Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Oprah Winfrey for president?

Polls put her well ahead of Trump

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PRELIMINAR­Y polling showed there was high interest among US women in an Oprah Winfrey presidenti­al candidacy in 2020. According to a Quinnipiac poll last month, women would back the former talk-show host 58% to 33% against President Donald Trump. Men were evenly divided, with 45% supporting each.

But Winfrey said that some influentia­l men had encouraged her to consider a run for the White House.

“I had a lot of wealthy men calling, telling me that they would run my campaign and raise $1 billion (R12bn) for me. I think when you have that many people whose opinions you value coming at you, it’s worthy of thinking about,” she told 60 Minutes Overtime correspond­ent Ann Silvio.

Despite the offers, Winfrey said the lack of spiritual confirmati­on is what has kept her from seriously considerin­g a run.

“If God actually wanted me to run, wouldn’t God kinda tell me? And I haven’t heard that,” she said.

So for now it seems we can count Winfrey out of a presidenti­al race.

“I am actually humbled by the fact that people think I could be a leader of the free world, but it’s just not in my spirit,” she told Silvio. “It’s not in my DNA.”

Much of the interest in the political aspiration­s of the mogul was rooted in her stirring Golden Globes speech on the sexual abuse and harassment of women by men in power. Winfrey, who in the past has talked about her own sexual abuse, has historical­ly made respect for women part of her identity.

“I was just trying to give a good speech. I was looking for a way to express what was going on in this moment in terms of gender and class and race. I cared about landing that speech in the room,” Winfrey said.

Despite her repeated past declaratio­ns of disinteres­t in running for president, many Americans rallied behind the moment. Overall, the Quinnipiac poll had Winfrey winning 52% of the vote to Trump’s 39% if she ran against him in 2020.

Trump’s overall approval rating has inched up since Winfrey’s speech, but he is in the midst of a scandal about the White House’s handling of allegation­s against now-former staff secretary Rob Porter, who was accused of abuse by two ex-wives.

Trump, who has been accused of sexual misconduct by almost 20 women, has regularly stood up for men on his side who have been accused of sexual abuse or harassment, including Repub- lican Senate candidate Roy Moore in Alabama, Fox News Channel’s Roger Ailes and former talk-show host Bill O’Reilly.

And on Saturday, in the middle of the Porter scandal, he did it again.

“People’s lives are being shattered and destroyed by a mere allegation. Some are true and some are false. Some are old and some are new. There is no recovery for someone falsely accused – life and career are gone. Is there no such thing any longer as Due Process?” Trump tweeted.

A recent Washington PostABC News poll showed that more than eight in 10 men view sexual harassment of women in the workplace as a problem. And only 35% of men think the amount of national attention given to the issue has been sufficient.

It is clear from recent polling, Winfrey’s claims about male political donors as well as criticism against Trump that men also are looking for a leader who can respond effectivel­y to the crisis of the abuse of women.

It won’t be Winfrey, apparently. But the men who would back her for president need not fear her disengagin­g: “I feel I have a responsibi­lity, as a person who has a big voice, to use it to promote justice and kindness and goodwill.” – Washington Post

 ?? PICTURE: AP/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) ?? Oprah Winfrey with the Cecil B DeMille Award at the 75th annual Golden Globe Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel last month.
PICTURE: AP/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) Oprah Winfrey with the Cecil B DeMille Award at the 75th annual Golden Globe Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel last month.

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