The news that Wyclef Jean's not going to be the next President of Haiti
- something about him not actually living there, apparently - brought to
mind some other short lived political careers of people whose day job
involved cavorting on a stage. Who can forget Joe Strummer's manifesto
in the New Musical Express ahead of the general election in May 1979?
Certainly not the person who sent him a death threat as a result of
reading Joe's views on Northern Ireland. It put Joe (and the rest of The Clash) right off the idea of
coming to Derry for a free festival that summer, which was fair enough, I
suppose. I don't think Joe was ever serious about running for office,
of course. That manifesto thing was probably an NME inspired wheeze, which must
have seemed amusing in the office in Carnaby Street. Much more
practical was Jello Biafra, who got as far as standing for election as
mayor of San Francisco in 1979. Bear in mind, at the time, he was the
singer of a band called the Dead Kennedys. That was a tasteless
enough name before he decided to enter politics, but it didn't seem to
be an issue in the campaign. His most famous policy was that
businessmen should be forced to wear clown suits within San Francisco city limits. He lost the clown vote as a result and came fourth. A few
others have dabbled since but never the ones who would have been worth
voting for. I would love to have seen Joey Ramone towering over the
Presidential podium taking questions from the White House Press Corps,
with Dee Dee as Secretary of State. I wouldn't have let either of them anywhere
near the nuclear button of course. That would have been safe in Johnny's guitar case.
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