Posted on 09/25/2011 12:42:05 PM PDT by Brices Crossroads
It is hard to argue that Sarah Palin's delay in formally announcing her candidacy has been anything other than a smashing success. I have been among a minority who have contended from the outset that Governor Palin's delay in announcing was prudent strategy both for financial as well as political reasons. She has been able to campaign both in Iowa and New Hampshire within the last month, garnering huge amounts of publicity and the largest crowds of the campaign season. Her crony capitalism speech in Indianola on September 3 has driven the debate (as well as the GOP debates) even in her absence from the stage. It exposed the first chink in the armor of James Richard Perry, who has continued to bumble his chances, as some of us predicted he would. Meanwhile, Michele Bachmann has virtually disappeared from the radar screen, and is rumored to be broke, having poured every resource she had into winning the meaningless Ames Straw poll and paying the likes of Ed Rollins. And Mitt Romney remains in the low twenties, unable to put any daylight between himself and the weak field he faces. Romney's weakness--in the face of his opponents' implosion--has led the Establishment to begin to trot out what must be its last reserves, to wit: Governor Chris Christie of New Jersey, a liberal Establishment Republican to the left even of Romney.
Sarah Palin has positioned herself beautifully, as events have unfolded in the last month, by not formally announcing. And she has spent not one dime doing it. On August 14, I argued here that the principal reason for her to delay is financial. The Establishment is already funding two major candidates, Romney and Perry. They are trying to launch a third, Chris Christie. Well heeled to be sure, the GOP Establishment does not have limitless funds, and the burn rate for Romney and Perry (plus Christie, if he gets in) will stretch its resources to the limit.
Sarah Palin will, I argue, have adequate funds, but she will not be able to match the Establishment dollar for dollar. By waiting, she spends nothing while the Establishment spear carriers flit from straw poll to straw poll to fundraiser, spending cash by the boatload, to so little effect that a third major Establishment candidate is now poised to enter.
Sarah Palin is husbanding her resources while the Establishment is spending hand over fist, while dividing its admittedly much larger warchest several ways. In effect, Palin--who will be the insurgent candidate--is evening the odds. She is learning from some of the mistakes of the 1976 and 1980 Reagan campaigns, which overspent early in both cycles and ran out of money both times, costing the Gipper the nomination in 1976 and very nearly derailing him in 1980. Her delaying game, coupled with the multiplication of Establishment candidacies (a divide and conquer strategy, so to speak), has put her in the catbird seat.
Moreover, her delay is forcing the Establishment to play its cards first...to put its candidates out front first for the public to scrutinize. Palin knows that her formal announcement would take the spotlight and scrutiny, as well as the pressure, off the Establishment candidates since all eyes would then turn to her. And she is not about to give her Establishment opponents such a break. The vetting process has been very hard on the new candidates so far, and Palin is wisely allowing it to continue.
Meanwhile, under the radar screen, she is better organized than any of the declared candidates, with her O4P legions in nearly every state, particularly Iowa, quietly assembling names of volunteers and positioning themselves to strike as soon as she gives the word.
A Civil War analogy comes to mind. At Second Manassas in August 1862, Robert E. Lee was confronted with two Union Armies, whose combined strength was far greater than his own. He realized that he had to prevent them from uniting in order to defeat them separately. Understanding that the first Army--commanded by the timid George B. McClellan---would move slowly, Lee turned his attention to the other, commanded by the impetuous John Pope. Lee sent half his Army under Stonewall Jackson, perhaps 25,000 men, to lure Pope into battle, while keeping the other half, under James Longstreet, with him. Jackson mounted a lightning strike on the federals at Cedar Mountain, driving Pope back to the Rappahanock River, and then old Stonewall vanished into the Bull Run Mountains. Jeb Stuart hit him next, raiding Pope's headquarters and making off with $350,000 in cash and Pope's dress coat. Pope, enraged, took off after Jackson. When he finally found him two weeks later, Jackson was dug in on the railroad cut at the old Bull Run Battlefield from a year earlier.
Pope hurled his army of 62,000 against Jackson, trying to dislodge the stubborn rebels. At the end of the first day, Jackson's lines had wavered but held. Meanwhile, unbeknownst to Pope, Lee had brought up the second half of his Army under Longstreet and positioned it on the federal left, concealed by the dense foliage. The next day, Pope renewed his attack on a two mile front, stretching Jackson's line to the breaking point. Civil War historian Bruce Catton sets the scene:
"The Yankees drove against Jackson on a two mile front stretching his line to the breaking point. His men threw rocks at the attackers when their ammunition ran out. Still Longstreet waited. Not until the last Yankee reserves had been thrown against Jackson did he take action. Then he launched his counterattack. An artillery barrage smashed the left side of the Union forces. Rebel infantry, 'screaming like demons emerging from the earth', fell upon the surprised Yankees as Longstreet's five divisions rolled against the Union flank.... As Pope tried to halt Longstreet on his left, Jackson hit him on the right. The whole Union line bent like a horseshoe."
Palin's hit and run tactics of last summer in Iowa and New Hampshire are reminiscent of Jackson's and Stuart's tactics in August 1862. She continues to live rent free in the heads of the permanent political class, and her lightning strikes have forced them to react to HER, rather than forcing her to react to THEM. Just when the Establishment begins to hope it is rid of her, she pops up unexpectedly, and strikes it a blow that sends it reeling. At the same time, she manages to keep her intentions (and especially her timing) obscure enough to deny her enemies an easy fix on her as a target.
The huge vacuum in the current field, coupled with the many hints she has dropped over the last four months, suggest that Palin will enter the fray, but at the last possible moment, when the maximum amount of the Establishment's reserves, both financial and political, have been exhausted, or at least committed. Her entry will generate a tidal wave of excitement and energy, a political feu d'enfer reminiscent of the artillery barrage at Second Manassas, through which her legions of supporters will pour to vanquish the tattered, dispirited Hessian hirelings of the Establishment.
To those who are pleading "Run, Sarah, run", my rejoinder is "Wait, Sarah, wait." Strike when the maximum advantage has been gained. Not before.
Don’t you think you should ping someone when you’re referring to them?
What a shame you were doing so well. Back on the .... List.
:)-
Yes, that was a significant mistake, although I'd characterize that as foreign policy inexperience. What about with regard to your claim that he's unable to navigate the task of making government work?
I wouldn’t have to comment on Palin threads if there was not a constant bashing of good people. My foray into this thread started after Palin supporters started in on Cain with the Lib talking points. Cain is a solid Conservative and has every capability to be a fine President.
There's a reason you're the Chief Druid of Trollhenge, my brother. You make an excellent point.
Oops, thought I did. Magritte, meet Norm; Norm, meet magritte. Check comment 299, I thought I added your name.
I love the Civil War lessons. And I echo your call “Wait Sarah wait”. She truly knows what she is doing.
I wait anticipating with pleasure Sarah call to “Unleash Hell”. I plan to be among the minions of patriot “rebels” giving that heart quaking “rebel yell”, RUN SARAH RUN!!!
Another worshiper of the fell God Hindendus! Fellow Freeper, let us pray ever harder for the promised day of Zotnarock! ;)
Kidding aside, the paid bots are coming out of the closet across the board. We gotta watch for them and call them on it/let the mods/JR know when it happens. Like the wise kitty said, Freep’em all and let MOD sort’em out!
And it’s going to get worse as the election draws near. Anyone who thinks that FR, the largest and most influential conservative gathering place on the web isn’t filthy with paid trolls and political operatives simply has not thought it through.
BLITZER: Should states or local governments be allowed to the gun situation . . .[gun control]CAIN: Yes
BLITZER: So the answer is yes?
CAIN: Yes. The answer is yes, that should be a states decision.
Yikes! This is worse than not knowing what the right of return means in Mid-East foreign policy.
The Second Amendment right is protected by a fundamental individual liberty that the federal government is supposed to protect. Keeping arms is an individuals right and it is the governments responsibility to protect that right. It is not a state issue. Our rights dont exist based on the consent and good grace of any one state (or all the states), just as they dont exist based on the consent and good grace of the federal government. What Cain should have said is that the proper role of the government, whether state or federal, is to refrain from infringing upon our liberties. States may try and pass legislation but they must be consistent with the US Constitution, and they certainly cant legislate away the Second Amendment.
No question Cain is a funny guy, as he has demonstrated a couple of debates ago in his response to a question, what would he bring to the WH if elected president? and he replied: "I would bring a sense of humor to the White House, because America's too uptight!" Yep, I can imagine how the current state of our economy makes all those unemployed and going through hard times really uptight.
Or has not checked posing histories...posting histories do not Lie!
Verily and forsooth...five sooth even! (I’m not a Gore type that believes in ‘sooth’ conservation ...however I may be persuaded on a good global soothing;)
I have a poor academic record but a 3.2 in physics and math doesn’t make me stupid.
Oh, for cryin' out loud. Save your concern for a sermon to the church of PDS.
You and other Palin bashers don't need any other reason to come onto Palin threads, other than the bare mention of her name.
Those "good people' you're supposedly defending, are in the main, known trolls of Palin threads, and do nothing but spout the same tired talking points, ad nauseum, despite the fact that their scripted spittle has been debunked thousands of times on this website.
I know what I'm talking about, because I was an early Palin defender on this website, and have taken more than my share of abuse from those "good people" over the last two and a half years.
You know clyde, it is amazing. I didn’t say one bad thing about Palin on this thread. I just said she needs to say if she is running and get out there and compete.
Her die hard fans are very loyal and they need their reward.
There is no reason to be missing the debates at all. If Palin is so good, she should be able to wipe the floor with her opponents.
Now you know I am a lot more harsh on Perry than I have ever been on Palin. And he deserves it.
Instead, even though I have said nothing bad about Palin, I get piled up on for no good reason.
Perhaps this is “The Unreasonable”;^(
Great visual. I like it!
In this article it is the wag dogging the tail.Sarah will conquer, and without even stooping.
It’s always nice to hear from tinyjeremiah, my personal stalker !!
What a load of bull. Have read the thread and the "Lib talking points" from Palin supporters include, (1) "he is a fine man, but doesn't have a chance on getting the nomination" and, (2) Cain doesn't have executive experience (never held a state, local, or national executive position), or (3) Cain was a board member of the federal reserve, and that might hurt his chances
Don't confuse bashing/liberal talking points with facts posted by reasonable freepers highlighting the obvious weaknesses of a candidate
Here is my gripe: He is dismissive of the details when he speaks, and in government, especially Federal government, there are so many layers of details, authorizations, and mandates in layer after layer of legislation, some going back to the ‘60s that the solution is politically arduous, but he doesn’t accept it.
If he had coattails, like we know Palin will have, perhaps broad legislation may be possible, but it would take a lot.
Don't try to play the innocent victim, when so many of us who know you are watching.
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