HERSCHEL WALKER & BILL BRADLEY HAVE NOTHING IN COMMON
…Herschel
Walker cannot use his celebrity athlete status as has other athletes
…Walker has
developed a reputation as a consistent liar
As to
the fate of Herschel Walker, should he
actually win the Georgia runoff election (God forbid!), it won’t be the
first time a prominent athlete has reached the U.S. Senate.
New Jersey’s Bill Bradley (D) did it in 1978, when he was elected to the Senate, where he served from 1979 to 1997. That followed an illustrious career on the basketball court that featured an Olympic gold medal and 10 years with the New York Knicks, including two NBA championships.
And Jim Bunning (R) represented Kentucky in both the House and the Senate over the course of a political career that stretched from 1987 through 2011. His life as a politician came on the heels of 16 years as a major league pitcher, which was capped with his election to the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Walker
might be counting on his celebrity athlete status as a University of Georgia
Heisman Trophy winner and an acclaimed former professional football
running back to land a coveted spot in Washington.
But Walker, is destined to fall short of that position.
He woefully lacks what Bradley and Bunning had when they sought office. It’s the same thing other standout athletes, former pro-football star quarterback Jack Kemp, former top National Football League receiver Steve Largent and former University of Oklahoma star quarterback J.C. Watts, had when they won election (all as Republicans) to the House: namely, credibility based upon honorable reputations earned before seeking public office.
Except for memories of his on-field gridiron heroics, during three seasons with the Donald Trump-owned New Jersey Generals of the original U.S. Football League, followed by 12 seasons in the NFL, Walker brings to public service very little that commands respect.
Walker is usually a stranger to the truth.
For instance, Walker has claimed to be a University of Georgia graduate and said he was his high school’s valedictorian, both of which CNN found to be a lie. CNN also found Walker’s references to his military career and having “trained with the FBI,” to be untrue.
Meanwhile,
the Associated Press reviewed hundreds of pages of public records tied
to Walker’s post-college business ventures and found a record that included “exaggerated
claims of financial success.”
“In repeated media interviews,” the AP reported, “Walker claimed his company employed hundreds of people, included a chicken processing division in Arkansas and grossed $70 million to $80 million annually in sales.”
But upon checking further, the AP found that when Walker’s company applied for a federal Paycheck Protection Program loan during the pandemic, it reported just eight employees. And it received about $182,000 in covid-19 aid.
What else on earth can be said about Walker and abortion?
He has campaigned as an opponent of abortion, including in cases of rape, incest and the protection of a mother’s life. He has embraced Sen. Lindsey Graham’s (R-S.C.) proposed national ban on abortion at 15 weeks.
However, two women have separately said Walker pressured them to have abortions during their affairs with him. He has strongly denied both claims. One of the women claimed he paid for the abortion that he wanted her to have. When confronted with a copy of a $700 check given to her in 2009, Walker acknowledged writing a check but he continued to deny the woman’s claim that the money was provided to pay for an abortion.
It’s his word against theirs.
And who
knows what to make of the Herschel Walker who sat for an interview in 2021 with
conservative social media personalities and said, “The father leaves in the
Black family. He leaves the boys alone so they’ll be raised by their mom. If
you have a child with a woman, even if you have to leave that woman, you don’t
leave that child.”
Yes, that is the same Walker who once cited absentee fathers as a “major problem.”
That same Walker also confirmed during the campaign in June that in addition to having a 22-year-old son, with whom he is close, he has another son, 10 years old, whom he financially supports but does not see, and two additional grown children. Said Walker of the revelations, “I have four children. Three sons and a daughter. They’re not ‘undisclosed’, they’re my kids,” Walker said. "I support them all and love them all. I’ve never denied my children.”
“You don’t leave that child,” said Walker a year ago, but of course, that was when conservative cameras were rolling.
Walker’s entry in the Senate race was stoked by Trump, who used his Tuesday night reelection bid to praise Walker as “a gentleman and a great person…a fabulous human being” What would you expect Trump to say?
Walker
is counting on Trump’s endorsement, his personal celebrity and his search for
redemption pitched to social conservatives to deliver him victory in the Dec. 6
Georgia runoff.
If the people of Georgia haven’t lost their minds, Walker’s wishes probably won’t be enough.
There is no single ingredient essential to transitioning from a prominent career, in sports or anything else, to a Capitol Hill job. But a reputable public persona, can help a lot.
But Herschel Walker has little of that to offer.
Copyright G. Ater 2022
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