Posted on 10/06/2008 12:43:28 PM PDT by publius1
I am freshly returned from a Sarah Palin fundraiser in Burlingame, California. Thank-you to the readers who donated in my name, both the nameless first (who, the campaign insists, is called Joann, and is my wife) and the second. I have stopped in a Palo Alto cafe to tap out an observation or two.
First? A smash, despite the many broadminded protesters outside whose homemade placards decried Geezer & Gidget. The original notion for northern California was to have an intimate event in the Woodside, Calif., backyard of a certain technology titan. (Not, regular readers should note, that of my own employer.) But in the event, far, far too many Silicon Valley Republicans wanted to pay $1,000 a plate to hear from Sarah Palin. I received a call last week letting me know that the high-priced event would now be held in a ballroom. And it was going to remain high-priced. Happy tidings. In conversation with various attendees, it unraveled to me that the profusion of California conservativeswho are in truth mostly libertariansis not new; these are dormant Republican voters activated by either the simple goodness of the Governor of Alaska or the increasing feeling that the vaporous, vacant, imperfect vessel Barack Obama is a cipher hiding quite poisonous views.
So what played to this audience? What caused genuine applause? Well, one line, in particular: near the end of her twenty-minute speech, Sarah Palin told the audience that out on the hustings one comment from supporters has dominated, in frequency, all others: tell people about the real Barack Obama. She said this quietly, without drama. But: thunder, hoots, an ovation. It was the one real firework in her stump speech; yet from the cadence of the speech one could tell that it was not intended thus. Audiences know that standing up for one particular line in a political speech is reserved for positive lineslines that honor someone, or declaim some principle, or express some affirmation, or promise some victory. Rarely are audiences moved to bolt from their chairs over a negative line. (Theyre more likely to boo affectedly.) But Mr. Obamas guile has created considerable resentmentso much, in fact, that even a flat recitation of his positions, with not a drought of oratorical flare, dazzles and refreshes and fires an audience.
Sarah Palin spent some time piquing the newsmedia, and thanks to a zealous tablemate who initiated them the New York Times earned decidedly unaffected boos from the Silicon Valley audience. But you understand that if the newsmedia were doing their job, it would not be enough for a political candidate merely to mention the opinions of her opponent. Some argument would be necessary. Not so, not so with Barack Obama. The free pass he has been given is feltand felt widely. In the final analysis I suspect this will make the mans candidacy weaker, not stronger. It leaves him vulnerable, qual piuma al vento, to a late-October truth-squad attack.
There was, otherwise, little new in the stump speech. It was the same one given yesterday in Southern California (photo above) and reported on by the Associated Press, which dribbled into its dispatch some surrogate outrage because Mrs. Palin mentioned Barack Obamas relationship with a violent left-wing terrorist who once intrigued the bombing of the Pentagon. And portions of Mrs. Palins speech today were recycled from the Republican National Convention in St. Paul last month. That, at least, is a letdown: Barack Obama today had a fresh stump speech that made able parry to yesterdays Palin event in the Los Angeles area. The McCain campaign is utterly unable to work as efficiently as that. But my sense was that few donors got that feeling: the excitation of Sarah Palin overshadowed easily any sense one might otherwise receive that the momentum is shifting away from John McCain.
And why not? The crowd of 25,000 she elicited yesterday is proof that Sarah Palin is attracting new voters. And today was further evidence of her effect: a ballroom flush with self-made men and women who, though accustomed to living the dreary life of a permanent political minority, now feel theres someone for them, too. They see Sarah Palin as a political Ghostbuster singularly able, by dint of her background, her charm, and her cool, to suss out the spectrous Barack Obama, holding him up for everyone to see. She should, soon.
OH, BY THE BYE: The afternoon netted well in excess of $2 million.
Thanks for the good news from Silicon Valley, the home of 200 major computer companies. I hope to hear more about the successful event.
I’m just curious. The McCain campaign has pulled out of Michigan because they don’t feel like it’s in play any longer, but they think they have a shot in California? Interesting, if true.
Sara is going to ride into Michigan and save the day.
I guarantee you that she can do it.
She will tell the Michigan Republican I am with you and we can do make a difference.
This gal if used correctly is the difference maker.
Sarah Palin is the contradiction that Obama can not over come with his celebrity status.
California is NOT in play - but it makes a great ATM for fundraising.
She will tell the Michigan Republicans, I am with you and we can make a difference.
RECEIVED MY REPORT FROM MY BUDDIES IN FT. MYERS. THE PLACE WAS PACKED, THEY HAD TO CLOSE THE DOORS LEAVING MANY OUTDOORS. ONE DISTURBANCE FROM ABOUT A HALF DOZEN SKANKY LOOKING PEOPLE AND THEY WERE ESCORTED OUT. SHE DID A GREAT JOB!
Dude! She was there for the 2000 large.
They are many good Repubs in CA, but alas, CA is lost, so the only thing these CAers can do is donate, then their money gets put to good use in the battleground states...
Are you hinting that Larry Ellison is a McCain supporter?
I wonder if I could get a bumper sticker that reads
“I’M for Geezer and Giget” Remember Giget always got her man at the end of the movie.
its money but its also media time, face time, and most important of all, it’ll boost actual popular vote forMcPalin.
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