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marc
01-04-2008, 07:47 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080104/wr_nm/britain_topgear_clarkson_life_tech_dc;_ylt=At_AitG pr3CtBHn9GYhUT2SL_bIF


http://d.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/rids/20080104/i/r3785221725.jpg?x=180&y=249&q=85&sig=Zkd2EXo3Ge1zXX2PsSlUvA--
LONDON, Jan 4 (Reuters) - He's the host of one the world's most popular television programs and now many people in Britain apparently want him to be prime minister as well.

Jeremy Clarkson, the gruff and opinionated presenter of Top Gear, a program about cars watched by 350 million people from Finland to Australia, is the subject of an online campaign being waged in the very heart of British government.

A petition, posted on the official Web site of Prime Minister Gordon Brown (www.pm.gov.uk), calls for Brown to step down and make Clarkson, 47, prime minister instead.

As of Friday, 30,311 people had signed the petition, making it the sixth most popular posted on the site, which since November 2006 has allowed any citizen to make a proposal and try to garner popular support via online signatures.

The campaign for Clarkson, submitted by someone called Joseph Dark, now outranks arguably more pressing issues such as "Reduce the rate of fuel duty" and "Reverse the decision to cut vital UK contributions to Particle Physics and Astronomy," which have 11,700 and 10,050 signatures respectively.

"We the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to make Jeremy Clarkson Prime Minister" reads Dark's submission, which has nearly four months to run before it closes on April 17.

Clarkson, who has become popular in Britain for his forthright opinions on everything from immigration to fashion, as well as his stock-in-trade views on fancy cars, has not commented on the online campaign, but Downing Street is apparently taking it seriously.

In the section on petitions, the prime minister's Web site explains that humorous, joke or offensive petitions will no longer be accepted and will be removed.

"Initially we accepted humorous petitions on the grounds that they did no harm and were often funny," the site says.

"However... We have decided no longer to accept petitions that are obviously intended as jokes."

Since the Clarkson petition remains, the inference is that it is regarded as serious.

Parts of the British media have rallied behind the campaign, with the conservative Daily Mail newspaper running a full page of suggested policies Clarkson should adopt if he were to suddenly find himself running the country.

The paper also revealed on Friday that Dark is a 20-year-old fan of Top Gear who has never managed to secure tickets to be in the audience for the program, one of the most popular in Britain over the past six years.

Dark was not reachable for comment.

The prime minister's Web site has attracted more than 29,000 petitions since the feature was launched, attracting nearly 6 million signatures.

The top petition at the moment, with 244,000 signatures, is "Allow the Red Arrows to fly at the 2012 Olympics" which was launched following rumors that the government might ban the aerial display team from flying.

The government has already replied to the petition saying no such proposal was ever in place but that with five years to go before the Games, no formal decision has yet been made.

http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/01/clarkson.jpg

Burrcold
01-04-2008, 07:50 AM
I remeber Clarkson saying (on a Top Gear episode), that he would never run, and that he knows nothing about politics - this in regards to this online petition.

neological
01-04-2008, 08:03 AM
I like Clarkson and all but he's kind of an insufferable racist at times. He has the typical Brit attitude of having absolutely no respect for anything outside of Western Europe.

Gas-n-Grease
01-04-2008, 08:46 AM
I like Clarkson and all but he's kind of an insufferable racist at times. He has the typical Brit attitude of having absolutely no respect for anything outside of Western Europe.
yep. I like the guy...... but at the same time I dislike him.

jlitman
01-04-2008, 11:13 AM
All I know about him is that he's witty and likes cars. Surely those two qualities make him well suited to be a PM :rolleyes:

neological
01-04-2008, 11:31 AM
The "Top Gear goes to Africa" episode had about 2-3 jokes in it that would NEVER play anywhere outside of Britain where comfortable sense of racism against foreigners (especially Eastern Europeans) has been a part of their society since the precolonial days.

The "African Stig" made me and my girlfriend turn to each other and say "what the fvck." I really thought we were done with the days of modern Africans being depicted as half naked spearchuckers but apparently in Britain this is still cutting edge humor.

GTsRasta
01-04-2008, 12:13 PM
Egh, he'd get shyt done. I'd vote for him.

The "Top Gear goes to Africa" episode had about 2-3 jokes in it that would NEVER play anywhere outside of Britain where comfortable sense of racism against foreigners (especially Eastern Europeans) has been a part of their society since the precolonial days.

The "African Stig" made me and my girlfriend turn to each other and say "what the fvck." I really thought we were done with the days of modern Africans being depicted as half naked spearchuckers but apparently in Britain this is still cutting edge humor.

And the fat American stig wasn't supposed to be funny either? I laughed my ass off at that, since it followed the American stig theme. Would you have rather the African stig be in rags, and have a AK flung around his back?

neological
01-04-2008, 12:22 PM
The British one isn't wearing a Kappa race suit and a Burberry tartan helmet.