Connect with us

Politics

Ben Carson announces bid for U.S. Presidency

Monday, May 4, 2015

Ben Carson - Former Director of Pediatric Neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, delivers remarks to the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in National Harbor, Maryland, March 16, 2013. PHOTO/Jonathan Ernst/Reuters

Retired surgeon Ben Carson declared his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination Monday, resting his longshot bid on his vision of the nation as “a place of dreams” where people can thrive when freed from an overbearing government.

Carson, the only African American in the race, spoke in front of hundreds of people at Detroit Music Hall, a few miles from a high school that bears his name.

He told supporters that he’s not anti-government but believes Washington has exceeded its constitutional powers.

“It’s time for people to rise up and take the government back,” he said. “The political class won’t like me saying things like that. The political class comes from both parties.”

The former head of pediatric neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins hospital has never run for public office. But he Is a star among some conservatives and will try to parlay his success as an author and speaker into a competitive campaign.

He told his rally: “I am Ben Carson and I am a candidate for president.”

Carson was the second White House hopeful to get into the Republican race Monday. Former technology executive Carly Fiorina declared her intent to run earlier in the day.

Carson earned national acclaim during his 29 years leading the pediatric neurosurgery unit of Johns Hopkins Children’s Center in Baltimore, where he still lives. He directed the first surgery to separate twins connected at the back of the head. His career was notable enough to inspire the 2009 movie, “Gifted Hands,” with actor Cuba Gooding Jr. depicting Carson.

“I see myself as a member of ‘we the people,'” he told The Associated Press in an interview earlier this year, arguing that his lack of experience is an asset.

The 63-year-old Detroit native remains largely unknown outside of conservative activists who have embraced him since his address at the 2013 National Prayer Breakfast, where he offered a withering critique of the modern welfare state and the nation’s overall direction.

Pages: 1 2

Continue Reading
Comments

© Copyright 2026 - The Habari Network Inc.