• Angelina Jolie hinted that she might run for president.
  • The actress told the BBC that she would have laughed at the idea 20 years ago but that she would now go where she is “needed.”
  • She said “thank you” when a BBC host said he would put her on the list of potential 2020 candidates.
  • But Jolie said she would stay quiet “for now” because she can get a lot done through her role as a United Nations ambassador.

Angelina Jolie dropped a big hint that she might move into politics and run for president.

Speaking on Friday on BBC Radio 4’s “Today” program, which she guest-edited, Jolie said she would have previously dismissed the idea but that she would now go where she is “needed.”

When the program’s host, Justin Webb, said he had put her on a list of Democrats who might run in 2020, Jolie laughed and said, “Thank you.”

Jolie, who serves as a special envoy for the United Nations’ refugee envoy and campaigns against sexual violence, said she would stay quiet “for now” because she feels she can “get a lot done without a title.”

She said her work had given her some relevant experience.

"I'm also able to work with governments, and I'm also able to work with militaries, and so I sit in a very interesting place of being able to get a lot done without a title and without it being about myself or my policies," she said.

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But she also said her attitude had changed over time.

"I don't know if I am a fit for politics, but then I have also joked that I don't know if I have got a skeleton left in my closet - I am pretty open and out there. I can take a lot on the chin," she said. "I honestly will do whatever I think can really make change."

Jolie will be an executive producer of a new BBC-run global English-language current-affairs program for children set to premiere in 2019.

Jolie said it was important that the project was "global" and "will help young people in different countries to be connected to each other and to have greater awareness and understanding of the news on an international basis."