MONTGOMERY, Ala. -- Former basketball star Charles Barkley says he's switched
political teams from Republican to Democrat and is again talking about running
for governor in his home state, possibly in 2010.
"I really believe I was put on Earth to do more than play basketball and
stockpile money," said Barkley, known as the Round Mound of Rebound. "I really
want to help people improve their lives, and what's left is for me to decide how
best to do that."
Barkley, a Leeds native who has been an NBA analyst with cable network TNT
since his 2000 retirement, has been talking about running for governor of
Alabama since he was playing with the Phoenix Suns in the 1990s. In 1995, he
said he was considering running in 1998 as a Republican, but that never
materialized.
Barkley continued to identify himself as a Republican until recently, when he
switched parties. "I was a Republican until they lost their minds," he said
earlier this month.
Barkley said his immediate goal is to get his 17-year-old daughter through
high school and into college. Then he plans to decide on his future, including
whether to run for governor.
"I say welcome Charles Barkley. Charles Barkley has been a Horatio Alger
story for many people, not only in sports but in business and broadcasting," Joe
Turnham, Alabama's Democratic Party chairman, said Wednesday.
But Jim Seroka, a political science professor at Auburn University, said the
former Auburn basketball star is getting ahead of himself. "He doesn't have any
of the bases necessary to run a statewide campaign," Seroka said.
The head of the state GOP said she has no idea whether Barkley is serious
when talking about a future race for governor as a Democrat. "To be governor
requires more than a publicity stunt. It requires real leadership," said Twinkle
Andress Cavanaugh.
Barkley is eyeing a job that has had more than its share of scandal, with
criminal convictions against two of the last four people elected to the office.
Former Gov. Don Siegelman was convicted of government corruption charges last
month, and Guy Hunt was forced to step down as governor in 1993 when he was
convicted of an ethics violation.