'Troubled Man': Alice Cooper launches White House bid

With US presidential front-runners Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump suffering high disapproval rates, a new outside candidate sees an opening.

Stone Free Festival 2016 - Day 1

Alice Cooper performs on stage at The O2 Arena on June 18, 2016 in London, England. Source: Getty Images

The veteran shock rocker announced Monday that he is running for president with the slogan, "A Troubled Man for Troubled Times."

While the 68-year-old has enjoyed a fan base for decades, his platform, unveiled on a campaign website, revealed that he is not overly serious about his ambitions.

Cooper calls for late Motorhead frontman Lemmy's likeness to be added to Mount Rushmore, the massive mountain sculpture that honors four US presidents, and for comedian Groucho Marx to grace the $50 bill.

Leaving aside sovereignty concerns in Britain, which recently voted to leave the European Union, Cooper's platform also calls for Britain - where the rocker has long been popular - to put comic Peter Sellers on the 20-pound note.

Cooper's campaign so far consists of selling merchandise and reissuing his band's 1972 song "Elected." The song, a hit during Richard Nixon's successful re-election campaign, ends with a politician promising, "Everybody has problems / And personally, I don't care."

Even if Cooper's campaign is a longshot, another musician - rap superstar Kanye West - has vowed to run for president in 2020.

Trump, a real estate tycoon and former host of a reality television game show, himself shocked the political establishment by winning the Republican nomination.

Cooper - the voice behind youth anthems such as "I'm Eighteen," "School's Out" and "No More Mr. Nice Guy" -- has in the past described himself as apolitical.

He hinted at Republican sympathies in 2004 when he criticized musicians who campaigned for John Kerry against George W. Bush, arguing that rock and politics should not mix.

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2 min read
Published 23 August 2016 3:15pm
Updated 23 August 2016 3:24pm
Source: AFP


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