Oct
12
2008
4

Trouble In Paradise

Early last week, I had a chat with a well-connected Democrat who said that the inside scoop on the McCain camp is that there is a growing disagreement between Palin and McCain on strategy, and that she’s begun to pull away and form her own alliances in hopes of a 2012 run.

This individual is trustworthy, and isn’t particularly given to hyperbole. The source of this person’s rumors included right-wing pundits who are fairly well known.

Yesterday, Hot Air reported (h/t to Joe Marier) a nearly identical rumor (coming from the Times of London) to the one I heard. While they claim it’s thinly sourced (one reason why I didn’t circulate my information widely) it corroborates so closely what I heard that I think it’s too much to chalk up to mere coincidence:

Quoth an unnamed Republican consultant: “Sarah Palin is no fool. She sees the same thing [i.e. a likely defeat] and wants to salvage what she can. She is positioning herself for the future. Her best days could be in front of her. She wants to look as though she was the fighter, the person with the spunk who was out there taking it to the Democrats.” Any reason to believe that she and McCain really are at loggerheads? Well, (a) as the Times reminds us, she’s publicly questioned the campaign’s strategy in pulling out of Michigan as well as McCain’s decision not to go after Obama on Wright, (b) while Maverick’s begun inching away from the brass knuckles approach, she’s still telling people how eager the base is to see them take the gloves off, and (c) she’s famous in Alaska for not deferring to her political patrons when she thinks there’s something to be gained from opposing them. She’s built her career on it. If she wants to go out there and take it to Obama, there’s not much McCain can do except scream at her on the phone and hope she listens.

If there’s truth to the story, well, we all know what happens to a house divided.  As Obama pulls ahead again in virtually every poll, it would seem to be a wise strategy on Palin’s part to distance herself from John “train wreck” McCain who just can’t keep a good thing going.

On that note, Palin deserves our gratitude for finally calling out Obama on abortion in a way I doubt John McCain ever would:

Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin attacked Barack Obama on abortion on Saturday, saying the Democratic presidential candidate has “left behind even the middle ground on the issue of life.”

Palin said she and Republican presidential candidate John McCain would be “defenders of the culture of life.” She opposes abortion in all cases except where the pregnancy threatens the woman’s life.

Alaska’s governor also touched upon common campaign themes during her speech to about 5,000 supporters in Johnstown, but she focused on children with special needs and then abortion. Palin, whose infant son, Trig, has Down syndrome, said she and McCain would make protecting such children a priority.

“Every child has something to contribute … if we give them that chance,” she said.

Palin said it was about time that Obama was “called” on his abortion views.

“Please, it is not negative and it’s not mean-spirited to talk about his record,” she said.

In the Illinois Senate, Obama opposed legislative efforts in 2001, 2002 and 2003 to give legal protections to any aborted fetus that showed signs of life. The 2003 measure was virtually identical to a bill President Bush signed into law in 2002 that unanimously passed the U.S. Senate.

Obama and others who opposed the Illinois bill said the state already had a law to protect aborted fetuses born alive and considered able to survive. They contended that the proposed legislation would have undermined abortion rights in ways that the federal law would not.

Palin called Obama’s ideas and votes on abortion “radical.”

“In short, Sen. Obama is a politician who has long since left behind even the middle ground on the issue of life. He’s fighting with those who won’t protect a child born alive,” she said.

I think this is a smart move on her part. The world knows who she is now, setting her up for a 2012 run. If she spends the next four years brushing up on national policy issues, she could be a formidabble contender on the next go-round. Obama is a socialist radical who will, if he wins (as looks likely) preside over potentially one of the most difficult times in modern American History. His policies may be his ruin - or at the very least, may strip away the veil of hope and change and charisma that whip his supporters into messianic frenzy. He will be vulnerable in 2012, and the conservative base will have far fewer qualms voting for a re-invigorated and re-educated Palin (myself included) than we would for John McCain - unless she foolishly adopts his most controversial policies instead of establishing her own.

Some have argued that a McCain loss is the best thing that could happen for Sarah Palin’s future. I think they’re probably right.

Written by Steve Skojec in: Palin-Mania, Politics |
Oct
06
2008
1

Incurious And Empowered

Michael Brendan Dougherty blogs about the questions that arise with a possible President Palin:

Conor Friedersdorf outlines a frightening post-election crisis that involves truck bombs, Putin, and a dead president. The he asks: would you feel confident with Sarah Palin at the helm?

Phil Klein, rightly responds that he would be pretty scared no matter who was president in such an emergency.

Too true. The problem with Palin is not how she would react during a serious crisis, it is how she would handle the day-to-day tasks of the presidency. What impression would she give Dimitry Medvedev during a routine state visit? Can she set reasonable priorities during negotiations? Would she begin praying in tongues over Pope Benedict while on a diplomatic mission? I just don’t know.

I do not welcome this election. I do not believe John McCain or Barack Obama are competent to meet each task that would come their way. But I sense they have some idea of their limits, some deference toward the status-quo on matters where their knowledge is deficient. I have no such confidence in Palin.

We’ve seen her bubbly and assertive personality in a convention speech and the opening moments of the debate. In other moments we’ve seen (at best) a crippling nervousness that causes her to fall awkwardly silent or (at worst) a shocking and scandalous ignorance. Without more experience in office, or some grounding in political philosophy, her self-conception as a “Maverick” is a menace. Anyone can make a hash out of an unprecedented crisis. But only someone as incurious and empowered as a Palin can make even the routine seem perilous.

Written by Steve Skojec in: Palin-Mania, Politics |
Oct
04
2008
7

Palin’s Credibility Problem

Sarah Palin has a credibility problem.

In her interviews, she tried to provide answers to questions when she clearly didn’t have them. What came out instead was an odd, twisted, mish-mash of words that more closely resembled the management wisdom of David Brent than that of a future Vice President.

Some have characterized this as dishonesty, and I tend to agree. It would be far better if she simply indicated that she had asked to be briefed on the details of an issue she did not yet fully understand than to pretend to give an answer that meant absolutely nothing. By choosing to simply reword the question in a meaningless train wreck of syntax, she not only demonstrated that she didn’t know, but proved she was desperate to hide her ignorance.

She seemed to begin working against this tendency in the debate - being honest about her inexperience and using it well to shield her from questions she couldn’t answer:

IFILL: So, Governor, as vice president, there’s nothing that you have promised as a candidate that you would — that you wouldn’t take off the table because of this financial crisis we’re in?

PALIN: There is not. And how long have I been at this, like five weeks? So there hasn’t been a whole lot that I’ve promised, except to do what is right for the American people, put government back on the side of the American people, stop the greed and corruption on Wall Street.

But in a post-debate interview with Fox, Palin was back to her old tricks. Rather than admitting her mistakes in the interview with Couric, she simply indicated that she was annoyed for not being asked the questions she thought were important to Americans (read: the questions she was prepped for):

Palin told Carl that she was “annoyed” at some of the interviews she has done, “Ok I’ll tell you honestly the Sarah Palin in those interviews is a little bit annoyed because it’s man no matter what you say you are going to get clobbered. If you choose to answer a question you are going to get clobbered on the answer,” Palin said. “If you choose to try and pivot and go on to another subject that you believe that Americans want to hear about you get clobbered for that too.”

She then aimed to defend herself for some of the criticism she got for the Couric interview. She was blasted for not answering Couric’s question on any of the periodicals she reads or even a Supreme Court decision that she disagreed with. She defended some of the circular answers she gave the CBS anchor saying that she did not get to cover some of the topics she saw as important, “But in those Katie Couric interviews I did feel that there were a lot of things that she was missing in terms of an opportunity to ask what a V.P. candidate stands for. What the values are represented in our ticket. I wanted to talk about Barack Obama increasing taxes, which would lead to killing jobs. I wanted to talk about his proposal to increase government spending by another trillion dollars.”

Let me show my own annoyance for a moment when I ask, “Governor Palin, How stupid do you think we are?” Anyone who has ever been put on the spot and didn’t want to look ignorant has probably rambled their way through an incoherent answer. Palin is unwilling (or not allowed) to be up front about this, and when she prefaces her response with, “Honestly…” it’s all the more insulting. It’s not honest. It’s the same squirrely nonsense my kids do when they think they can stay out of hot water by deceiving their parents about what really went down.

We’ve spent the past 8 years with a President who is pathologically incapable of admitting his mistakes. He grows indignant when he’s called on it, rather than saying, “You know, everyone makes mistakes. I tried to do my best here, but I fell short.” Accountability is something I really, really want from our leaders. If you screw up, take responsibility for it, apologize, and move on. Don’t try to spin it so it looks like it was all part of the plan.

Governor Palin either needs to be the honest, average American that people want her to be, or she needs to be kept away from the media. This ongoing insistence that it’s someone else’s fault that she can’t get her answers straight is insulting to those of us she’s meant to appeal to.

(Cross-posted @ Culture11)

Written by Steve Skojec in: Palin-Mania, Politics |
Oct
03
2008
2

Substantial Charm And Good Looks

Jeff Culbreath on the debate:

Sarah Palin passed the test, but did she rescue a faltering campaign? I don’t think so. Unfortunately it is the Obama-Biden ticket that is campaigning on ideas and policies (bad ones), and the McCain-Palin ticket that is campaigning on image and identity. I think even the average American voter, who isn’t too bright, can see the difference between candidates who really want to change things, and candidates who really just want a room in the White House. Their principles are wrong, but at least Obama and Biden are running on principles. McCain-Palin is running on little more than Governor Palin’s substantial charm and good looks, which doesn’t hurt, but isn’t nearly enough. Judging by tonight’s debate, the Republican ticket’s most comprehensible ideas are support for same-sex civil unions, increased federal involvement in education, and expansion of our foreign wars. So far as this campaign is concerned, Governor Palin’s pro-life principles amount to nothing more than Mario Cuomo’s “I’m personally opposed, but …”.

Well said.

Written by Steve Skojec in: Palin-Mania, Politics |
Oct
03
2008
3

Debate Roundup

Pundits are weighing in.

Peggy Noonan gushes:

She killed. She had him at “Nice to meet you. Hey, can I call you Joe?” She was the star. He was the second male lead, the good-natured best friend of the leading man. She was not petrified but peppy.

[snip]

The heart of her message was a complete populist pitch. “Joe Six-Pack” and “soccer moms” should unite to fight the tormentors who forced mortgages on us. She spoke of “Main Streeters like me.” A question is at what point shiny, happy populism becomes cheerful manipulation.

Sarah Palin saved John McCain again Thursday night. She is the political equivalent of cardiac paddles: Clear! Zap! We’ve got a beat! She will re-electrify the base. More than that, an hour and a half of talking to America will take her to a new level of stardom. Watch her crowds this weekend. She’s about to get jumpers, the old political name for people who are so excited to see you they start to jump.

Rod Dreher isn’t so sure:

In a seemingly self-contradictory column, Peggy Noonan raves about how great Palin was last night, but then crawls McCain’s backside over phony populism.

[snip]

Noonan seems to think that Palin’s populism is authentic, and I suspect she’s right — but only populism as a matter of style. Noonan talks in her column about how extraordinarily serious the present moment is for our country — unprecedented, even — but I don’t see how she squares that observation with giving Palin a pass for her upbeat performance. As I said below, I thought Palin really suffered by comparison to Biden in discussing foreign policy. She doesn’t know what she’s talking about, and while she avoided gibbering, I found her reliance on talking points, and accusing Biden of counseling “surrender,” to be more than a little maddening.

A friend writes this morning that he can’t believe after watching Palin last night flail on foreign policy, that I still have doubts as to whether she’s capable of governing. Her foreign policy mediocrity is even more important, he points out:

And this is crucial because in domestic policy, the President governs collaboratively with Congress whereas in foreign policy the Executive Branch is largely a law unto itself.Yeah. It is very, very hard for me to imagine Sarah Palin having the temperament and conceptual understanding to deal with a complex foreign policy crisis. Again, I don’t think she’s dumb. But I am nearly certain that given the very dangerous waters into which the ship of state is sailing, she is incapable of being a reliable captain if it came to that. Nearly.

Rich Lowry likes the cut of her jib:

Palin held her own against Joe Biden, and flashed the poise and charm that made her such a star at the Republican convention.

[snip]

She dropped her G’s (”puttin’ government back on the side of the people”) and said “darn” and “doggonit” in a folksy, familiar style; he referred to himself in the third person in the self-important senatorial style.

She kept it general, direct and common-sensical; he loaded his answers with detail. She exuded a sincerity that pulsed through the screen; he seemed like a typical senator.

[snip]

Yes, there were obvious weak points in her knowledge. She didn’t defend McCain effectively on deregulation, didn’t rebut Biden’s detailed critique of McCain’s health-care plan and seemed at sea in answering a question about nuclear policy.

But she also laid good clean hits on Biden. And he couldn’t respond to some of them - for instance, his own criticism (during the primaries) of Obama as not ready to be president.

Plus, he was the one who made the more obvious factual errors, falsely denying that Obama had pledged to meet without pre-condition with Iranian President Ahmadinejad and claiming that McCain had voted the same way as Obama on a budget resolution repealing the Bush tax cuts.

In the runup to the debate, Biden stressed how often he’d debated women. Sure - but not a woman like Sarah Palin.

Tom Bevan notes a very important distinction (one I alluded to in my post last night):

Stylistically, both candidates played to their strengths. Biden was knowledgeable and statesmanlike, delivering responses with authority. Palin was folksy and plain spoken, casting her responses in terms that the middle class could identify with.

Unsurprisingly, in the spin room after the debate both camps claimed victory. Rudy Giuliani declared that Palin hit a “home run.” Fred Thompson concurred, adding that after tonight Palin’s detractors should be “ashamed of themselves.”

Obama campaign manager David Plouffe said Biden turned in the most effective line of the night by ticking off the ways in which John McCain was the same as George W. Bush, adding that Palin failed to offer a single difference between McCain and Bush in response. Linda Douglass gave Palin points for her peformance skills but said that Biden was “hands down the winner on substance.”

David Brooks disagrees with Bevan on this point:

On matters of substance, her main accomplishment was to completely sever ties to the Bush administration. She treated Bush as some historical curiosity from the distant past. Beyond that, Palin broke no new ground, though she toured the landscape of McCain policy positions with surprising fluency. Like the last debate, this one was surprisingly wonky — a lifetime subscription to Congressional Quarterly. Palin could not match Biden when it came to policy detail, but she never obviously floundered.

Brooks then goes on to talk about the important role of our contemporary culture in making Palin’s folksiness workable:

Where was this woman was during her interview with Katie Couric?

Their primal need for political survival having been satisfied, her supporters then looked for her to shift the momentum. And here we come to the interesting cultural question posed by her performance. The presidency and the vice presidency once was the preserve of white men in suits. As the historian Ellen Fitzpatrick pointed out on PBS Thursday night, if, in 1984, Geraldine Ferraro had spoken in the relentlessly folksy tones that Palin used, she would have been hounded out of politics as fundamentally unserious.

But that was before casual Fridays, boxers or briefs and T-shirt-clad Silicon Valley executives. Today, Palin can hit those colloquial notes again and again, and it is not automatically disqualifying.

On Thursday night, Palin took her inexperience and made a mansion out of it. From her first “Nice to meet you. May I call you Joe?” she made it abundantly, unstoppably and relentlessly clear that she was not of Washington, did not admire Washington and knew little about Washington. She ran not only against Washington, but the whole East Coast, just to be safe…

No doubt we’ll be seeing a lot more opinion (and disagreement) of note very soon.

And of course, if you still want to find mind-boggling love-fests for patriarchal figures from liberal feminists, they’re out there too. (This may be the first time in human history that a leftist woman has said, “Political equality for women will not come from the minimization or idealization of motherhood — but rather from recognizing fatherhood as a significant factor in our culture and politics.”)

Wonders never cease.

Written by Steve Skojec in: Palin-Mania, Politics |
Oct
02
2008
6

Palin Hits Her Stride

I’m impressed. I was wrong in my predictions about Palin’s performance.

Palin stood much to lose by putting in a poor showing tonight, but that didn’t happen. This debate will likely quiet some of the criticisms of Palin’s competency, and it should. She put many fears to rest tonight, and while her inexperience still showed, it was more endearing this time, and she looked more like an up and coming pro than a woman out of her depth.

The debate went much more quickly than the Obama/McCain debate, and there was a much stronger likability factor on the part of both Biden and Palin. I actually enjoyed watching them together tonight. I wouldn’t say she won, but I think that she came out of the gate more strongly than Biden. In fairness, he was at a disadvantage because he couldn’t look like he was beating up on her. By the end, they were matching each other swing for swing without getting brutal.

This means McCain becomes the main issue again, and she can step out of the spotlight for a bit.  Questions will - and should - linger about her ability to step into the role of President should circumstances require it, but she’s taken a good first step in putting those concerns to rest.

Well played.

Written by Steve Skojec in: Palin-Mania, Politics |
Oct
01
2008
6

On An Optimistic Note, I Shall Begin A Palin Moratorium

I’m going to put away my Palin drum until after the debate. I’m beginning to sound like a broken record. I thought that in honor of the ceasefire, I’d offer up what I think is a very reasonable and even optimistic take on the McCain Veep - an open letter posed by the editors of The American Conservative to Mrs. Palin:

An Open Letter to Sarah Palin

To: Gov. Sarah Palin
From: The American Conservative Editors
Re: What Your Tutors Aren’t Telling You

Congratulations on being chosen as John McCain’s running mate. It’s an honor, if a dubious one. As you know, conservatives have reservations about McCain. To your credit, they have few such concerns about you.

You’ve given new life to a party whose brand was bankrupt. You’ve energized a campaign that was embarrassing its own partisans. Across America, crowds flock to see you—not that old man who barely wheezed his way through the primaries. If John McCain wins, he will owe you, as the guy in the undisclosed location says, “Big time.”

Wonder why Middle America finds you irresistible? Maybe they’re big Tina Fey fans. More likely, you remind them of the conservative values they feared lost: faith, family, independence. This impression owes more to who you are than what you’ve done. But at least you keep Obama from cornering the market on hope. Conservatives have faith in you. Don’t fail them as George W. Bush has.

You see what happened: the president’s entire domestic agenda collapsed under the weight of his failed foreign policy. Social Security reform stalled. Pro-lifers became political orphans. And whatever gains Bush’s tax cuts secured were wiped out by record spending. Everything was subordinated to the war on terror.

Conservatives grasping for something to commend give the president points for his judicial picks. But he would have much preferred justices like Alberto Gonzales and Harriet Miers—toadies whose top qualification was their willingness to give the executive more power.

The party that championed the things you prize—individual liberty, fiscal restraint, and a strong defense—has trampled civil rights, pushed us to the brink of insolvency, and broken our Armed Forces. After eight years of Bush, even diehard Republicans are glad to see him go. You might have noticed the elephant not in the room in St. Paul.

There’s a better way. In fact, you figured it out in the 1996 presidential primary when you sported the flair of the leading pro-life candidate. (Your minders would prefer that we not mention his name. It triggers their Tourette’s.) As you surely know, even beyond social issues, he represents a strain of conservatism that offers a consistent ethic of life and philosophy of limited government. It was not a coincidence that the most pro-life candidate in ’96 was also passionately noninterventionist.

It’s also no coincidence that those who want you to heed the siren call of global democratization care little for traditionalist causes. Recall that second night of the Republican Convention when you were told to blow off a reception in your honor hosted by Phyllis Schlafly so Joe Lieberman could chaperone your debut before the directors of AIPAC. Neoconservatives pay lip service to life, but, as their enthusiasm for Lieberman shows, they have higher priorities. Now they plan to make them yours.

You’ll find the new friends conducting your foreign-policy crash course pleasant enough, if a little dogmatic and a lot condescending. They call you “Project Sarah.” We saw that one staffer at AEI—that mystery monogram on all your briefing books—said you’re “a blank slate.” He added, “She’s going places, and it’s worth going there with her.” That’s how they operate. They don’t implement their agenda themselves. Rather, they impose it on rising star. If things don’t work out, it’s because the Project wasn’t sufficiently committed. (Just ask President Bush.)

Now you’re the latest object of their attention, and you’re probably finding the program a bit confusing. They tell you that the U.S. is fighting “World War IV,” a struggle against “Islamofascism.” We can win, they say, as long as we’re prepared to bomb Iran and build up the national-security establishment at home, just like Reagan did.

Trouble is, your tutors also believe we’re still engaged in “World War III,” the Cold War with Russia. So maybe the Gipper didn’t win that one after all. In fact, neoconservatives like Norman Podhoretz chided Reagan for appeasing Moscow. And when terrorists struck the Marine barracks in Lebanon in 1983, Reagan, instead of “staying the course,” withdrew our troops. Your Beltway suitors prescribe the opposite of Reagan’s strategy.

And as they would have it, we’re not only waging World Wars III and IV, we’re still fighting World War II. At least, that’s the way it sounds when Robert Kagan opens a Washington Post op-ed by likening Russia’s conflict with Georgia to Hitler’s invasion of Czechoslovakia.

But Russia is not Germany, Georgia is no innocent Czechoslovakia, and Vladimir Putin is not Adolf Hitler—no matter what your guru Randy Scheunemann says. (He probably forgot to tell you that he used to lobby for the government of Georgia.)

Here’s a hint: don’t believe everything you read in the papers, especially if the byline is Kristol or Krauthammer. Russia is not an expansionist, ideological empire. It’s a traditional, semi-authoritarian great power intent on preserving its influence in its own backyard and its prestige on the world stage. That’s why Russia intercedes in the domestic disputes of unruly states on its periphery. Putin balks at Poland hosting our antimissile systems for the same reason we would bristle at Cuba or Mexico receiving Chinese antitank missiles.

With more validity, some of the people whispering in your ear tell you that Moscow wants to corner the European markets for oil and natural gas. And what nefarious end does Putin have in mind? Raising prices and reinforcing Moscow’s political clout, not with nuclear blackmail but with good, old-fashioned economic power. We have plenty of that ourselves (or at least we used to). Putin, far from being a totalitarian ideologue, is an economic nationalist, as the leaders of great powers traditionally have been.

Then there’s the Middle East, where only American arms (and lives) can prevent little Israel from being swept into the sea by Muslim hordes. Surely that’s what AIPAC told you that night you left Phyllis cooling her heels. But again, it isn’t true. Israel has nuclear weapons, for one thing, and can outfight her neighbors even without resort to atom bombs. Israel’s problem isn’t external threat so much as internal security and demographics. When the Jewish state was founded, tens of thousands of Palestinians—Christians as well as Muslims—lost their homes. Palestine was no wide-open Alaskan frontier: when the newcomers moved in, Arabs were moved out, often by force. Terrorism didn’t come to the region with Hamas or Hezbollah; decades earlier groups like the Stern Gang and Irgun used violence to clear the way for Israel’s creation. Nor was Palestinian Authority leader Yassar Arafat the first terrorist to lead a state in the Holy Land. Israeli Prime Ministers Menachem Begin and Yitzhak Shamir had unclean hands as well.

While your minders probably don’t put much stock in his work, University of Chicago political scientist Robert Pape has shown that suicide terrorism develops almost always among occupied peoples. The task before the Israelis is not to defend themselves against aggressive neighbors but to give justice to the Palestinians already in their midst—to suppress terrorism without suppressing civil liberties and human rights, which only leads to more bloodshed. The most helpful role the United States can play is that of impartial mediator in the conflict. There is injustice and suffering on both sides.

No doubt you’ve been told (again and again) that Iran wants to “wipe Israel off the map.” Here’s something to keep in mind: Iran does not have nuclear weapons and is far from attaining them. Ironically, the Bush Doctrine’s pledge that “America is committed to keeping the world’s most dangerous weapons out of the hands of the most dangerous regimes” makes rogue states like Iran more likely to seek nuclear devices, as a deterrent against pre-emptive U.S. strikes. This is a vicious circle. Instead of boxing Iran into a corner, we should engage with Ahmadinejad, unsavory fellow though he is. Even with nuclear weapons, Iran would not pose an existential threat to Israel, let alone America.

Since you had some difficulties in your oral exam with Charlie Gibson, your new friends will no doubt ramp up their lessons. (For the record, you can scarcely be blamed for fumbling the answer about the Bush Doctrine. Your tutors were clearly reluctant to bring it up, even though the whole scheme was theirs, not Project George’s.)

They may even start assigning you book reports. It will feel like the third grade, except the subjects won’t be charming orphans. Now it’s rogue states against America the Benevolent. Near the top of the list will be An End to Evil by Richard Perle and David Frum. They’d have you think that Muslims will impose Islamic law on America if we don’t go to war with 18 different countries. But you know that a bunch of Muslims can’t make red-blooded, moose-hunting Americans wear burqas. Think what happens if you try to get a book pulled out of the library.

That’s only the beginning of the curriculum. You’ll be handed titles like Present Dangers and The Return of History. Thankfully, just like third grade, you don’t really have to read them. If they ask, just say, “The enemies of freedom won’t be appeased. We must stand firm, like Churchill.”

Meanwhile, we suggest sneaking a look at The Limits of Power by Andrew Bacevich. It’s stern stuff, but he gets to the point: America can’t spend money it doesn’t have, beat everyone up, and expect to stay healthy, wealthy, and wise. If you want a good book on how America screwed up in Iraq, there is Fiasco by Thomas Ricks. You said some nice things about Ron Paul during the primary. He gave Giuliani a list of books that might be worth your time.

You’ll have to keep your extracurriculars quiet. We know how these things work. Since he helped you break into the big leagues, you have to toe McCain’s line. But the outgoing administration has shown us how powerful a veep can be. If you go all the way, President McCain will be in your debt. (If he forgets, ask him how many rallies he held while you were home in Alaska. He wisely opted not to deliver speeches in phone booths.) Don’t leave your maverick spirit on the campaign trail.

Despite all the briefing books being thrown at you, you know your own mind—and you realize that the neoconservative agenda doesn’t square with your worldview. You prize localism, their vision is grandiose. You value fiscal discipline, neocons will ruin the country to finance endless war. You honor life, and they think nothing of killing hundreds of thousands in the service of ideology. But they’ll tell you this alien vision—imported from the Left—is coherent and conservative.

It is neither, but your supporters are both. They’ve turned against this war and definitely don’t want another. Yet your running mate does. Perhaps you’ve noticed that his interest in domestic policy pales alongside his foreign-policy ambitions. Or maybe you caught his virtuoso performance of “Bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb Iran.”

You surely see that the Bush policies have come to a dead end. If the millions poised to vote for you wanted four more years, the president’s approval rating wouldn’t be 25 percent. This isn’t because Republicans dislike Bush personally or disagree with his positions on energy and taxes. It’s because they know that his main legacy—the Iraq War—is a disaster.

Thankfully, they don’t think you’re like him. They see in you someone like themselves—a patriot and a mother. The Middle Americans waiting hours to hear you speak don’t want the United States to be defeated, and they don’t want Iraq to be a haven for al-Qaeda—something it never was before the invasion. They are pleased that the surge has made it more possible to leave because they don’t want to send their boys back for a third or fourth tour. They want America to come home—not because she’s weak but because she’s wise. They hope that you are, too.

SOURCE: The American Conservative Magazine

(h/t to Pat Buchanan)

Written by Steve Skojec in: Palin-Mania, Politics |
Oct
01
2008
0

More Palin/Couric

This is a longer clip from the series of interview questions Gov. Palin has fielded from Katie Couric. There are fewer awkward moments here  (with the notable exception of Palin’s inability to cite a single news source she reads with specificity) and some notable comments on life issues near the end of the interview.

It’s worth taking note that while she admirably supports choosing life even in cases of rape, she’s equivocating during the interview, making this an issue of personal opposition and not policy. She won’t explicitly say that the law should forbid abortion in these cases or ban the morning-after pill, only that she believes life begins at conception and that people should choose life.

She also makes statements in support of all other forms of contraception, and of the choice of individuals to adopt the homosexual lifestyle. This is the first time I’ve heard her speak with any detail about these issues, and it’s good to be able to start nailing down what her positions are:

Written by Steve Skojec in: Palin-Mania, Politics |
Sep
30
2008
3

Cleanup Duty: McCain & Palin Follow Up With Couric

YouTube Preview Image

Do you agree? Was it gotcha journalism? Are you convinced that she’s “ready, willing and able”? Do you think that just saying that their administration wouldn’t “lay the cards on the table” when dealing with terrorists negates the fact that Palin already, well, laid the cards on the table?

I’m not impressed with their PR strategy. Just pretending like there isn’t a problem (or that the problem is someone else’s) doesn’t make the problem go away. The McCain camp needs to stop blaming the media, and start holding itself accountable.

Media bias is one thing. Capturing foot-in-mouth disease on tape is another.

Written by Steve Skojec in: Palin-Mania, Politics |
Sep
29
2008
22

Jeff Culbreath: The Sarah Palin Tragedy

Jeff Culbreath has reached a (disappointed) conclusion about Sarah Palin, and he hits the nail squarely on the head:

There just isn’t any doubt at this point: Governor Palin is in way over her head. And Senator McCain had to have known this would be the case. His luring a good but unqualified woman - a woman, moreover, with serious responsibilities at home - into a bruising and cynical national campaign is inexcusable. Even more disturbing is the way she has been coached to bluff her way through interviews, pretending to have answers to questions she doesn’t begin to understand. It is impossible to watch this CBS interview without feeling acute embarrassment for her…

[snip]

Seriously, her dishonesty in this interview is systematic - not incidental to a particular question - and is evidence of personal corruption right out of the gate. She is not only corruptible, but she’s already internalizing the corruption of her handlers.

Now then, it seems that most politicians do this routinely. McCain, Obama, and Biden are experts at pretending to have answers they don’t have. Obama is so smooth he can make a journalist forget what the question was. So why pick on Palin?

I’ll tell you why. Sarah Palin is still an essentially honest person who isn’t good at telling lies. She averts her eyes. You can see the conflict in her face, you can hear the doubt in her voice, and it all betrays her words. You know her conscience bothers her and she’s going to feel terrible about this interview when it’s over.  Dishonesty doesn’t come easy to her … yet.  Perhaps a few more interviews like this one and she’ll get better at it.

But no! I don’t want this for Sarah Palin. I want Sarah Palin to go home, protect and re-build her integrity, and take care of her family and her state.

Dishonesty. It’s a tough word, but it fits. (It also can be applied to her “thanks but no thanks” comment about the “bridge to nowhere” in the stump speech.) Jeff is right - she doesn’t seem comfortable with deception, but she’s on the spot, and she desperately wants to give an answer that will take the heat off the fact that she just. doesn’t. know. the. answers.

Which us to another point - one I’ve been discussing with a friend today - why can’t politicians just be allowed to tell the truth? Jeff touches on this, posting a mock interview with a news network in which the candidate admits that they are still studying the issues.

In Palin’s case, that’s the kind of PR strategy McCain’s camp should have had from the beginning. Everyone knows she lacks experience - it’s manifest from the short amount of time she’s spent in politics. But what she appeals to - and still does, even after these horrible performances in the media - is the normal people. The people who root for her because at last, there’s someone they feel is really like them. Someone who doesn’t talk middle-class values from inside of a suit that costs as much as their car.

Would it be so bad if she were to say, on the issue of foreign policy (or economics, etc.), “You know, I’ve been deeply committed to running the State of Alaska for the last two years, and while I’m aware of many of these national issues, I don’t know all the details. That’s why I’m spending as much time as I can before the election getting up to speed on the most important challenges facing our nation. No Vice President, or President for that matter, can know everything about every issue. It’s why every administration draws upon the best experts and policy advisors they can to get the job done. A shift in focus from the state to the national level means a steep learning curve for me, but I’m up for the challenge.”

Could you imagine? Sure, the left would attack her, and say, “See - even she admits she doesn’t know anything!” But it would demonstrate honesty and integrity on her part and shore up her support on the right. It would keep the Average American’s B.S. detectors from going off whenever she opens her mouth and starts firing off mixed talking point messages, and she’d be in no worse situation than she is now, when she’s proving not only that she doesn’t know what she’s talking about, but she’s willing to try to hide that through a smokescreen of nonsense words.

I don’t know if it’s too late for a shift in direction, but if McCain wants to keep Palin from making the rapid transition from rising star to political millstone, he’d better consider it. He’s got nothing to lose.

Written by Steve Skojec in: Palin-Mania, Politics |

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