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Accidental Good Fortune? Strategic Genius By Woman Tony Knowles Called ‘Alley Cat Smart’ Sarah Palin
conservatives4palin.com ^ | August 16, 2011 | "John Smith"

Posted on 08/16/2011 8:11:57 PM PDT by RonDog

Accidental Good Fortune? Or Strategic Genius By The Woman Tony Knowles Called ‘Alley Cat Smart’

Posted on August 16 2011 - 8:49 PM - Posted by:

Guest Submission by “John Smith”

Sarah Palin’s political tactics always have been unconventional. Supporters like me know this, and even we alternate between “aha” moments and total confusion as to what she’s doing. As we’ve watched the GOP primary season evolve, as we’ve watched Bachmann and Perry enter the race and have tried to digest all of the quote “mixed signals” from Palin herself, it is hard not to arrive at the conclusion that she might not run after all. That conclusion would be wrong, for while her tactics may seem and probably are unconventional, her strategy has always been obvious. She’s running, and she probably has been since November 2008.

I suspect that even in 2008, Sarah Palin had a general idea that she’d run for President in 2012 depending on how the next 20 months or so played out. After all, she admitted as much on The Bob & Mark show then as Kelsey recorded here. Well, in terms of how things went in the midterms, the general mood of the country, and President Obama’s performance, things couldn’t have played out any better for her 2012 chances.

Oh, she’s had some high moments and some low moments, but, going into the late spring, everything lined up as well as could be expected for a Palin 1976 style run of her versus the establishment, with all Anyone But Palin (ABP) forces coalescing around Mitt Romney.

Then Michelle Bachmann started looking more and more like she was ready to enter the fray, especially as the bus tour came to a close on June 2. That, in turn, created a difficult dynamic. It would be tough enough to go one on one against Romney with all ABP forces behind Romney. Leaving aside the stalking horse theories, it would have been infinitely more difficult to confront that challenge AND ward off Bachmann’s attack from the right flank at the same time (she may not have seen Bachmann as a threat to eclipse her, but she most assuredly knew the dynamic put Romney in the cat bird’s seat.

That’s when I think Palin called an audible and laid the seeds to bait Rick Perry into the race. This is complete speculation, the type of thing one believes if one thinks Palin, as Tony Knowles once said, is ‘alley cat’ smart . . .

On the bus tour at the beginning of the summer, she twice offered unsolicited praise for Rick Perry, suggesting that he’d make a fine candidate for President. The first mention came early in the tour. The second mention came on the last day of the tour, in an interview with Sean Hannity. What made this interesting is that she never before or since specifically made unsolicited mention of a potential candidate. She knew perfectly well that Perry continued to say that he had no interest in running, and she knew perfectly well that stories were coming out at the same time that Perry did not see a path to the nomination for himself if Palin were in the race.

Then, after June 2, Palin did the strangest thing. She disappeared. She retreated to Alaska. One week later, Newt Gingrich’s entire Iowa campaign team, which included long time Perry campaign people, resigned en masse. The “Perry for President” talk began in earnest.

For the rest of the month, Palin pretty much stayed out of sight. We later heard something about jury duty, even though the jury duty didn’t begin until July 1. In total, Palin wrote very little and said very little over a 70 day period. When she would talk 2012, she’d say she had a fire in the belly but otherwise still was contemplating. To an experienced political pro, I suspect that looked like she was saying “I’d rather be kingmaker for the right person”.

So, the Perry machine got ready for an entry to the race, and it was clear two weeks ago that Perry was in for one simple reason: He saw a GOP race without Palin shaping up like the Texas 2010 primary. On one side, you had the DC establishment person in Romney (not unlike Kay Bailey Hutchinson in Texas). On the other side, you had the nutty purer tea party type in Bachmann (not unlike Debra Medina in Texas). So, the Perry plan would be to run like he did in 2010: Appeal to tea party types, let the purer tea party type implode, and then use a Palin endorsement at the perfect moment to seal the win against the DC establishment opponent.

It’s a really smart plan if Palin is sitting out the race. But, then, about 10 days ago, the damndest thing happened. Palin re-tweeted an article about Perry’s spending and debt record. A week ago, Palin then announced she was restarting the bus tour and would be including a stop at the Iowa state fair. During interviews at the fair, she took a few jabs at Perry, and a few more at Bachmann.

All of this raised an interesting question: If Palin was planning to endorse Perry, then why fire a few shots across his bow? If she’s not going to endorse Perry and we know she won’t endorse Bachmann or Romney, then what’s her game plan? Well, maybe the game plan is that she’s running (that she’s always been running) and holding off the announcement as long as possible.

This, of course, begs two obvious questions: One, if she’s running without declaring, then why abruptly end the bus tour with the “time to take Piper back for school” excuse? Two, why is she holding off the announcement as long as possible? The answer to both questions is the same: As Sun Tzu wrote, “All warfare is based on deception.”

Time for a little more speculation: While Rick Perry has visions of a race that shapes up like the 2010 Texas GOP primary, Sarah Palin sees a race that can shape up like the 2006 Alaska GOP primary if she goes pretty much dark for two more weeks.

Why two more weeks? Michelle Bachmann is under the full glare of the media after her straw poll victory. She’s got Rick Perry employing his 2010 primary playbook. Simply put, Bachmann, already polling worse and bleeding support more than others care to admit, will be in Cain territory in two weeks. At the same time, the Perry versus Romney war has begun and will be in full bloom in two weeks (and, frankly, more likely by this weekend). In two weeks, Bachmann will be pretty much out of it, and Perry will have a slight advantage over Romney, and an expected Palin endorsement of Perry coming to seal the deal, exactly how Perry’s team envisioned things when he entered the race.

There’s just one problem with that theory: I don’t think that’s Palin’s plan. Endorsing Perry is the safe play, perhaps the conventionally smart play. But, then I remember hearing somewhere a politician who doesn’t act like a typical politician note that “a ship in harbor is safe, but that’s not why the ship was built”. I think about how that person is anything but conventional. I think of that person often talking and writing about how she’d rather sleep well than eat well. And, I begin to realize that, whether by design or coincidence, what looks like a plan has come together:

While Rick Perry may have visions of 2010, I suspect that Palin has visions of 2006. Everyone knows the GOP primary was a three way race. You had Murkowski, the serious challenger in Bitney, and Palin, who was seen as an afterthought initially. Murkowski and Bitney exchanged blows. Palin avoided a lot of direct fire. Then came the “Alaskans deserve better” moment in the debate in which everyone realized that Palin had transcended both of them. Think about that. Then envision Palin versus Perry versus Romney. Put another way, imagine the 2010 Texas GOP primary IF Perry hadn’t gotten a Palin endorsement and IF Medina hadn’t imploded. Simply put, it would have been anyone’s game.

If you’re Perry, are you going to attack Palin if she enters the race? No, you don’t. First of all, he needs to focus on Romney. Second, his initial strategy would be to hope Palin fizzles quickly. Third, he’d view Palin as being the kingmaker at some point, even if it were at a brokered convention. Oh, he’d fire some shots across her bow, but it wouldn’t be a full blown attack.

Now, if you’re Romney, you’d like nothing better than to take Palin out immediately. The problem with that is twofold. One, if you take Palin out, you pretty much assure her supporters and her support goes to Perry. Maybe that’s inevitable, but the last thing you want is to be fighting BOTH Perry and Palin at the same time. Two, like Bitney with Murkowski, Perry is seen as the more direct threat to Romney’s base of support. So, even from Romney, Palin would avoid a lot of the direct fire, at least for a time.

Speaking of Bachmann, I suspect that Tim Pawlenty’s departure from the race led to another mini audible. I’m not suggesting that Palin wasn’t going herself to get Piper back to school. But, with Pawlenty in the race, you had a Pawlenty versus Bachmann undercard. Now, you don’t. What to do? Well, why not disappear again and let Bachmann deal with the withering scrutiny and Perry for two weeks?

Think about it: At the end of the month, the GOP primary effectively will be Perry versus Romney. Oh, some people out there will be trying to build up Bachmann still, but she’ll be done because most of her support will be soft (perhaps it always has been soft anyway, but I digress). But, Palin won’t have to bother with her in the same way you had a Pawlenty versus Bachmann undercard. While she’ll have to ignore what I expect to be a lot of instigation from Bachmann, Palin simply will eclipse her in the end.

Then, what briefly had become a two horse race gets transformed back into a three horse race, where she’ll get her chance to transcend the two quote “serious” primary candidates, just like she did in 2006 in Alaska. What once would have been a Palin versus Romney one on one or a Palin versus Romney and Bachmann handicap match could at the end of the month be a three way race in which ABP forces are divided and thus more easily (relatively speaking) conquered IF Palin closes the sale with those primary voters who I suspect in the end will be hers to lose.

Anyway, that’s my epiphany du jour. Maybe there’s nothing to it. Or, maybe Sarah Palin really is “alley cat” smart.



TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Extended News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bachmann; obama; palin; perry; romney; sarahpalin
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To: gov_bean_ counter

Believe it was I-O4P crew who was.


41 posted on 08/16/2011 10:14:49 PM PDT by Sea Parrot (Democrats creation of the entitlement class will prove out to be their very own Frankenstein monster)
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To: RonDog

When she’s ready.

If Sarah runs, she’ll do it her way. nd she’ll shake up the field significantly.

OTOH, maybe she’s having fun taunting the media to pay them back for 2008.


42 posted on 08/16/2011 10:15:24 PM PDT by TBP (Obama lies, Granny dies.)
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To: thecodont

Sounds to me like the thing to watch for would be her resignation from FOX News.


43 posted on 08/16/2011 10:18:49 PM PDT by redhead (I will vote for Sarah Palin, even if I have to write her in. —)
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To: RonDog
“She’s what I call ‘alley-cat smart,’” Tony Knowles, the former Democratic governor, told me.

“It’s not about ideology. She knows how to pick her way down the political route that she feels will be the most beneficial to what she wants to do.”

And this, from a former Democrat Governor, whom she stomped in her run for the Alaska Governor's office. You almost couldn't ask for a better recommendation than that.

44 posted on 08/16/2011 10:19:34 PM PDT by Windflier (To anger a conservative, tell him a lie. To anger a liberal, tell him the truth.)
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To: Windflier

I think that there is a whole lot of inside info (or at least high level speculation) running the course. Was listening to Rush today and he was doing that one-sided conversation with Snerdley thing he does. “Snerdley” told him about a scroll on FOX, Rush immediately said millions of Americans were waiting for just that news. Then he asked if there was a question mark behind the scroll... He said he wouldn’t say what it was cuz it was too big. Then Rush went to inferring that Christie or Ryan could join the race... Anyone know what that ‘scroll’ said? I was at work and had no access to TV. It certainly was interesting to say the least, there was an obvious storyline directly under the surface.


45 posted on 08/16/2011 10:22:49 PM PDT by Mensius
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To: Sea Parrot
Ya beat me to it.

Didn't mean to... =)

46 posted on 08/16/2011 10:24:26 PM PDT by Mensius
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To: Windflier
he is an expert in this area.

Rove? Yeah, I really admire the way the Bush years ended. A real masterpiece.

47 posted on 08/16/2011 10:26:37 PM PDT by hinckley buzzard
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To: Mensius
Was listening to Rush today and he was doing that one-sided conversation with Snerdley thing he does. “Snerdley” told him about a scroll on FOX, Rush immediately said millions of Americans were waiting for just that news. Then he asked if there was a question mark behind the scroll... He said he wouldn’t say what it was cuz it was too big.

I could only listen off and on today, so I didn't catch that segment. Very, very interesting.

Now I've got a mystery sandwich. I'm dying to know what 'news' was on that crawler (considering that its "big", and that "everyone has been waiting for it"). It couldn't have been news about Christie or Ryan joining the race. "Everyone" isn't exactly waiting for that news.

Wonder what it was?

48 posted on 08/16/2011 10:30:07 PM PDT by Windflier (To anger a conservative, tell him a lie. To anger a liberal, tell him the truth.)
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To: hinckley buzzard
"he is an expert in this area."

Rove? Yeah, I really admire the way the Bush years ended. A real masterpiece.

I suppose I should have been more specific about what I meant there. Rove has been working major campaigns for close to thirty years, and so he's got what most would consider to be "expert" experience in that area.

As far as how he performed as an advisor to Bush, well, that's another hat, in which he got completely different results. I agree that they were disastrous.

49 posted on 08/16/2011 10:34:19 PM PDT by Windflier (To anger a conservative, tell him a lie. To anger a liberal, tell him the truth.)
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To: alley cat

woof


50 posted on 08/16/2011 10:39:21 PM PDT by woofie
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To: RonDog; Travis McGee
Good strategy points discussed in this article.

Palin has employed excellent strategy in her past campaigns, and she has said in the past that if she runs, she will be "in it to win it."

51 posted on 08/16/2011 10:41:08 PM PDT by meadsjn (Sarah 2012, or sooner)
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To: Bigtigermike

She may go a bit later to REALLY throw a wrench into the opposition plans. Don’t discount the possibility.


52 posted on 08/16/2011 10:43:02 PM PDT by Norm Lenhart
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To: TBP

No, b/c by taunting the media, she would be also screwing a lot of people who are working very hard for her. Bob


53 posted on 08/16/2011 10:44:45 PM PDT by alstewartfan ("The movie's rolled down to the last reel. It's got an ending you never planned. Harry Chapin)
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To: RonDog

Excellent piece, and Romney is facing some serious problems between Palin and Perry, I don’t know that Romney has the smarts to figure out a path to victory.

Neither one of these two challengers are predictable, or easy to fight against, yet both of them are serious, skilled campaigners, to have to fight both of them simultaneously is going to bleed Romney badly, hopefully fatally enough to crush him and finish forever this pretense that he is a successful politician.


54 posted on 08/16/2011 10:45:42 PM PDT by ansel12 ( Bristol Palin's book "Not Afraid Of Life: My Journey So Far" became a New York Times, best seller.)
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To: Windflier

Rove’s problem was the war. He’s a political animal and lethal with conventional politics, but the war issues didn’t translate to hie expertise. He plaid those like SOP politics and he was out of his ‘zone’. The results are obvious.

IMO FWIW.


55 posted on 08/16/2011 10:51:27 PM PDT by Norm Lenhart
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To: ansel12

I really don’t think there is one for him. He’s going to get hit with hardball questions over his gymnastics on Romneycare/abortion et all and he’ll fold since there IS NO defense to them.

IMO, he’s toast and thats why the GOP is bringing out Perry...who is nearly as flawed a candidate. Everyone should do their reserach on him. Old guard GOP and an Al Gore worker in 88?

Nope.


56 posted on 08/16/2011 10:54:49 PM PDT by Norm Lenhart
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To: alstewartfan

How so? Seriously.


57 posted on 08/16/2011 10:55:54 PM PDT by Norm Lenhart
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To: RonDog

There’s an event scheduled to be held on Sept. 3 somewhere in Iowa, eastern Iowa, I believe (name of town escapes me, begins with W, possibly Waukon), that Sarah has stated that she intends to attend and where she is booked to speak.


58 posted on 08/16/2011 11:00:06 PM PDT by Elsiejay
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To: The Cajun

I would like her to run if only to get everyone running to the right. But she is a mystery right now.


59 posted on 08/16/2011 11:02:06 PM PDT by RobbyS (Pray with the suffering souls.)
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To: Norm Lenhart
Rove’s problem was the war. He’s a political animal and lethal with conventional politics, but the war issues didn’t translate to hie expertise. He plaid those like SOP politics and he was out of his ‘zone’. The results are obvious.

I read it exactly the same.

60 posted on 08/16/2011 11:02:39 PM PDT by Windflier (To anger a conservative, tell him a lie. To anger a liberal, tell him the truth.)
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