If I were a betting man, I'd wager that Oprah Winfrey will run for political office at some point. And if I lost that bet, I'd most definitely put a dollar straight on the possibility that she is — at the very least — figuring out how to be the progressive black female version of the Koch Brothers.
Recent movements suggest it's not a matter of if but when.
A bored, bigoted rich white guy with a bad comb-over and a leaned-in eBay CEO shouldn't be the only nontraditional politicos who can catch that fire in the belly. Why not a sister with more than enough millions to dump into a race and the global brand recognition to capture the imaginations of eager voters?
We can rightly assume that Winfrey's latest media-empire transitions are simply part of her continuing evolution as a successful businesswoman who is keeping her brand alive. With her having gone from syndicated talk show host to cable network owner, there's not much doubt that she's looking to carve out a permanent branding space. Every opportunity leads back to Oprah-centric success and feeds into her estimated $3 billion-plus value.
And even though her brand has taken enormous hits since the 2011 cancellation of her trendsetting eponymous show (such as the steep 22 percent drop in readership of O, The Oprah Magazine), it's not as if they were fatal blows. She's still sticking around. We'd be surprised to wake up tomorrow and read a headline that Winfrey had gone belly-up.
But what's intriguing about Winfrey's trajectory is her shrewd entry into the political marketplace, even if it risks taking bites out of her business model. She could easily have played it safe in 2008 and not endorsed then-candidate Barack Obama in the Democratic presidential primary, avoiding the permanent ire of her loyal white female fan base who either backed Hillary Clinton or skewed right in favor of McCain-Palin in the general election. Instead, she unapologetically put all her chips on the table and has found herself in recovery mode ever since.
Still, Northwestern University's Craig Garthwaite and the University of Maryland's Timothy Moore concluded that in doing so, Winfrey delivered more than a million votes for Obama. Winfrey commands the kind of political draw that could prove useful in, say, a statewide U.S. Senate bid. Illinois, where her entertainment career blossomed, would be a good place to start.
Her latest moves are by no measure reckless. They are calculated maneuvers that push the boundaries of her brand and experiment with embedded public-policy platforms: Profits from her Teavana-Starbucks partnership will support youth education; she's also endorsed controversial charter school initiatives, dipping into fairly choppy and controversial waters, and she's kept the South African girls' leadership academy alive, despite road bumps and criticism. Notwithstanding that themes in personal enrichment and women's empowerment frequently populate OWN narratives, Winfrey is eager to make targeted policy points.