Friday, November 07, 2008

Sarah Palin: going, going, gone... by gimleteye

The longer America listened to Sarah Palin, the less she liked her a heart beat from the presidency. The antipathy wasn't just a matter of expensive clothing from Nordstroms or Saks. Ted Stevens, Don Young, Sarah Palin; a majority may not clearly grasp it, but American voters will continue to push back against Alaskan conservatives, when they reach for the presidency.

The allure of the Alaskan conservative to the Republican Party has to do with a fondness for wilderness that leaves democracy pure and undisturbed by government. It is a kind of romanticism, that government need not serve the clamoring masses, or, regulation.

No Republican can hear a tree fall in the forest in Alaska, whether it is brought down by a pine bark beetle, a private chainsaw on public land, or nature. It is a place where dissent can echo for miles; unaddressed by government and unhindered by the sibilant rush of oil hurrying through pipes to tankers idling off coast of Valdez. You see: two things are going on in Alaska-- the kind of freedom that the Lower 48 ran out of as population ran in, and, lots of oil.

In both cases, once they've arrived in Congress, Alaskan conservatives are the proud expression of what drives the Republican agenda: remember, Don Young and George W. Bush dropped the "environment" from the House Natural Resources Committee. And if you dared visit Congressman Young's office, you were greeted by an implacable though fully dead, fully stretched, snarling grizzly towering over any liberal ideas you might harbor. Romantic? You betcha.

Palin proved a quick study under a very harsh spotlight. But poorly qualified, attractive people elected on the basis of likability have gotten the US into enough trouble; can't we have leaders of keen intelligence and sound learning? (Yes we can.) Then there is Palin's naked ambition that John McCain reasonably tolerated until the end. That end was when Mark Salter told her at the stage steps to the concession speech, "No, Sarah, you can't deliver a few words to the nation."

We are all familiar with outsized ego from political candidates; they see see the blue tape marking their place on the stage and ignore it. But Palin was different: a pitbull in stilettos filtered through the cut of news anchor experience married to the cultural wars filtered through Beltway speechwriters. The bottom line: if Sarah Palin is Bill Kristol's Eliza Doolittle, let him keep her to himself.

Palin was a dewey-eyed woman and mother with a hint of "Drill, baby, drill" and "USA! USA!". The sexual and the jingoistic; whatever could frame her best. I'm of the view that John McCain, in his heart, didn't believe any of it. Still, it was the only blood that pulsed in his party and he allowed its toxic nature to sweep his campaign away. Though I didn't support McCain, it seemed that on some level Palin supported him even less.

On the farewell stage in Pheonix, John McCain was honest, gracious and statesman-like. Sarah Palin was just Sarah. John McCain made a mistake selecting her to be his running mate; but it was not his year or any Republican's to be president. For that, the party can thank Karl Rove.

As Congress and a new president navigate an extraordinarily difficult passage, we should not forget what calculations pushed Sarah Palin forward; she is not our captain or our fair lady. We do best to remember that, the next time one is teed up for the highest office in the land.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

I think Palin kept thinking Republicans from the polls. Voter turnout was not as high as expected and that is the only conclusion I can come to. McCain didn't scare them as much as the thought of her running the country.

Anonymous said...

Gimleteye writes: yes, it was clear from the polling numbers that the first euphoria about Palin wore off quickly. The few notes she could play to the adoring crowds did scare off lots of voters. McCain's speechwriters-- from the Rove camp-- clearly misread the impact of her words on the mood of the nation.

Anonymous said...

I think the radio prank said it all... (other than Bitsy or which ever staffer who took the call should have been locked in a closet)... Sarah was ditsy ... no red phone for her, ever-ever, please.

Anonymous said...

I will never understand McCain's choice - the conservative base would have voted for him just cuz he wasn't Obama - instead he alienated everyone in the middle of the road. I have hope for the republican party (even though I am not one) that they can return to policy issues instead of morality ones. Anyone remember when they were the fiscally responsible ones?

Anonymous said...

Yes, i remember. The morality has killed the party. I call it the "born again" party now instead of the "fiscally responsiblle party."

Anonymous said...

It made no sense to me. I just did not understand. Why would you meet a person one time, and then hand them the most powerful position in the world and the lives of millions of people?

Today's revelation that she thought Canada and Mexico was a part of the country, and that she did not know that Africa was a continent, not a country, is really depressing. Just think she could now be our Vice-President- Elect!

Anonymous said...

Very scary that it got that close. Now you see the news segments and she looks all bent out of shape like she was misunderstood. No I think we understood her very well and we're damn glad she's back in Alaska.