................fighting the bad fight since 135 BC................

Showing posts with label Sarah Palin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sarah Palin. Show all posts

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Sarah Palin, starring as Sarah Palin

The Sarah Palin most of us see is a carefully-crafted character. Her and her handlers work hard to present us with a person that mainstream America can identify with. There have been missteps, but the fact that she is still one of the strongest voices coming from the right shows that their efforts are largely paying off.

The Sarah Palin most of us don't see is the one that shows up at Tea Party rallies and speaks directly to an audience that already identifies with her. It is at such rallies that the "God & guns" Sarah Palin can speak without fear.

Yet the story is not quite so simple. Ms. Palin is not officially a Tea Partier. In fact, if she tried to label herself as a Tea Partier, she would likely receive a cold reception. The Tea Party people make a big deal about their grassroots origins, and Ms. Palin was already a careerist politician when the movement began.

On Saturday, Ms. Palin dropped by a Tea Party Express rally in Wheeling, West Virginia. The only media coverage on the scene were Tea Party folks themselves. As such, we get to see Ms. Palin in action on friendly turf, but not necessarily on home turf. It is very worthwhile to watch this footage to see how she operates under these intriguing circumstances:



Here we see both Ms. Palin's gifts and shortcomings as a speaker. At first she sounds extremely awkward and cloying. But once she gets going, her performance is rather riveting. Most of what she says is the usual empty rhetoric about "putting our government back on the side of We the People". But she is a master improviser, in contrast to Barack Obama. While the President can deliver an inspirational speech to a big crowd, Ms. Palin can capture a smaller audience by speaking at their level. Note how she starts rambling on about coal mining after someone in the audience shouts something to her. She changes tack to focus on a topic of her audience's choosing without missing a beat.

Ms. Palin is also doing something else here. Note how she places herself at a distance from the Tea Party movement. She refers to them constantly in the second person. She casts them as the grassroots revolutionaries that they believe themselves to be without ever placing herself among their ranks. This was a point made a month ago in a Washington Post blog post:
Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin (R) appears to be making a purposeful play in recent days to be the face of the "tea party" movement, a strategy that suggests what sort of candidacy she would run if she enters the 2012 presidential contest.

Palin has largely demurred when asked about her 2012 ambitions (or lack thereof) -- choosing to steer the conversation to the importance of electing Republicans this fall.

But, in a speech to the Iowa Republican Party on Friday night and then again in a Web video released by her political action committee today, she seems to be sending clear hints about a national bid -- and laying claim to the mantle of the tea party candidate if she does run.

In the video -- titled "Tea Party" -- Palin praises the movement as a "ground-up call to action that is forcing both parties to change the way they are doing business," adding, "It is so inspiring to see real people, not politicos, not inside-the-Beltway professionals, come out and stand up and speak out for commonsense conservative principles."
Indeed, Ms. Palin seems to be continuing on this course. But at some point she's going to have to steer the ship slightly. She is going to have to make her political ambitions clearer. We will have to see what happens to her relationship with the Tea Party movement at that point.

(Note -- you might have noticed that very odd commercial at the end of that video clip. Yeah, I don't know what to make of it either.)

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Sarah Palin hints at 2012 presidential run?

This article was recently published online by The New York Times:
Sarah Palin cracked open the door to a presidential bid just a little bit wider Thursday, telling “Entertainment Tonight” that she would run in 2012 “if there’s nobody else to do it.”

Ms. Palin, the former governor of Alaska, spoke with Mary Hart of “Entertainment Tonight” from her home is Wasilla and told her, “I still have not decided what I’m going to do in 2012.”

“For me, Mary, it’s going to entail a discussion with my family — a real close look at the lay of the land, and to consider whether there are those with that common sense, conservative, pro-Constitution passion, whether there are already candidates out there who can do the job and I’ll get to be their biggest supporter and biggest helpmate if they will have me,” Ms. Palin said. “Or whether there’s nobody willing to do it, to make the tough choices and not care what the critics are going to say about you, just going forward according to what I believe the priorities should be. If there’s nobody else to do it, then of course I would believe that we should do this.”
Let's set the content of these statements aside for a moment and reflect on the following fact -- Sarah Palin may have unofficially announced her 2012 presidential run on Entertainment Tonight. Entertainment Tonight. This is the world we live in.

And, of course, I'm going to provide you with the video evidence. I know that you'll scoff at the notion of viewing such frivolity. But you'll probably watch anyway. Watch it for the cheesy music. Watch it to see the house that Sarah's husband "Tahd" built. Watch it to see for yourself that Mary Hart is still alive. But most of all, watch it because Sarah's words just don't quite have the same impact unless you actually hear her saying them:



Now, all joking aside, what is Ms. Palin getting at here? Well, many pundits are already pointing to former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee as the front-runner for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination. Mr. Huckabee probably comes closest to Ms. Palin in terms of values, but he also has far more political experience. So his presence is a problem for Ms. Palin's possible aspirations to the nomination.

Mr. Huckabee came out with a surprise win in the Iowa Republican caucuses in the 2008 election season before quickly fading. This trajectory poses another problem for Ms. Palin, as she would have trouble gauging her own popularity in the early going. On the other hand, she might be able to throw her hat into the ring and then quickly take it back again under such circumstances.

It's still too early to tell what 2012 has in store. But it seems quite clear that Ms. Palin would very much like to be part of the story in that election year.