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Al Franken making U.S. Senate bid in Minn.

Comedian Al Franken said Wednesday he will run for U.S. Senate in 2008, confirming his long-suspected plans to seek the Democratic nomination to challenge Republican Sen. Norm Coleman. [!]
FRANKEN
Comedian Al Franken smiles during his radio show on Feb. 10, 2005.Haraz Ghanbari / AP file
/ Source: The Associated Press

Comedian Al Franken said Wednesday he will run for U.S. Senate in 2008, confirming his long-suspected plans to seek the Democratic nomination to challenge Republican Sen. Norm Coleman.

Franken’s announcement came on the final day of his radio show on Air America. The former “Saturday Night Live” performer’s celebrity instantly makes him a heavyweight contender and brings national attention to the Minnesota race.

“Minnesotans have a right to be skeptical about whether I’m ready for this challenge, and to wonder how seriously I would take the responsibility that I’m asking you to give me,” Franken said in a video clip posted on his Web site.

“I want you to know: nothing means more to me than making government work better for the working families of this state, and over the next 20 months I look forward to proving to you that I take these issues seriously,” Franken said in a transcript of the clip.

Though Franken has a well-known name and is likely to be well-funded, he’s expected to be challenged by several other Democrats, including wealthy trial attorney Mike Ciresi.

Franken, 55, was born in New York City but grew up in the Minneapolis suburb of St. Louis Park. He graduated from Harvard University in 1973, and in 1975 he and writing partner Tom Davis joined the writing staff of “Saturday Night Live” during its first season. They soon started appearing in sketches, and Franken remained a fixture on the show well into the 1990s.

In 1996 Franken took his career in a political direction when he wrote “Rush Limbaugh Is A Big Fat Idiot and Other Observations,” a broadside against the conservative radio host and other figures on the right. He’s since published several other books critical of Republicans and the conservative establishment.

As early as 2003, Franken said he was considering a run for the Minnesota U.S. Senate seat previously held by his friend the late Democratic Sen. Paul Wellstone.

In 2004 Franken joined the upstart liberal radio network Air America as its biggest-name host. He soon got more directly involved in politics, forming a political action committee that raised more than $1 million for Democratic candidates in the last election cycle.

‘I felt like the luckiest kid in the world’
In 2005, Franken and his wife, Franni, moved back to the Twin Cities, which was widely interpreted as laying the groundwork for a campaign. He announced a few weeks ago that Wednesday would be his last day on Air America, but continued to play coy about his aspirations while privately telling prominent members of the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party (essentially the state chapter of the Democratic Party) about his plans to run.

Franken is stringing out his announcement over two days — Wednesday’s announcement, and a scheduled first public appearance as a candidate Thursday morning at a clinic in south Minneapolis.

In his Web site message, Franken acknowledges he’s not a “typical politician.” But he stresses his Minnesota roots, talking about his father’s decision to open a quilting factory in Albert Lea that failed after two years, prompting the family’s move to the Twin Cities.

“I grew up in a hard-working middle class family just like many of yours. And as a middle-class kid growing up in Minnesota back then, I felt like the luckiest kid in the world. And I was.”

Franken’s celebrity is likely to give him an edge over other Democrats in getting attention, but is no guarantee he’ll get past the primary. Besides Ciresi, other names mentioned as potential candidates include state Sens. Tarryl Clark, Mee Moua and Tom Bakk, and state Rep. Joe Atkins.

Coleman viewed as vulnerable
Franken’s candidacy will also test whether Minnesotans are in the mood for another celebrity-cum-politician after the 1999-2003 governship of former pro wrestler Jesse Ventura. Ventura’s fame and occasionally outrageous behavior regularly brought national attention to the state but after a while wore on the patience of many Minnesotans.

Coleman defeated former Vice President Walter Mondale in 2002 just a few weeks after the plane crash that killed the incumbent, Wellstone.

Coleman is viewed as vulnerable after several years of Democratic resurgence in Minnesota and the continued unpopularity of his fellow Republican President Bush, but his proven skills as a campaigner and adept fundraiser make him a formidable opponent.

Franken has had little good to say about his potential opponent. In his latest book, “The Truth (with jokes),” he criticized Coleman in not-so-flattering terms for his former chairmanship of the Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations.

“The subcommittee’s chairman, Minnesota Republican Norman Coleman, is one of the administration’s leading butt boys,” Franken wrote. “He hasn’t held a single hearing on postwar corruption.”