Bully_Pulpit
New member
George Clooney
Talk of a future “President Clooney” started following the actor long before he played a presidential candidate in 2011’s “The Ides of March.” Clooney, a big time Democratic donor and humanitarian activist, has knocked down past reports of potential political runs. His rep told us a British tabloid’s story earlier this year that Clooney, 53, was being courted by Democrats to run in the 2018 California gubernatorial race was a “fabrication.” But that hasn’t stopped the speculation: a British gambling firm increased the odds of Clooney becoming president after the longtime bachelor tied the knot with lawyer Amal Alamuddin earlier this year.
Ashley Judd
The member of the famed country music clan weighed a possible Democratic bid this year against Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). Although she appeared this close to tossing her hat in the Bluegrass State match-up, the 46-year-old “Divergent” actress and 2012 Democratic National Convention delegate ultimately decided against the Senate run, telling her Twitter followers she needed to be “focused on my family.” But Judd isn’t completely shying away from politics — she appeared as a special guest at a Democratic state Senate candidate’s fundraiser in Tennessee over the summer.
Fran Drescher
“The Nanny” star has been open about what her next role might be: senator. When we asked Drescher last year if she’s considering running for public office, she replied, “Maybe.” The New York native and Hillary Clinton supporter, 57, eyed Clinton’s Senate seat back in 2008 when she made her White House run, but ultimately decided against running. But Drescher, a cancer survivor, said in late 2013 of her political plans, “I think it’s on the horizon.”
Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson
He laid the smack down on his opponents in the wrestling ring, but the WWE-star-turned-actor says he has his sights set on the political arena. When asked about his interest in politics back in 2012, the 42-year-old replied, “Right now the best way that I can impact the world is through entertainment. One day, and that day will come, I can impact the world through politics.” Plugging his new movie at the time, the American Samoa native said, “The great news is that I am American, therefore I can become president. But don’t forget: I am G.I. Joe.” He’s already gotten at least a satirical taste of the presidency: the real-life President Obama supporter played “The Rock Obama” in a 2009 “Saturday Night Live” sketch.
Tim McGraw
The country music crooner has long flirted with the idea of throwing his signature cowboy hat into a political race. In 2006, the “Shotgun Rider” singer and dad of three with wife Faith Hill told Esquire magazine he could run in a Tennessee Senate or gubernatorial race, “Maybe in 10 or 15 years when the music has died down.” The longtime Democrat, 47, already received an endorsement of sorts from one former commander in chief. “I think he’s got it,” Bill Clinton told the magazine.
thehill.com/blogs/in-the-know/in-the-know/225777-top-10-celebrities-who-might-run-for-office
I guess being a politician isnt much different than being an entertainer, especially in this star fucker cult of personality culture we live in here in america.