On Tour in ‘12: Sarah and the Moderates
Thanks to Morgen for his sharp response and very kind words towards myself and my fellow co-blogging members of the League of Gentlemen (though I assure you we are quite ordinary).
I agree with Morgen’s argument that Sarah Palin can not run a national campaign from Alaska so it makes sense for a number of reasons for her to roll the dice and attempt to claim territory in the now wide open leadership void within the GOP. I also agree with his analysis of campaigns (particularly post-Obama but preceding him) as built around celebrity-hood and personality issues. In comparison to a Mitt Romney or Tim Pawlenty, Sarah Palin, whatever else is to be said about her, has wattage. It can be argued that the media loves to hate her, but that attitude still involves love. By media standards a Romney or Pawlenty is a nothing-burger (again fair or unfair, that’s the harsh truth of the media-age politics).
I don’t think however that she has a strong chance of moving that personality politics movement into an elected position going forward. So perhaps we arguing over our sense of the meaning of success/failure. If she continues on, let’s imagine gets the GOP nomination (which I still think is a fairly outside shot), then loses (maybe big-time) to Obama, did she fail? Did she succeed? Did she ever really have a chance?
Whatever the answers to those question, she needs to find some concrete outlet or the same media technologies and fascination that has fueled interest in her will quickly dissipate (out beyond her core following). I doubt she will want to go for a Alaskan Congressional seat. She could perhaps find some place on a board at a political advocacy group like American Enterprise or something. Morgen mentions new media technologies as a possible outlet and that certainly is a possibility (maybe a talk radio show, webepisodes of political commentary, and the like, I don’t know).
Morgen is right that I did think (and continue to think) that Sarah Palin was unqualified for a job of Vice President and therefore of President. But I don’t agree with his characterization of my position as expressing the most “stridently liberal interpretation of these types of issues”. On the specific Letterman point, Letterman made an awful completely out of line joke–which he himself admitted and apologized for, genuinely apologized for I believe and offered a hand for reconciliation and she came back continuing to (as I said) pick the fight. She could have accepted his apology and appeared magnanimous. Instead to me it showed a kind of subordination of everything to her belief in being persecuted by the media. It became a kind of self-fulfilling prophecy and that has only left her open to more criticism which again I think hurts.
As she (in)famously said you can’t blink. You can’t back down. That attitude that earned her the nickname Barrucuda endears her to some, but turns her off to others she desperately needs if she ever wants to fulfill the higher ambitions for which I think she feels herself destined. One thing to be a fighter; another to be unwilling to admit you have ever goofed. I’m not sure it’s a guaranteed dealbreaker (few things in politics are), but on balance I believe they hurt.
For some perspective, I actually thought some of the coverage of her during the campaign (and since) has been very unfair. I don’t think she is in anyway some special breed of specifically horrible politician. I think of her as pretty much a normal politician in our contemporary US age: probably a little thin-skinned, highly ambitious, not entirely clear on their governing philosophies or how to concretely effect change, and generally more interested in winning than in governing. That might be considered a cynical view, but it’s not singling her out for special approbation. I’ve never understood this kind of special animus towards her. Her persona is certainly unique in it’s way, but it doesn’t strike me as fundamentally different from the rest. In fact, I think she’s pretty normal…for a US politician. That’s hardly the most stridently liberal position on Sarah Palin.
And to be even fairer to Sarah Palin, the fact that I thought her at the time unqualified for the job of Vice President was really a criticism of John McCain not Sarah Palin. He picked her without it seems to me adequately having assessed her past, her person, her capacity for the job, etc. That reflected poorly on McCain and his campaign.
Now that Sarah Palin is wanting to move out into her own, however, that political albatross is around her neck. Protestations of unfair treatment from the media are not going to endear her long term to the kinds of people she needs to move to her side. That kind of rhetoric I believe only appeals to those already within that politico-linguistic worldspace. In what I will call a reverse Nixon, she’s not going have the media to kick around forever–at least in a way that will win her expanding support.
To be clear, it isn’t only the drama/potential scandal elements that float around Palin alone that hurt her image with the broader public in my mind but events like the Katie Couric interview, the “I can see Russia from my house” comment, as well as the cultural warrior stance that is the real problem for her. Morgen I don’t think adequately responded to those criticisms, instead focusing alone on the scandal tabloidish/liberal media bias angle, usually a deflecting defensive ploy by Palin herself and her supporters.
When even Bill Kristol says that she needs to work hard studying for issues in order to win over skeptics, then you know she needs some work. When Peggy Noonan writes this, you got problems. Like Lucy, Sarah’s got some ’splaining (not blaming) to do.
–
Afterthought:
Re: the poll Morgen cited concerning the Upper Midwest, those numbers could support an alternate theory as well.
While it’s true conservative identification has risen slightly in those states, the analysis of that poll reads:
A plurality of residents in each of the three Upper Midwestern states view themselves as politically moderate – averaging 45.3 percent in Minnesota, 42.4 percent in Iowa, and 41.1 percent in Wisconsin during this five-year span.
My central point is that Palin has a very negative image with moderates. We already know she has stratospheric uber-negatives among liberals. I think this negative press hurts because it can give credence to the prime vulnerability to Palin (esp. among moderates/independents): her perceived lack of readiness. The only bad press that really hurts is the stuff that re-confirms the negative storyline.
That fact–not the negative press itself–is what is really hurting her with the party GOP establishment. For her to capitalize on her grassroots support will require donors, funding, and some support from the bigwigs in the party. If this GOP uptick Morgen points to is going to be leveraged by Palin she is going to have to have some party support. Acting in the manner she has been of late (again not even really the decision itself but the poorly, shoddily way it’s been handled) is really closing some doors she needs to stay open.
During campaigns one, sometimes two, issues/concerns/events come to override the rest and the election often becomes a ratification or nullification of various candidates’ responses to those events. In 2008 it was the economic crisis, which McCain handled very poorly and as a result lost.
Sarah Palin will need to work on a number of issues so that when something does break in a campaign, she will be able to respond. Otherwise those moderates will remember the VP candidate who turned them off in ‘08, assuming she even gets that far.



Home