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Val Kilmer, aka Batman, the next governor of New Mexico?

Guy Adams
Wednesday 17 September 2008 14:06 EDT
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Ronald Reagan made it all the way to White House, Clint Eastwood managed a term as Mayor of Carmel-by-Sea, and Arnold Schwarzenegger is still, just about, Governor of California. Now Val Kilmer could be the next "big-name" to jollify the colourful world of celebrity politics.

The occasionally-outspoken actor has sent a shockwave through the sleepy political establishment of his native New Mexico amid reports that he's considering a run for the Governor's job when the position becomes vacant in 2010.

Speculation about the bid was fuelled by Bill Richardson, the state's current governor, who told TV reporters last week that he thought Governor Val Kilmer would be "a fine idea."

"I like the idea," he told a press conference. "Val Kilmer is a first rate New Mexican. He was Batman. You know there have been successful actors going into politics. I haven't talked to him about it, I don't know how serious he is, but you know if he jumps in a race he's got name ID, so it can't be discounted."

In the five days since those comments were made, Kilmer's spokesman, David Unger, has declined repeated requests to confirm or deny his client's political ambitions, only adding to the air of fevered excitement in the State's legislative capital, Santa Fe.

Reporters this week also unearthed comments that the 48-year-old actor made in January, when he appeared to float the idea of a political career during an interview with a red-carpet journalist in Los Angeles.

"I did get some lobbyists once saying that I'd make a good governor," Kilmer said. "Reagan wasn't much of an actor and look how that worked out for him. And then there's Arnold... I think you should be able to pronounce the name of the state."

They note that Richardson, a prominent Democrat, who until recently was a leading contender for his party's Vice Presidential ticket, is known to be friendly with Kilmer, and say that he's unlikely to have spoken without at least some inside knowledge.

The 48-year-old actor, who apart from Batman is best known for his roles in Top Gun, The Doors and True Romance, certainly boasts a decent enough pedigree for the job. He has lived on in the mostly-rural desert state since the early 1980s, and currently owns a 6,000-acre ranch situated near Rowe, about 20 miles south east of the capital, Santa Fe, where he spends his free time raising a herd of bison.

Quite what political ticket Kilmer might stand on is anyone's guess, though. At present, he's neither a member, nor a registered voter for either political party, and state records reveal that Kilmer has never taken part in an election there, despite having registered to vote in 1992.

Kilmer's role in local politics has so far been limited to a close involvement in the Wildlife Centre of New Mexico. Although he recently cancelled an appearance at the Democratic Convention in Denver, that shouldn't be taken as a party endorsement: he was due to be speaking alongside the independent presidential candidate, Ralph Nader.

Experts believe that Kilmer's left-leaning sympathies, together with his occasionally maverick streak, indicate that he'd stand for office as an independent. However no independent has ever won the Governorship of New Mexico.

In addition, a controversy from the actor's past may return to haunt him during an election campaign. In 2003, Rolling Stone magazine quoted him saying he "lived in the homicidal capital of the southwest," and that "80 percent of people in my county [San Miguel] are drunk."

Although Kilmer claimed his words had been taken "out of context," he was later forced to apologise at a public dinner at the Governor's Residence in Santa Fe.

Any future bid would also set Kilmer against the political establishment. Richardson's current deputy, Diane Denish, has until now been heavily fancied to succeed him to the role when his term runs out in 2010. This week, she seemed rattled by queries about whether Richardson was now endorsing Kilmer.

"There's a lot of speculation about 2010. But what I'm doing, and what I think everyone should be doing, is working on 2008," Denish told reporters." I'm not going to speculate on what the governor thinks."

If Kilmer is to seek office, he'll soon also have to start raising funds – a task that could prove problematic. Given Arnold Schwarzenegger's troubled reign in the nearby state of California, New Mexico's political bankrollers could be wary of another celebrity governor.

Despite being comfortably off, Kilmer is unlikely to boast the sort of wealth necessary to finance the entire bid from his own pocket. By his previously high standards, his acting career has been in the doldrums of late, and his most notable recent role was as the voice of KITT, the car in the new Knight Rider series.

Whatever happens, however, America's headline writers will be hoping a bid does materialses: it would afford them the opportunity to tip their hat to the role that made him famous in Top Gun, and announce that "the Iceman cometh."

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