Why didn’t celebrities go to politics?
The new USA Today/Suffolk University poll asked voters which female celebrities they think could make the transition to political positions.
“General Hospital” is not usually a place where Americans get a glimpse of their future presidential candidates, but that happened this week when ESPN character Stephen A. Smith made a surprising return to the long-term drama.
In it, Smith plays a man named “Brick.” He enters his hospital room, confronts the assassin, throws the figure of a nurse, and tries to inject poison into the mob boss. Smith’s character seeks her identity, but before she pulls out the gun, he first draws the weapon, and in slow motion, fatally shoots the killer with a clip that explodes on social media.
“Naha Stephen A. Smith from General Hospital is by no means a funny Dawg. Why did he kill a woman with a silencer?” asked the X user online.
If you’re serious about being a White House candidate in 2028, highlighting the key qualifications of the 57-year-old “first take” host is a spectacular topic.
“Imagine me in the stage of discussion with these people, these politicians,” Smith told the National Association of Broadcasting Stations in Las Vegas earlier this month.
“This is what I do for a living. I’m not a politician. I don’t have a political record that they rely on. I can challenge what you literally say,” he added. “They’ll know more at this particular time than I do, but they have a record to deal with.”
President Donald Trump, who has gained the infamous name to host NBC’s “The Apprentice” for 14 seasons, supported the idea when asked about Smith running at News Nation’s City Hall on April 30.
“I love watching him,” Trump said. “He has great entertainment skills, which is very important. People are watching him.”
Others who taste Smith’s Panmeling have been skeptical of his sports program’s co-hosts and guests about him entering politics, but the Democrats have admitted they need fresh blood.
“If he was running and he introduced some kind of policy that seemed very effective in improving the country and helping the citizens of the country, I would change my mind and vote for him,” Ashley Oliver, a registered Democrat and financial expert in Birmingham, Alabama, filmed “the first” daily.
However, many voters who spoke with her and USA Today expressed concern about whether the country should easily embrace another bold persona on television for the best office on the land.
“He’s a great sports commentator. Don’t get me wrong, but I have zero experience in the political realm,” said Stephen Uzkuu, a 33-year-old cybersecurity analyst from Baltimore, in an interview. “It’s just a stereotypical American citizen. He’s rich and he’s on television. I don’t know how he can contribute to politics.”
In the first 100 days of Trump’s second term, Democrats are thinking about taking the national stage. Their message is sharper, with some already swarming New Hampshire and other early early states.
But despite the party presenting a solid, deep bench of experienced 2028 candidates, there is a nagging story that mostly media circles need Democrats to mimic GOP by running through with non-traditional candidates in large entertainment and social media footprints.
Joseph Guibarghese, executive director of our revolution, said he is one of the nation’s largest progressive grassroots organizations.
“We’re in the attention economy, and the people who control it, or who can have 15 minutes, will automatically become a powerful trending topic,” he said.
“Donald Trump was the first reality TV president. He built his brand by being in public as a host of “apprentice.” Now we are in this age of influencers. ”
Celebrity candidates aren’t new, but Democrat voters express skepticism
While experts point out that celebrities running for office aren’t new in America, their candidates are drawn in ahead of the next contest, primarily because Democrats remain faceless party they are not convinced that voters are a better alternative.
Ronald Reagan was a movie star who led the guild of screen actors long before he bored Jimmy Carter in 1980. Former professional wrestler Jesse Ventura has been elected governor of Minnesota and Austrian-born actor Arnold Schwarzenegger as governor of California.
“Democrats and Republicans have standard bears magical saviors and celebrities because Will Rogers was the (honorary) mayor of Beverly Hills,” said Peter Roge, director of George Washington University’s Media Affidge Affidge School.
However, Roge warned that if his approval rate continues to decline and the country is heading for a recession, there may be no desire for a Trump-style candidate on the left.
If so, they may be craving more predictable and stable. “Their kids are safe when they go to school and can pay their doctor’s bills knowing they can afford gas and groceries,” he said.
Many voters who spoke with USA Today agreed that many celebrities think media mogul Oprah, pop star Taylor Swift and action movie star Dwayne “Rock” Johnson – can set a wave of interest, but it’s unclear what many of them represent politically.
Uzhuu, a Baltimore cybersecurity analyst, voted for Kamala Harris last fall. He said that both parties make mistakes by thinking that celebrities will inspire ordinary people.
“Trump washed away people like Hulk Hogan and Amber Rose, and Harris megged your stallion with Stage Truking,” he said. “We need to stop thinking of celebrities as political activists, because they’re not.”
“He said he’s reluctant to support people like the ‘rock’ for the president,” said Kelly Haferman, a 47-year-old Democrat of Madison, Wisconsin.
But Hafermann, the administrator of higher education, added that she is open-minded about accepting people with less political experience when she is someone who aligns with her values.
“I will fully support John Stewart for the President, or anyone who has a clear understanding of the issue and knows what they’re talking about,” she said.
Data for Progress, a Washington, D.C.-based progressive think tank, announced a vote early in April that most Democrats are leaning towards more established numbers, with former Transport Secretary Pete Battigegg leading the pack in the 2028 hypothetical primary battle.
Top of the list includes Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-New York, Sen. Cory Booker, D-New Jersey, and California Gov. Gavin Newsom. However, of the nearly 20 candidates surveyed in data for the progress survey, Smith had the lowest net favourability of all the numbers tested, and was rated at a 3% negative.
Joshua Chester, who lives in Clinton Township, Michigan, said he occasionally watches ESPN’s “first take” and doesn’t think he would welcome Smith’s famous raucous people in the way grassroots conservatives accepted Trump a decade ago. He would like Ocasio-Cortez to be at the top of democratic tickets.
“My (Smith) take is totally invalidated in all substances,” says the 27-year-old registered Democrat, who works as a service advisor for a car dealer.
“Looking for celebrity support and that might be a good thing, but if you actually make them try to run for the office in almost every case, it really doesn’t work.”
Fantasy candidates fill in the blank as they still lack confidence in dems
Public polls show that the country is getting sour about the economic turmoil that early in Trump’s inauguration three months ago, but Democrats haven’t filled the gap.
Only 25% of voters in the Gallup Survey, conducted in the first two weeks of April, said they are confident that they are either encouraged or did the right thing for the economy to the Democratic leaders of Congress.
That’s well below the roughly 44% who said the same about Trump, who is trying to calm recession anxiety after igniting a global trade war with US allies and enemies.
“The Democrats need better communicators. It’s simple and simple,” said Illinois Legislative candidate Kat Abugazare.
Smith himself called out the issue of Democrat messaging in a March 6 episode of his personal YouTube show on March 6th. There, I laughed at how several Democrats would read from the same script when criticizing the Trump administration and criticising social media videos ahead of the president’s joint speech.
“Do you have to come to Capitol Hill and do lessons?! Seriously, you don’t understand that,” Smith said.
The self-proclaimed, registered independent Smith remains unknown. Also, others like him who may run for president are integral to promote themselves by promoting the next presidential election. USA Today reached out to Smith for comment but did not receive a response.
Geevarghese presented voters with a massive philosophy of governance, in the way Trump made America’s great move, that larger politically conscious people and groups would hesitate to take these overtures seriously.
“Some of these influencers’ problems, they have hot take and critiques, but many of them don’t clarify the real solutions faced by normal everyday Americans,” he said.
But it may not matter whether Smith and other populist-oriented celebrities catch the imagination of voters like Trump.
Oliver, a financial expert from Birmingham, Alabama, said many veteran Democrats, including former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, no longer resonate with younger voters. She said that Smith skeptical Americans must admit that they are familiar with the power of relevance and media, including themselves.
“We need a new face and he could be a new face that will excite the base, but that has to be someone who knows how to speak publicly, can interact with the public and attract people,” Oliver said.
“I don’t think anyone agrees that Stephen A. Smith can portray people — the question of what happens when he does.”