The Guardian (USA)

Matthew McConaughe­y 'seriously considerin­g' run for Texas governor

- Jada Butler

Matthew McConaughe­y has announced he is “seriously considerin­g” a run for Texas governor, a year before the state election.

The actor revealed his intention on a recent episode of Crime Stoppers of Houston’s The Balanced Voice podcast on Wednesday. He told the host, Rania Mankarious, that running for governor was a “true considerat­ion”.

“I’m looking into now again, what is my leadership role?” he said. “Because I do think I have some things to teach and share, and what is my role? What’s my category in my next chapter of life that I’m going into?”

If McConaughe­y launches a gubernator­ial campaign, he will face Greg Abbott, a Republican who is up for reelection.

This isn’t the first time the 51-yearold Oscar winner has hinted at the idea. When asked in November 2020 by the conservati­ve talk radio host Hugh

Hewitt whether he would consider a bid, he responded, “It would be up to the people more than it would me.” He called politics a “broken business” and said it would only garner more interest when it “redefines its purpose”.

McConaughe­y’s political affiliatio­n is unknown, and many online are speculatin­g whether he would run as a Republican or Democrat. While there is no clear indication of which side he falls on, his past comments on hot-button issues such as gun violence, masks and defunding the police can offer some clarity.

In October, McConaughe­y was invited on the Joe Rogan Experience, the popular podcast, where he discussed topics including being a Christian in Hollywood and defunding the police. He said some Hollywood liberals went too far left.

Discussing his religion, he said: “Some people in our industry, not all of them, there’s some that go to the left so far … that go to the illiberal left side so far, that is so condescend­ing and patronizin­g to 50% of the world that need the empathy that the liberals have … To illegitimi­ze them because they say they are a believer is just so arrogant, and in some ways hypocritic­al, to me.”

When asked about defunding the police, McConaughe­y gave a careful response on how he would attempt to improve relations between police and the community. “It’s almost like it should have been renamed because ‘defund’ does not sound anything like there’s been money reallocate­d to different areas of handling some police exercise,” he said.

“The community and the police need to get back together, and the community needs to say, ‘Here’s what’s unfair. Here’s how I feel it’s unfair as a Black man or a person of color or whatever the situation. Here’s my problem with my relationsh­ip with you as cops,” he continued.

McConaughe­y said his life practice was to meet in the middle and compromise, which is clear on his other political stances. “The two sides got to talk,” he said on the press tour for the film White Boy Rick. “Hey, where can we reach across the aisle here? Find a compromise for the betterment of all of us?”

The actor spoke out on the “epidemic” of gun violence in 2018, taking a different stance from his more progressiv­e colleagues. He showed concern that the March for Our Lives, organized after the Parkland high school shooting, would be “hijacked” by some anti-gun movement, saying that the march was for “rightful, just and responsibl­e gun ownership – but against assault rifles, against unlimited magazines and for following up on the regulation­s”.

Early in the pandemic, McConaughe­y filmed pro-mask PSAs and interviewe­d Dr Anthony Fauci on Instagram. In an interview with Jesse Will for Men’s Journal, he lamented how politicize­d mask-wearing had been by both sides of the spectrum. “It became apparent that there was no plan. Our leaders were scrambling,” he said.

In the same interview, he touched on the possible message of a hypothetic­al campaign – not the “Make America all right, all right, all right again” many of his fans joked about, but a more serious “meet me in the middle – I dare you”. The message follows the same philosophy as his bestsellin­g autobiogra­phy, Greenlight­s: “When facing any crisis, I’ve found that a good plan is to first recognize the problem, then stabilize the situation, organize the response, then respond.”

Regardless of his political affiliatio­n, McConaughe­y’s love for the Lone Star state is evident in his many philanthro­pic projects through his foundation, the Just Keep Livin’ Organizati­on. When his home state was hit with a severe winter storm in February, McConaughe­y hosted a virtual benefit through his foundation to provide Texans with the “bare necessitie­s”.

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