*OT* Since there were a bunch of posts in the recent past concerning wrestling, this front page NY Times article may interest some. First Hartford goes through the stadium fiasco, now they might elect Bob Backlund??? <ggg>
Regards, John
Men Who Put Foes in Headlocks Now Try to Get a Grip on Politics
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Forum Join a Discussion on Election 2000
By MIKE ALLEN
LASTONBURY, Conn. -- When Bob Backlund hits the campaign trail as a Republican congressional candidate in greater Hartford, he isn't asked about school vouchers or abortion or Kosovo, but about the "cross-face chicken wing."
Other politicians can only dream of leaping from behind the lectern, throwing a noisy audience member into a hammerlock and then twisting his arm behind his back. Backlund actually does it -- and the crowds bark and clap.
Backlund, two-time champion of the World Wrestling Federation, is leading a parade of professional wrestlers who hope to duplicate last fall's upset victory by Jesse Ventura, formerly "the Body" of the WWF and now the governor of Minnesota. With huge built-in followings and a sweaty instinct for pleasing the masses, these candidates hope to tap voters' disgust with the same old political faces.
"There's a lot of people that watch wrestling that don't give a hoot about voting," Backlund said. "But because of who's running, they're going to vote. And when the people vote for me, they're votin' for America."
Rep. Tom Davis, R-Va., chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee, said Backlund was part of a national effort by the party to appeal to nontraditional voters. He said the party also expected Jeff "Skunk" Baxter, former guitarist for Steely Dan and the Doobie Brothers, to challenge Rep. Brad Sherman, D-Calif., in the San Fernando Valley.
"We see 2000 as a great year for outsiders," Davis said. "People may be tired of what's happening in Washington and want to get some new blood in there."
Other wrestlers-turned-politicians include Jerry Lawler, a current WWF star, who is pondering an independent bid for mayor of Memphis, Tenn., in October; John DeFazio, once the WWF's "Jumpin' Johnny," who has the endorsement of the Allegheny County, Pa., Democratic Party in Tuesday's primary for a seat on the County Council, and Harry Venis, a Democrat who wrestles as "Dirty Harry" and was elected mayor of Davie, Fla., in 1996 and now says he aspires to a statewide office.
Backlund, a strawberry blond who played the good guy for most of his career in the ring, said he could relate to disaffected voters since he did not cast his first ballot until three years ago, when he did volunteer work for the Bob Dole campaign.
"I can show 'em, 'Hey, I didn't vote either, but I made a big mistake. You can't complain if your taxes go up, because you're not part of the system.' " Plus, he said, he has the simple tastes of the common man.
This is not a candidate who simply shakes hands. At a recent stop at Hooker Elementary School in Hartford, he was introduced to Donna Liebman, a librarian who said she was a longtime fan. He grabbed her in an airborne bear hug, then twirled her around as she cooed with delight. In a list of accomplishments, his campaign biography notes that he "once lifted Hulk Hogan (302 pounds) over his head with one arm."
Backlund is 49 but stays in chest-baring shape by starting each day at 6 a.m. with a punishing regimen at his home in this woodsy suburb of Hartford. His basement has a rowing machine, monkey bars, a rack of barbells and tumbling mats.
As he exercises, he listens to memory- and vocabulary-building tapes.
After an hour of Marine pushups, bench presses and hanging upside down in "gravity boots," Backlund bounded over to an electric juicer and started pulverizing a dozen carrots, with a few apple slices thrown in for variety.
"Breakfast," he said.
Despite spending most of his adult life in tights, Backlund has flirted with politics before. As the WWF candidate for president in 1996, "Hail to the Chief" blared when he entered the ring.
But the Connecticut candidacy is no joke. Backlund, 49, has the support of top party leaders and is expected to win the Republican nomination next year. He has retired from wrestling in this country (he still performs in Japan, where he has a big following), and has set out to raise $1 million for the 1st District race against Rep. John Larson, a first-term Democrat. Backlund said he may stage a celebrity wrestling match as a fund-raiser.
He is printing up T-shirts touting "The Wrestling Republican," and may bring back his action figure.
Backlund, who grew up in rural Minnesota, said his candidacy is possible only because of Ventura. (In tribute, Backlund has deleted a line from his resume that bragged about beating "The Body" 10 times.) Backlund said the Ventura victory allowed him to skip at least two years of groundwork that otherwise would have been required to have his candidacy taken seriously by party officials and contributors.
Several political analysts said that Ventura's election demonstrates an opportunity for quirky candidates, but that it was largely a product of local factors and would be difficult to duplicate.
"People are willing to take a chance if they hear straight talk instead of flim-flam," said Peter Fenn, a Democratic media consultant. "We have to realize as politicians and consultants that if we show ads of guys walking on the beach in suits, voters are going to shake their heads."
Stuart Rothenberg, a nonpartisan analyst who closely tracks races around the country, said that candidates who were famous in other fields could help Republicans loosen up their image as a "blue-suit, button-down party." He said that although polls did not indicate an anti-establishment mood, "Under this rather slim veneer of satisfaction, you find a longstanding American skepticism about special interests and professional politicians."
Vincent McMahon, owner of the WWF, said his wrestlers were in the same business as career politicians, but were just more honest about it. "Given the choice, Americans know they can trust an entertainer as politician more than a politician as entertainer," McMahon said.
Lawler, the wrestler who is toying with running for mayor of Memphis, said that wrestlers had an obvious advantage when entering politics.
"Political races in general have become either beauty contests or popularity contests," he said. "When you're talking about wresting, you're talking about people who have made a living in front of crowds and on TV."
DeFazio, the candidate for the Allegheny County Council, remarked, "When people see you in tights every Saturday, they really know you."
The ex-grapplers open a whole new frontier for the political consultants who specialize in opposition research. Backlund, for instance, acknowledges he has slapped wrestling rivals, and chased others into the dressing room. He even admits involvement in table- and chair-throwing episodes. But he showed a budding pol's caution when asked if he had ever pulled a rival's hair.
"Not that I recall," he said.
Backlund, who held the WWF champion belt from 1978 to 1983, once replied when asked if professional wrestling matches were staged, "They're on the level." He stands by that today, but again showed his nascent political instincts as a visitor took notes from a huge stack of scrapbooks.
"Those quotes in wrestling magazines -- they aren't quotes," he warned.
Even before he was a candidate, Backlund made regular stops at YMCAs, hospitals and senior citizens' homes in the cities where he performed, promoting physical, nutritional and mental fitness as the keys to happiness.
Backlund, the celebrity spokesman for Gov. John Rowland's Committee on Physical Fitness, now dons a red bow tie and red suspenders for visits to public schools, where he leads students in calisthenics, then lectures them about the evils of sloth and drugs.
He hands out cards showing himself topless and glistening, but will give his autograph only to pupils who can name all the presidents. "For the last one, it's OK to say Hillary," he says.
Backlund's wife, Corki, is a high-school physical education teacher. They have been married 25 years and met while they were attending South Dakota State University. They have a 21-year-old daughter, Carrie, who is a junior at the University of Rhode Island, studying marine biology.
His platform is conservative but otherwise vague. "I want America strong, and to do things with people," Backlund said.
Larson, Backlund's prospective opponent, said that Backlund was a nice guy and seemed well-intentioned, but that he was ready to take him on. "God bless him," he said, "but I'm wrestling with Social Security, Medicare and saving the public education system." |