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Shatner may eye Canada prime minister role

WINNIPEG, Manitoba, Feb. 26 (UPI) -- Actor William Shatner, possibly following the footsteps of Arnold Schwarzenegger and Ronald Reagan, said he might consider running for Canadian prime minister.

The 77-year-old Emmy Award-winner, best known as Capt. James T. Kirk on "Star Trek," made a comment in response to a fan letter urging him to become Canada's governor general, representing Queen Elizabeth II, who is officially the head of state.

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"I must, with deepest thanks, turn down your honorable intent to advance me as Governor General," Shatner, a native of Montreal, wrote. "Besides which, I don't have time to be Governor General," he wrote. "My intention is to be Prime Minister of Canada, not Governor General, which is mainly a ceremonial position."

The current governor general, Michaelle Jean, greeted U.S. President Barack Obama at the airport when he visited Prime Minister Stephen Harper in Ottawa last Thursday.

"As Prime Minister I can lead Canada into even greater exploits," online Dose magazine quoted Shatner's letter as saying.

Neither Shatner nor Harper had any immediate comment on the report.

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The actor won his first Emmy Award for his role as Denny Crane on "The Practice" in 2004. He won a second Emmy in 2005 and Golden Globe Awards in 2006 and 2007 for his Crane role in "The Practice" spinoff "Boston Legal."

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