Why a suburban Midwest dad started a Draft Oprah 2020 PAC

A Midwestern suburban dad says it's the 'right time' for President Winfrey.

— -- In October 2017, A.J. Stevens, a 47 year old father from Baldwin City, Kansas, had an idea he wanted to run by his wife, Carrie.

“You’re going to tell me I’m crazy. I’m thinking about starting a PAC for Oprah,” Stevens said he told his wife as they sat on the couch in their living room.

“I thought she was going to say I’m crazy,” Stevens told ABC News. “But she was like, ‘do it,’”

“She’s just the right person at the right time,” Stevens told ABC News. “I was never a big fan of her but what she does is refreshing and it’s needed.”

Stevens recognizes that he’s not who you’d expect to run a Draft Oprah 2020 PAC.

He is not an Oprah superfan, and he never watched her eponymous show. A registered Republican who grew up in rural Indiana, Stevens coached lacrosse at at Dartmouth College and is now the current executive director for the Midland Railway Historical Association. He serves on his local Baldwin City Council and says he’s only been involved with politics at the grassroots level. He and his wife, an attorney who works in higher ed, have a 9-year-old son.

“I’ve talked to a few friends about it and they thought it was really silly,” Stevens said. But he thinks it’s the right time for Winfrey in the White House.

“I’m not looking at her TV personality,” he said. “She just brings sensibility and some common sense in terms of how things are done. I feel like there needs to be balance in life and I think she brings that.”

“Just look at her story — growing up and getting her first job in news, and she’s just been through some trials and tribulations and ended up coming out on the other side,” Stevens said. “That’s the American dream.”