Voters always say they’d rather support “real people” than “professional politicians.” But Al Franken is having trouble in Minnesota precisely because he hasn’t spent his life reading a political script, Michael Kinsley writes in the Washington Post. Instead, he told jokes for a living—jokes his opponents are now trying to transform into political gaffes, and it seems to be working.
Jokes almost always offend someone, making them far too dangerous for typical politicians. Politicians, that is, like Norm Coleman, Franken’s incumbent opponent. Coleman “is a man of no interest,” writes Kinsley, “a standard-issue pro-war tax-cut Republican.” If voters choose him because they can’t laugh off a couple jokes, then they had better stop complaining about professional pols, which is what they deserve. (More Al Franken stories.)