USA TODAY International Edition

FEISTY, FUNNY AL FRANKEN IS GETTING A SERIOUS LOOK

Memoir combines humor, barbed criticism

- Susan Page

WASHINGTON For Al Franken, it’s finally safe to be funny again just at a moment all the news around him has taken a decidedly unfunny turn.

The two- term Minnesota senator and one- time Saturday Night Live comedian is emerging as one of the fiercest challenger­s of President Trump and his team, and as a rising star in a Democratic Party eager for political combat. Albeit one who uses humor as his sword.

Near the end of a freewheeli­ng memoir being published by Twelve next week ( sarcastica­lly) titled Al Franken: Giant of the Senate, he writes that there is “a decent chance” Trump will still be president by the time readers are perusing it.

Seriously: Does he think the president will serve the full four years?

Franken said it was “still too early” to make a judgment about whether Trump’s actions could amount to obstructio­n of justice or other impeachabl­e offenses. In a follow- up interview Tuesday, he noted a Washington Post report that the president had asked two top intelligen­ce officials to push back against the FBI investigat­ion into possible collusion by his campaign.

“It’s feels like it’s accelerati­ng, and we’re at a point there’s a lot of there there,” he said. “There’s things that are ... certainly improper communicat­ions approachin­g stuff that may be a crime.”

Perhaps it’s only right that the comedian- turned- senator would become an especially effective burr in the side of the reality- TV- star- turned- president.

He ousted an incumbent Republican senator, Norm Coleman, after a bitter eight- month recount battle that ended in an historic squeaker. When he was sworn in, in 2009, Franken decided to demonstrat­e that he was going to be a serious legislator, focused on his home state.

Behind the scenes, he tried to cultivate friendship­s, including with conservati­ve Republican senators who wouldn’t be among his natural allies.

While the book provides a glimpse at some surprising friendship­s across ideologica­l lines, there are no kind words for Ted Cruz. The Texas senator gets an entire chapter of his own that describes him as “singularly dishonest” and “exceptiona­lly smarmy.” ( Cruz’s office didn’t respond to a request for comment.)

Bashing Cruz in the book isn’t surprising. Criticizin­g Barack Obama is.

During Franken’s Senate campaign, former president Bill Clinton and then- senator Hillary Clinton appeared at rallies to help him get over the top. “But one person who had no interest in providing that help was Barack Obama,” Franken writes. ( Obama spokesman Eric Schultz declined to comment.)

Franken celebrated his 66th birthday Sunday. His relish for debate and his full- throated liberalism is a good fit with the rising anti- Trump energy among Democrats on the left. His name has landed on the early, speculativ­e lists of prospects for the party’s presidenti­al nomination in 2020.

He dismisses that question in a way that doesn’t preclude the possibilit­y. The 2020 campaign? “Look, that’s a long way away.”

“You have to understand that I like Ted Cruz probably more than my colleagues like Ted Cruz, and I hate Ted Cruz.” Sen. Al Franken, D- Minn.

 ?? JARRAD HENDERSON, USA TODAY ?? Minnesota Sen. Al Franken has become a rising Democratic star.
JARRAD HENDERSON, USA TODAY Minnesota Sen. Al Franken has become a rising Democratic star.

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