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View Full Version : friedman's just another word for nothing left to lose



sbw
13 Sep 2006, 08:39 PM
clever brits with their puns...from the economist print edition...



YOUR typical American politician will wriggle and duck to avoid saying anything that might conceivably offend anyone. Kinky Friedman is not your typical politician. With his country band, the Texas Jewboys, he used to belt out ballads such as ?They ain't makin' Jews like Jesus any more? and ?Get your biscuits in the oven and your buns in the bed?. His lyrics upset every Christian, feminist and racial-sensitivity-watchdog foolish enough to take him seriously. To the many fans of his music and comic mystery novels, however, Mr Friedman is one of the funniest men in America. He is certainly the most amusing candidate for governor of Texas.

Admittedly, the competition is not fierce. His opponents' slogans are dull to the point of self-parody: ?I'm proud of Texas? (Rick Perry, the Republican incumbent) and ?Think big? (Chris Bell, the Democratic challenger). Mr Friedman's are: ?Why the hell not?? and ?How hard could it be??

His platform is a medley of populist tunes and one-liners. He calls himself a ?compassionate redneck?. His heroes are ?teachers, firefighters, cops and cowboys?. His education policy is ?No teacher left behind??higher pay, fewer standardised tests and a big infusion of cash for schools, which he will raise by legalising casino gambling (?Slots for tots?). He will also slap an extra tax on oil firms (boo, hiss) to raise salaries for firefighters, cops and teachers. Perhaps because his parents were teachers, he is especially sensitive to their plight.

Mr Friedman is also a big fan of alternative energy. He wants Texas to get 20% of its electricity from renewable sources by 2020. He favours tax breaks for biodiesel, which would ?stop the Saudis from playing the jukebox and the rest of us dancing to the tune?. He has even suggested appointing as energy czar his friend Willie Nelson, a green country singer who fuels his tour bus with biodiesel and sells the stuff at petrol stations in Texas. Mr Friedman will soon unveil a health policy loosely based on the system in Minnesota, where another maverick, Jesse ?The Body? Ventura, a professional wrestler, actually won the governorship in 1998. ?The Kinkster? draws inspiration from The Body's victory, and is taking advice from Dean Barkley, Mr Ventura's top strategist.

Mr Friedman's opponents dismiss his campaign as a joke and whisper that he is running only to provide material for another bestselling book. But Mr Friedman appears to take himself seriously, and so do a surprising number of Texans. A poll of likely voters by SurveyUSA put him in second place, with 21%, behind Mr Perry's 35% and a horse-hair ahead of Mr Bell (20%) and another independent, Carole Keeton Strayhorn (19%).

Most Texans are disillusioned with politics. Only 29% of the voting-age population bothered to vote at the last gubernatorial election. Lexington's chats with random Texans about the candidates revealed near-universal support for ?I don't much care for any of 'em.? Mr Friedman's strategy is to fish for the apathetic 71% and try to reel them into the voting booths. If the turnout in November remains below a third, Rick Perry will be re-elected, says Laura Stromberg, Mr Friedman's spokeswoman. But if it is over 40%, ?we guarantee [Mr Friedman] will win.?

On the trail in his trademark black cowboy gear, sucking on a Cuban cigar and volleying his best jokes at audiences who have not heard them before, Mr Friedman is proving an effective campaigner. For every sceptical query, he has a quotable answer. Isn't his candidacy a bit of a long shot? ?I don't know how many supporters I have, but they all carry guns.? Doesn't his utter lack of relevant experience disqualify him for the job? ?Politics is the only field in which the more experience you have, the worse you get.? Unlike all those career politicians, Mr Friedman is as clean as a pair of shiny new spurs and has no cronies clinging to the tails of his ?preachin' coat?. True, but?unlike Arnold Schwarzenegger, for example?he has no heavyweight policy advisers either. His assurance that ?I'm a Jew; I'll hire good people? is not entirely persuasive.

When his seriousness is questioned, Mr Friedman points out that all the ?serious? politicians talk in one-liners and sound-bites too?only theirs are not funny. He adds that several of the serious politicians' policies are a joke. The Texas House last year passed a ?booty bill? against sexy cheerleading. And in 1971 it unanimously passed a motion honouring the Boston Strangler, which a playful member had sponsored to demonstrate that his colleagues passed bills without reading them.

Friedman's just another word for nothing left to lose
Fair enough, but the reason sober observers think Mr Friedman would make an awful governor has nothing to do with his playfulness, his past drug use, his bachelorhood (?I'm not against marriage. I'm against my marriage?) or any of the other minor quirks his opponents will doubtless use against him. The trouble with Mr Friedman is that he appears never to have applied himself to anything complex and dull. That is fine if you are an entertainer, but not if you want to sort out a creaking school system, clogged highways or a precarious budget. Those who know him say Mr Friedman has the attention span of a hyperactive schoolboy. Ms Stromberg admits that, were he to become governor, his briefings would have to be very brief.

It is unlikely to come to that. Mr Friedman has no party behind him, unlike Mr Ventura, who used the old organisation of Ross Perot, another maverick Texan. So his chances of winning are slim. But he will probably divide the disgruntled vote enough to let Mr Perry mosey effortlessly to re-election. For Texans who like the governor's menu of tax cuts, tort reform and muscular Christianity, that is good news. But for those who agree with Mr Friedman that politics-as-usual should stop, it will be disappointing, to say the least.

abathur
13 Sep 2006, 08:48 PM
He's got my vote. And many hours of my volunteer service.

Strayhorn is trying hard to self-destruct coming into the election, and she's the only other candidate you could really claim has a chance to beat perry without Friedman present. Still, I don't think that she pulls broadly enough to do it even without Kinky in the race. Likewise, a democratic candidate just will not win Texas at this point, no matter who is in the race and how bad they are. Satan could run republican in Texas and win the election. Fact of the matter is, for all the talk of spoilers, Kinky is the only of the non-perry candidates that has enough broad appeal to win the election.

sbw
13 Sep 2006, 09:02 PM
He's got my vote. And many hours of my volunteer service.

Strayhorn is trying hard to self-destruct coming into the election, and she's the only other candidate you could really claim has a chance to beat perry without Friedman present. Still, I don't think that she pulls broadly enough to do it even without Kinky in the race. Likewise, a democratic candidate just will not win Texas at this point, no matter who is in the race and how bad they are. Satan could run republican in Texas and win the election. Fact of the matter is, for all the talk of spoilers, Kinky is the only of the non-perry candidates that has enough broad appeal to win the election.

one of his people is quoted in the article saying that if 40% show up to vote, he will win for sure. do you agree? and do you think there is any way they can entice an extra 750K-1M voters?

the major parties are working together (on a national level, though almost all the states are broke too) to bankrupt the country. anyone who works for either of them should be punched in the face immediately. I hope this crazy guy wins.

Scott

C.J.Woolf
13 Sep 2006, 09:15 PM
one of his people is quoted in the article saying that if 40% show up to vote, he will win for sure. do you agree? and do you think there is any way they can entice an extra 750K-1M voters?
I don't know, but that's how Jesse Ventura won -- by drawing lots of people who are disgusted with politics but will vote for a gadfly celebrity candidate. The question is whether the Kinkstah is as famous notorious in Texas as Ventura was in Minnesota.

All I know about him is based on reading one of his detective novels, but I can say: Why the hell not? He can't possibly be any worse than Bush or Perry.

abathur
13 Sep 2006, 09:21 PM
I think that's probably a good number, because I think a lot of that additional voting percentage is going to be for him. Even the Republicans are, at least many of them, disgusted with Perry. They may not all vote "not-republican," but a lot of them are going to stay home.

I think we'll see higher turnout, and I definitely think he's doing a little better than any of the polls will show due to their "likely voter" definitions. It's hard as hell to gauge, though, because of the gross differences showing up between polls. Still--despite that--he's been polling higher since April or so than Ventura did up until mid October. Our real challenge, as a campaign (and, being involved, it's a very grassroots effort going on here) is to get people registered to vote (all registrations must be in by early October.)

I'm not seeing the people who are happy with Perry. We heard from someone who heard from someone who finally saw the first pro-perry bumper sticker we've heard of all campaign.

We've got a lot of work to do, but I think the whole nation could get a pleasant surprise come November.

sbw
13 Sep 2006, 09:27 PM
Our real challenge, as a campaign (and, being involved, it's a very grassroots effort going on here) is to get people registered to vote (all registrations must be in by early October.)

what is entailed in that? have you been successful thus far?

I remember reading a while back that voter-registration efforts are also a big deal in cleveland, as ohio has been a 'battleground' state recently.

Scott

C.J.Woolf
13 Sep 2006, 09:31 PM
I've a hunch that the typical Kinky voter who doesn't normally vote also doesn't talk to pollsters, so he has support the polls don't detect. That might be total wishful thinking too.

abathur
13 Sep 2006, 10:43 PM
Registering voters involves getting deputized, yourself, to register people, and having them take a couple minutes to fill out a card and leave it with you. You turn it in within 5 days, they get their registration card in the mail. Registrations have to be in roughly a month before the election (I think it gets bumped back a few days because 30 days before falls on a weekend.)

I'm going to be setting up at a few local concerts to register voters as well as trying to talk my professors into letting me encourage people to register in class, maybe even give some bonus. Basically, we have to get ourselves out there at every chance possible and talk people into taking a few minutes of their time.

On C.J., I don't know that there's a "typical" Kinky voter, but I'd definitely agree that he has considerable support from non-traditional-voters. We've got democrats, independents, libertarians and republicans all working on the campaign locally here. College students, teachers, parents, grandparents, lawyers, nurses and small businessmen, too. As overwhelmingly republican as Texas can be, there's a lot of unrest down here.

My parents are card-carrying-straight-ticket republicans and they're both disgusted with Perry. I haven't quite won them over for Kinky, yet--but they're considering it. ;)

Ferrus
13 Sep 2006, 10:54 PM
Well, at least it's not Milton Friedman.

demagogic_schizoid
13 Sep 2006, 11:42 PM
one of his people is quoted in the article saying that if 40% show up to vote, he will win for sure. ?


Yeah just like John Kerry was helped by the big turnout.:rolleyes:

Why don't you guys stop pretending to be the silent majority? I will happily say to you now that if this candidate, running on a platform of higher pay for teachers and alternative energy, wins the election, I swear to never post on this site again.

abathur
14 Sep 2006, 12:05 AM
noted?

earwax
14 Sep 2006, 12:16 AM
Kinky Quotes:

"I support gay marriage. I believe they have a right to be as miserable as the rest of us."

"Musicians can run this state better than politicians. We won't get a lot done in the mornings, but we'll work late and be honest."

"I just want Texas to be number one in something other than executions, toll roads and property taxes."

Yeah, he's a colorful oddball. Texas has a history of colorful oddballs.

Why the hell not?