MORGAN Freeman has become the latest Hollywood celebrity to donate to help
re-elect Barack Obama, giving $US1 million ($A968,000) to a campaign group
backing the US president, his spokesman says.
The Oscar-winning actor gave the money to Priorities USA Action, a so-called
super-PAC independent of the official campaign, and praised Obama for his
achievements in office since winning the White House race four years ago.
"President Obama has done a remarkable job in historically difficult
circumstances," Freeman said, according to his spokesman Stan Rosenfeld.
"He ended combat operations in Iraq, put in place sensible reforms of Wall
Street, saved the auto industry and protected the health care of every
American," he continued.
"He has led our nation to be more tolerant and placed impressive,
accomplished women on the Supreme Court," added Freeman, who won an Oscar for
best supporting actor in 2005 for his role in Million Dollar Baby.
Bill Burton, the head of Priorities USA Action and former Obama White House
deputy press secretary, thanked Freeman for his "generosity" in a tweet linking
to stories about the donation.
Other donors to Priorities US Action have included Dreamworks Animation boss
Jeffrey Katzenberg, who gave $US2 million last year, and director Steven
Spielberg who donated $US100,000, according to the opensecrets.org website.
US comedian Bill Maher announced in February that he had donated $US1 million
to the Obama-backing super-PAC.
Freeman sparked lively debate, and drew criticism, when he said in a recent
radio interview that Obama is not the United States' first black president.
"America's first black president hasn't arisen yet. He's not America's first
black president. He's America's first mixed-race president," he told National
Public Radio. Obama's father was Kenyan and his mother white American.
Morgan is famous for movies including 1989's Driving Miss Daisy, 2009's
Invictus - in which he played Nelson Mandela - and the recent Dark Knight
movies.
The African American actor also played a fictional US president in 1998
disaster movie Deep Impact, about a leader scrambling to prevent a comet from
slamming into the Earth. |
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