Jeff Foxworthy endorses Romney in Mississippi
Posted on Mon, Mar. 12, 2012 07:22 PM
Comedian Jeff Foxworthy endorses Romney in Mississippi
By MICHAEL NEWSOM
McClatchy Newspapers
BILOXI, Miss -- BILOXI, Miss. - Comedian Jeff Foxworthy made an appearance Monday, but he didn't tell many jokes. Instead he professed worries about the direction of the country and said he's endorsed Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney.
Foxworthy made an appearance at Shaggy's restaurant Monday morning on behalf of Romney, who didn't attend. Romney, a former governor of Massachusetts, has been painted as out of touch with Southern voters. The campaign is hoping Foxworthy, who got much mileage on "you might be a redneck" jokes, will help his efforts in Mississippi and Alabama, which have primaries Tuesday.
According to the introduction Foxworthy received Monday, the Georgia native has sold more comedy albums than anyone in history. But the Grammy award- winning comedian stuck to serious topics, such as fears over the economy, the debt and the size of the federal government. He faulted President Barack Obama for not fixing those problems and said he believes Romney has the solutions.
"I avoided politics for 53 years of my life," Foxworthy said. "I have been doing stand-up comedy for almost 30 and never wanted to be political. Selfishly, I wanted to make everyone laugh. But it got to the point that this is too important."
Foxworthy said he hasn't gotten too much grief back home for picking Romney over former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, who represented Georgia in Congress.
"In Georgia, I have got a 25-year history with him," Foxworthy told McClatchy Newspapers. "I have seen him put his foot in his mouth, do or say something stupid too many times. So it's one of those cases of you reap what you sow. I'm not confident putting my eggs in that basket. If he does something like that in September, then we are shot, and we're stuck with four more years of this. We can't do four more years of this. The country will be bankrupt."
There was some comedy though. Foxworthy, who made a stop in Mobile, Ala., with Romney before heading to Biloxi, told the crowd he had spotted material for a new joke in a Waffle House parking lot earlier Monday.
"In the car next to us, there's three Great Danes in the back of a Toyota Corolla," Foxworthy said. "I said, 'Y'all, somebody must have said, "I'm going down to the Waffle House today; let me get all the dogs and put them in the back of the car." ' You never run out of redneck jokes down here."
Comedian Jeff Foxworthy endorses Romney in Mississippi - KansasCity.com
Very disappointed in Jeff for selling out
I agree with him on a couple points like Gingrich, I am in Atlanta and can't stand the guy. The problem is saying he wants to fix things for our kids - that is great but Romney certainly isn't the way. If Romney wins we might as well keep Obama because it will be about the same. Santorum is just as bad if not worse and will have a bigger government, war with every opportunity, and push his beliefs into law - so much for separation of church and state.
The problem is we haven't had someone in the white house acting for the people rather than the banks, military, and the establishment as a whole. The two parties have basically become one with just one exception. Ron Paul is the only one with a different message to fix the problems of government. All of the others have repeated some of his ideas but they won't follow through once elected. He is the only one that has proven over the last 30 years that he will stay true to his word and be immune to corruption. The parties and media fear this most - someone that will tell the truth and not allow the corruption.
Romney desperately needs help in the south, he cannot relate with the people. Nobody buys his pandering and comments about the south, he probably had still never had grits. This has all appearances of a paid endorsement by Romney, SuperPACs, or someone else. If that is the case Jeff needs to come clean on that or lose lots of fans, I would hate to think that he would peddle influence to his fans for a buck. Romney has plenty of money and this would be an easy investment for him to make - more media and celebrity exposure for less money than a TV buy.