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Was 'The Boss'
born to run...for U.S. Senate?
Some in New Jersey put out call for Sen. Springsteen
TRENTON, New Jersey (Reuters) --
A group of New Jersey political activists fed up with the usual crop
of political candidates announced a plan Tuesday to draft rock star
Bruce Springsteen to run for the U.S. Senate as a true representative
of the state.
With guidance from Doug Friedline, a former 1998 campaign aide to heavyweight-wrestler-turned-Minnesota-Gov.
Jesse Ventura, the group called "Independence for New Jersey" launched
a signature drive to put Springsteen on the general election ballot.
They need only 800 signatures. But there is a big problem: No one has
talked to Springsteen about the idea.
Friedline was not discouraged. "It took us seven months to get Jesse
Ventura to run," he said. "If Bruce Springsteen threw his hat in the
ring and made a real serious run at this, I think you'd see thousands
of volunteers coming out from all over the place."
Political analysts said the announcement was less a grass-roots groundswell
of support for Springsteen as native son than it was an attempt by Ventura
supporters to set up a third party in New Jersey.
The state Senate race currently features incumbent Democrat Robert Torricelli
and three Republican candidates -- millionaire businessman Doug Forrester
and state senators Diane Allen and John Matheussen -- who all face each
other in the June 4 primary.
Springsteen, known as "The Boss" among rock fans, would offer a number
of advantages as a political candidate, including name recognition and
popularity among younger voters.
Springsteen, whose songs often celebrate the blue-collar spirit of his
youth in Freehold, New Jersey, now lives in the upscale community of
Rumson near the northern end of the Jersey shore. The committee tried
to reach him as long ago as December but has heard nothing.
Quelle: cnn.com

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