Posted on 02/19/2010 11:25:11 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
The conservative intelligentsia are starting to take Sarah Palin seriously, but I suspect they have not got her quite right yet. Within 24 hours of each other, heavyweights Dorothy Rabinowitz and George Will have published op-eds critical of her. Heres Rabinowitz: The Sarah Palin of election year fame has not been much transformed since last we met. For many who look to her as a presidential hopeful, and a voice for their social views, this cant be encouraging news. What, specifically, does Rabinowitz object to? In part, the fact that Palin has endorsed Ron Pauls son for the U.S. Senate; but, more significantly: The unsavory echoes of [Palins] regular references to the real America as opposed to those shadowy elites, now charged with threats to the life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness of all real Americans. [Palin seems not] to have any idea of how that low soap-box oratory embracing one kind of American as the real kind, those builders in the towns and cities across America rings in the ear today. Rabinowitz points out that one of Palins heroes, Ronald Reagan, did not appeal to the aggrieved. Nor did he see in the oratory of grievance, or talk of real Americans and those who were not, a political platform.
Now, I share quite intensely, as it happens Rabinowitzs dislike of the sort of rhetoric for which she faults Sarah Palin. I would not welcome a continuation of it for all three years leading up to the 2012 election, much less for the four years of the next presidency. But I think Rabinowitz is wrong in saying that Palin is unaware of how that sort of speech rings in the ear today. Rabinowitz and I may not like it, but we are probably in the minority. Palin may have found just the right emotional buttons to be a successful politician in our time.
Which brings me to George Will, who writes: Sarah Palin, who with 17 months remaining in her single term as Alaskas governor quit the only serious office she has ever held, is obsessively discussed as a possible candidate in 2012. Why? She is not going to be president and will not be the Republican nominee unless the party wants to lose at least 44 states. Conservatives, who rightly respect markets as generally reliable gauges of consumer preferences, should notice that the political market is speaking clearly: The more attention Palin receives, the fewer Americans consider her presidential timber. The latest Post-ABC News poll shows that 71 percent of Americans including 52 percent of Republicans think she is not qualified to be president.
When I read this sort of thing, I cant help remembering that there was a point in 2007 when the Obama campaign was faltering, and I was thinking, What a dumb idea it is for a guy with no experience, no qualifications, and a record of less than half a term in the Senate to think he can be elected president. The sooner he gets out of the race, the less embarrassed hell end up being.
Will admits that Palin is feisty and public-spirited, and as if to validate my comment on the Rabinowitz piece that millions of people vibrate like tuning forks to her rhetoric. The gravamen of his substantive objection to Palin i.e., as opposed to the highly questionable assertion that she cant win is that while she has showed grit . . . she has also showed that grit is no substitute for seasoning. The thing about seasoning, though, is that it can come with time. I have seen already that Palin is a political natural, so I have little doubt she has the raw political talents to win peoples affections: In this regard, she reminds me of no one so much as of Bill Clinton, who in the 1992 primaries managed to turn catastrophe into political gold. He, too, used every attack against him as an opportunity to make the central political story entirely about himself, and emerged as a result as a highly sympathetic person in the eyes of middle America sympathetic enough to defeat an incumbent president who not long before had enjoyed a 91 percent approval rating.
Rabinowitz writes: At a time when Republican hopes are in the ascendancy, as now (and even when they are not), its impossible to imagine the Sarah Palin known to the world today as their leader. It would be well for her to begin pondering the reasons. The first sentence here is true, in a sense, but misleading; the second assumes, perhaps contrary to fact, that Palin has not yet considered the question. In my view, Palin is showing a great deal of skill in her current task: tapping todays mood to win a lot of support among some highly politically involved and energized Americans. She can hardly be faulted for not yet having moved on to the next task: to demonstrate that she can lead a party, and a nation. The answer on that, we can leave to be determined in an actual campaign.
It's time for them to curl up in the rest home. They have been too comfortable with the Leftist machinery for too lang.
The rest home for wayward RINO’s sounds like a good idea, they can even pretend its a country club.
Dorothy Rabinowitz writes for the WSJ editorial page.
I have always enjoyed her writings, but think she needs to shed the DC blue nose attitude with respect to Palin.
nobody inside the Beltway..or anywhere near it, for that matter, wants anybody from Flyover Country anywhere near the secrets of the City....
What would have helped you after your title you needed to put (Barf Alert)
Yes, that was the "intellectual", George Will's comment. The "brilliant" one can't name more than 6 states where Sarah Palin would beat Obama.
Uh, 2ndDivisionVet is a HUGE Palin support.
I have not read all the posts yet but I MUST comment:
Since when was George Will appointed a “Heavyweight Conservative?” The guy is as middle as a person can get without growing donkey ears.
I don’t know Rabinowitz that well but Will is not a conservative. In MHO.
George Will? The same Goerge Will who says Americans are under taxed?
Damned snobs.
And how many times has either of them been elected to office?
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