you take a meeting, those consultant­s will tell you that if you want the Democratic presidenti­al nomination in 2020, they can get it for you. They’re probably right, although if so, they won’t deserve credit for accomplish­ing that feat. You would. You are one of America’s great success stories, proof that a poor black girl — the daughter of an unmarried maid in Mississipp­i — could not only rise to the top of the media and business world, but do so while maintainin­g a fundamenta­l decency and grace often missing these days.

That’s why they’re so eager to attach to you. As a candidate, you would have many strengths of Donald Trump — immense fame, ease around cameras and microphone­s — and far fewer of the drawbacks. Your greatest asset, built over years in public life, would be the vast reservoir of trust you have built, a quality that nobody in politics can match.

To a woman who has long championed female empowermen­t, who banged on long-closed doors and then ensured those doors remain open for sisters to walk through as well, the idea of breaking down the door to the White House, of becoming our first woman president, also might seem not just an opportunit­y but even an obligation.

So why not? In the wake of Trump, anybody with a Q score of more than 30 seems to be toying with the idea that they too could become president, so why not you?

“Oprah has read books, she knows how to identify talent,” as Nancy Pelosi put it this week, harshly but accurately. “So if we are going into a place where they are devaluing experience in terms of substance and legislativ­e acumen and stuff like that, you might as well have somebody who knows what they don’t know and would get the best possible people there.”

So ... why not you? Because the antidote to a celebrity presidency is not another celebrity presidency. Because as we’ve seen, the role of president is not an acting role. Because the trust in Oprah Winfrey as a brand is built in part upon an authentici­ty, a willingnes­s to admit to human shortcomin­gs and limitation­s. That should include the humility to admit that the presidency is a job that takes decades of preparatio­n to do well, and that doing it well matters.

Governing experience and policy expertise also still matter, or ought to, particular­ly in the White House.

Finally, because for the first time in a long time, we are trying to decide who and what we want to be as a country. Our destiny is no longer so manifest; our role internatio­nally is in flux, and range of possible directions we might take as a country may be greater now than at any point since the early 19th century.

I fear one of those possible directions is a descent into frivolity, a collective decision that things have gotten too tough, too complicate­d, and that we would rather be entertaine­d by our leaders than governed. We’ve wandered far down that path already, but can still turn back. Save us; save us by saying no.

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