Senate The Chosen One

Georgia Senators (l-r) Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff. 

Apparently, running for Congress is not a spur of the moment thing. It is in the hands of party kingmakers who vet potential candidates behind closed doors, before sending them the invitation. The bigger the office (U.S. President), the bigger the army of kingmakers.

The Herschel Walker case in Georgia is bound to shift that power to aspiring candidates. How? Kingmakers in that state decided he should run for the U.S. Senate. They have their reasons for choosing him. He found the offer lucrative and accepted.

Now there are cracks on the road caused by his personal life. They are not cracks to men on the bus or gas station because they are not running for the Senate. The ideal scenario is not for party handlers to say this man or woman is our choice. It should be aspiring individuals.

The individual - Walker in this case - knows the road he has travelled, opinion he has expressed and amounts of money he used to take care of business. Everybody does it, but if individuals decided they wanted to be in Washington earlier in life, they would work on avoiding political potholes.

After the Walker affair, individuals with a clean slate are going to initiate deals, and not wait for kingmakers to pick them. I want to run for Senate or President and my chances of winning are greater because I’m as clean as falling snow, in all live coal issues.

By: Nonqaba waka Msimang

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