This election cycle there has been a
considerable amount of dissatisfaction with the choices for
president. I suppose this is nothing new; we've griped about our
choices before. Still, it would be nice to have an Ideal Candidate
someday. But what would such an Ideal look like? I think it would
have to be someone who represented our country and what is best about
us; someone who looks like America.
Maybe even like Captain America.
In the early 1980s there was a “Draft
Cap” movement chronicled in a story by Roger Stern and John Byrne
and appearing in CAPTAIN AMERICA #250. “Cap For President!”
begins with a group of terrorists seizing a political convention in
downtown New York City. Captain America is on the scene and swiftly
takes out the terrorists and frees the hostages.
The convention chairman, Samuel T.
Underwood, a jolly fellow with a used-car-salesman manner and a smile
almost as big as his cigar, enthusiastically thanks Cap and
introduces him to the rest of his staff. His organization is called
the New Popularist Party, a recent Third Party movement holding its
first national convention. As Cap politely schmoozes with his
admirers, one of the staff jokingly asks if he is considering running
for office. Underwood seizes on the idea: “Sure, that would work
! It would work like a charm – a fifty million vote charm!”
At first, Cap laughs the suggestion
off. After all, he's not a politician. “The people don't want a
politician … they want a leader!” Underwood insists. “The
people want a change, Cap … And you could be that change!”
Underwood's staff agrees. “Who could
refuse to vote for Captain America?” “People wouldn't have to
vote for the lesser of two evils – they'd actually have someone to
vote FOR !”
Cap makes polite noises and promises to
think about it; but he doesn't take the suggestion too seriously.
Underwood, however, is not going to let the matter drop; and as soon
as Cap has left the room he gets on the phone to leak a story to the
Press that Captain America is considering a run for President. If
Cap seems reluctant about running, then maybe Public Opinion will
make him change his mind.
Cap spends much of that afternoon in
his civilian identity as Steve Rogers, along with another friend
helping his girlfriend, Bernie, move. After a couple hours of moving
boxes and furniture, Steve and his pals are relaxing a bit and wind
up talking about local races in the upcoming election. The
conversation is fairly vague – I suspect the writer didn't really
want to specify who Steve Roger's congressman was, or even his
district – but before it gets terribly far, another friend breaks
in with the big news: one of the local tabloids has reported that
Captain America is running for President !
Steve is dismayed by this turn of
events, and even more so that his friends seem to think it's a great
idea. “You'd actually vote for a man who is basically anonymous …
who wears a mask?” Steve asks. “Hey, better than voting for some
crook who doesn't wear a mask!” Steve's girlfriend agrees:
“Wouldn't it be great to have a president you knew you could
trust?”
When Cap shows up at Avenger's Mansion
the next day, he finds a mob of reporters outside the gate. Once
inside, the Mansion's butler, Jarvis, hands him telegrams from both
the Democratic and the Republican Parties asking him to consider
running as their candidate. “Jarvis, has the whole world gone
crazy? What next?!”
He had to ask. His teammate, Hank
McCoy, the Beast, greets him with a song and dance. “I heard the
good news, and I'm ready to hit the campaign trail ! I can guarantee
that you’ll sweep the mutant vote! And then of course there are
my lady friends ! Their votes alone should carry New York !”
It seems that everyone has an opinion.
Iron Man asks if he's really serious about running. “You of all
people should know better than to get mixed up in politics! You
know the kind of red tape and corruption you'd be faced with!”
Wasp disagrees. “You're just the
kind of man this country needs! People look up to you … respect
you … trust you! When was the last time we had a president like
that?”
The Vision addresses the issue in a
coldly logical fashion. “The question is not one of respect, but
of qualifications! You are a man out of time, Cap … 1940s
solutions will not work for today's problems!”
As Cap ponders this conflicting advice,
we get a series of one-panel vignettes showing the opinions of people
on the street: the old guy who remembers Cap from the War Years; the
black professional who wonders where Cap stands on the issues of
minority rights, housing and education; the punk kid who thinks that
Captain America is a hoax invented by the C.I.A. We get reactions
from other super-heroes in the Greater New York Metro Area: Nick
Fury, who worked with Cap during the War; Daredevil, Spider-Man, even
Doctor Strange.
A full page is devoted to the offices
of the Daily Bugle, where publisher J. Jonah Jameson discusses Cap's
presidential run with his friend, City Editor “Robbie” Robeson.
“Cap's a good man...” Jonah muses, “But you remember what
happened when movie stars started running for office? It was like a
flood gate! It seemed like they were all running for something.
If Cap should run, Lord knows who else would! I can see it now …
Iron Man for Governor … Mr. Fantastic for Senator!”
“Or even Spider-Man for Mayor?”
Robbie teases.
That decides it. The Bugle will not be
endorsing Cap.
As evening falls, Cap goes out
patrolling the rooftops of the Lower East Side, trying to think
through his situation. He comes across an old abandoned school,
which has somehow avoided the wrecking ball, that he recognizes as
the school he went to as a boy, back during the Great Depression. As
he walks through the empty, dusty classroom, he recalls a teacher he
had, Mrs. Crosley, who had tried to instill a sense of civic
responsibility in her students.
“The United States offers its
citizens more rights than any other nation in the world!” he
remembers her saying. “But along with those rights come certain
duties as well! It's the duty of each one of you to see that this
land stays free … to see that Justice is extended to all!”
As he reminisces about Mrs. Crosley's
Civics class, his course of action becomes clear to him. He will
call Underwood. He has a speech to make.
A couple hours later, he is back at the
convention center, standing at a podium in front of a gigantic poster
of himself and addressing an enthusiastic crowd. He speaks of the
decision he has been asked to make and of what that decision means:
“The presidency is one of the most important jobs in the world. The holder of that job must represent the best interests of the entire nation. He must be ready to negotiate – to compromise – 24 hours a day, to preserve the Republic at all costs!”
Against that responsibility, he sets
his personal mission:
“I have worked and fought all my life for the growth and advancement of the American Dream. And I believe that my duty to the Dream would severely limit any abilities I might have to preserve the reality.”
I'm not sure if I buy Cap's rhetoric
here. I think he could make a much better argument for refusing the
call to run for office. But in the end, he decides that his mission
as Captain America was important, and that he could not remain
faithful to that mission and at the same time conscientiously fulfill
the duties of President. If Captain America is going to represent
America, he needs to remain above politics.
But although Cap pretty decisively
rejects the idea of running for office, other writers have played
with the idea. An issue of WHAT IF tells a story about what might
have happened if Cap had taken up the New Populist Party's offer. It
ends tragically, as the alternate histories in WHAT IF generally do.
In Ben Dunn's manga-style re-imagining of the Marvel Universe, MARVEL
MANGAVERSE, Steve Rogers is President and also leads the Avengers in
his secret identity as Captain America. And in the universe of the
MARVEL ULTIMATES titles, Captain America did run for President and
won. Which is unfortunate, because Ultimate Captain America is
something of a jerk.
But in this universe, Cap rejects the
call to throw his hood into the ring. The convention-goers are
disappointed and the final image of the comic is a discarded “Captain
America for President” sign lying on the floor, as Cap walks past.
The rest is history. The N.P.P.
Presumably went with John Anderson for their candidate. Ronald
Reagan won in a landslide, confirming Jonah Jameson's worries about
actors in politics.
More recently, Marvel had Steve Rogers
step down as Captain America as his advanced age began to catch up
with him. He passed on his mantle and his shield to his friend and
long-time partner, Sam Wilson, the Falcon. And in the first issue of
the new Captain America, Sam challenged Steve's stance on staying
above politics:
In all these struggles, all these debates, and all these things tearing us apart -- I have a side. That's right. I have opinions. Strongly held beliefs, even. And here's the thing -- the more I saw the people I believed I was standing up for being walked on -- the more I heard a noise machine spouting intolerance and fear, drowning common sense out -- the more I wondered -- shouldn't Captain America be more than just a symbol?
Steve always tried to stay above the fray, and I respected him for it. He took a stand when he had to, but as far as politics went -- he played it close to the vest. But if I really believed I could make a difference -- if I really believed I could change some minds, do some good -- then wasn't I obligated to try?
Perhaps
if Marvel re-visited Cap for President today, he might make a
different decision. But the original Stern & Byrne tale from
1980 is still an interesting read and touches on questions of why
elections are important and what it means to run for public office
that we don't often see in comics.
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