Palinism: Calling the RINO bluff
posted at 4:20 pm on May 20, 2009 by CK MacLeod
In prior posts on Sarah Palin and the work in progress I call “Palinism,” I’ve tried to reserve judgment as to whether its place in our political world, its effective meaning, will have to be defined and developed by someone else and under another name. No matter how explicitly stated, however, this reservation doesn’t prevent commenters from immediately returning to tiresome, trivially personalized discussion, a game of political Mystery Date in which the media construction “Palin” is compared unfavorably to some dream bachelorette or perhaps to the steady date currently in the White House.
Yet even if assorted provocateurs, obsessives, and open political enemies just want to re-cycle Campaign ’08 video and data files, their reaction is justified in one respect: As willing as we may remain to accept some other political author if he or she comes along and gives a better presentation, Governor Palin obviously retains a political right of first refusal on Palinism. The project is hers if she wants it.
There’s new evidence that she may, indeed, be exercising her option. Her latest release at SarahPAC indicate that, at a minimum, she is working up a treatment, possibly a full-fledged script, and that she intends to be directly involved in any negotiations on the property.
The relatively short statement is worth looking at closely. I think it gives us a working outline – or good piece of it – for our rough draft.
1) Confront Obama Directly and Define Him as an Establishment Politician
The transition from Candidate Obama to President Obama has been as predictable as Alaska’s winter snow.
While aligning herself with those who never trusted Obama the nominee’s posturing as a centrist, in her opening sentence Palin also speaks to the broader suspicion of all politicians who campaign one way, and govern another. “Alaska’s winter snow” can perhaps join death, taxes, and lying politicians among the great certainties of life. Obviously, the invocation of Alaska also reminds us of who the speaker is – this woman of the open frontier, as far removed from the Obamas of the world as you can be and still remain on the same political continent.
2) Define The Issues Broadly
We are now witnessing actions that will lead to a monumental shift away from free market capitalism and the strong work ethic that built this great country.
Conservative Republicans, the so-called “base,” do not hold with the likes of Colin Powell, David Frum, David Brooks, Arnold Schwarzenegger, John Huntsman, and others, that there’s a future or even much of a purpose for a Republican Party that merely offers somewhat “less of same” against the Democratic Party. While the moderates obsessively pore over demographic studies and try to imagine tactics that would rent out “more young people, more people of color, more people who are urban-dwellers, more who are the intelligentsia in America” for whatever election day, the Palinists insist on addressing core issues which in some respects haven’t changed since the Founding, always producing two “natural parties,” if under changing names and particular justifications, around the contradiction between centralization of power and fundamental civil liberties.
It’s hard to imagine how “less of same” can rise to “monumental” challenges. In the current epoch, under actual and proposed radical expansion of the public sector and radically increased public intervention by the state, Palinists see themselves as the defenders of democratic capitalism and the American way of life, not the party of more effective midnight basketball, new PCs for the GAO, or a more intellectually elegant division of spoils.
3) Emphasize and Broaden the Fiscal Conservative Message
“Change” in this administration has meant rapid movement toward massive government growth, huge tax burdens on future generations, and an unprecedented reliance upon foreign countries.
Further to #2, but focusing on Obamanomics, on which the political fortunes of the Obama Administration and the Democratic congressional majority will tend to rest. The “unprecedented reliance upon foreign countries” may loom larger in critiques of Obamanomics as we move forward, especially as debt obligations and the potential end of the dollar as international reserve currency come into focus – and the ringing of the global financial alarm clock becomes too loud for us to ignore.
4) Concretely Explain Why Expanding Federal Government Is The Wrong Answer To Our Problems
Today, we learned that Obama’s decisions continue to impact Alaskans; while we as taxpayers now own General Motors, Obama closes another dealership – this time in Soldotna as more of Alaskans’ hard-earned money and jobs are lost to big government. Government should not be in the auto industry business. In Alaska, we have also seen a shift in federal priorities that threaten the loss of subsidized village health care services under the same candidate who led you to believe he’d insure all Americans. The inconsistent messages and actions are unsettling.
While continually returning to general principles, Palin’s statement lines up simple, comprehensible examples of why the inequity, uncertainty, and economic dislocations caused when distant DC overlords run the lives of all its far flungs slaves.
5) Fight For The Soul Of The Party
But we have another voice in Washington, DC – a man who understands what Alaskans believe: less centralized government control, restrained budgets, more opportunity for development, and fewer taxes. Today, we have a friend in RNC Chairman Michael Steele and his bold and courageous speech defines his leadership goals that will guide us all through this most difficult time for our nation.
In order to grain strategic control of the party, Palinists will need allies. Embracing Michael Steele, at a moment when the usual suspects are busily trying to undermine him, when his own early stumbles have weakened his position, but when his own feisty statements and his own well-received, Reaganite speech show he’s still got some fight in him, may turn out to be a deft political move.
Party “kingmakers,” “insiders,” and reformo “consultants” (very partial link-roll) seem hardly to have missed a chance in recent weeks to minimize Palin, pushing her down the list of important players and possible nominees, when not completely deleting her from it. A different but partly overlapping group, including some of Palin’s strongest supporters but also many of her critics and potential competitors, has been turning on Steele, scant months after his selection.
By backing Steele, Palin is calling the moderates’ and insiders’ bluff. If her party adversaries really think that they can do without her and her supporters, all they have to do now is get rid of Steele and put some faceless Crist-Huntsman-Powell “insider” in his place.
Odds favor Palin’s play on this one, I think. Consistency and honor are not strong points among the moderates, but even they would have a hard time continuing to pretend that they’re the ones in favor of a “big tent” while busily purging the Republican Party of Sarah Palin and Michael Steele, and de-funding the whole operation.
Strange things happen in politics, and best-laid schemes go far agley in a minute, but why shouldn’t it be more likely – and a stronger move, incidentally – for the party’s most charismatic and base-beloved politician to end up working shoulder to shoulder, or tag by tag, with a strengthened party chairman now finding his feet?
On the other hand, if Palin’s play somehow fails, what does she have to lose? There doesn’t seem to be much role for her anyway in a party run by and for the current crop of Republican “insiders.” If the Palinists are going to have to fight a nuclear war toe to toe for the soul of the party, then why not get it over with earlier rather than later?
As for the wanna-be realists, maybe they’ll finally get real, and either start working with the team, or change uniforms and be done with it.
This post was promoted from GreenRoom to HotAir.com.
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Great post. I agree with many liberal points. But big govt isn’t the solution.
She’s on the right track.
AnninCA on May 20, 2009 at 4:22 PM
The�formatting�It�hurts�my�eyes�
lorien1973 on May 20, 2009 at 4:22 PM
I love that woman!
JamesLee on May 20, 2009 at 4:22 PM
anna, remember when you said all she talks about is abortion?
ousoonerfan15 on May 20, 2009 at 4:24 PM
hmmm,
every “liberal point” is rooted in big government because every “liberal point” needs the government in order to be accomplished. Either through judicial activism or Congressional acts, the very foundation of “liberal points” is big government
joey24007 on May 20, 2009 at 4:24 PM
Ck how do you turn on Steele, when you never supported him to begin with?
As soon as Steele does something incredibly stupid… Sarah may just drop him. On his head.
upinak on May 20, 2009 at 4:25 PM
Palin is one spoke on the future wheel of the republican party. Glad to hear from her. Now that the AK legislature is in recess, she can politic the way she wants.
I think Palin REALLY gets under Obama’s skin. He can’t even say her name.
portlandon on May 20, 2009 at 4:26 PM
After 100 days D.C. needs her cleanup more than ever.
seven on May 20, 2009 at 4:26 PM
Yes, I I’d almost bet that she won’t win me over due to that strident position she’s taken.
She’s scared me off.
But, I do agree with other parts about her platform, for sure.
It always comes down to choices when voting. I vote in all elections, even the ones others find boring.
I never vote thinking I’ve found the “answer.”
This particular slant?
I doubt she’ll ever win me over now.
But we’ll see.
AnninCA on May 20, 2009 at 4:28 PM
I look forward to hearing much more from her. I also agree this is a canny move, to criticize Obama directly and play up Steele while others are trying to run him out of his job. Steele will probably survive, and will owe a political debt to Palin at that time.
Some may not like that pragmatic reality, but politics ain’t beanbag.
And, if Steele does something (else?) dumb enough to actually lose his post, Palin would have a publicly justifiable reason to withdraw her support.
cs89 on May 20, 2009 at 4:30 PM
Why they fear her.
seymour on May 20, 2009 at 4:31 PM
By the time 2010 rolls around SO many things will become clear about these tax and spend statists. No one who is on the fence will be turned off by our conservative agenda. The moderates will come to us.
marklmail on May 20, 2009 at 4:31 PM
OT: Liz Cheney was on Cavuto. I don’t know much about her, and I certainly like Palin–but what are the strikes agains Liz Cheney?
Are there reasons why we shouldn’t be seeing more of Liz Cheney, at least as one of a number of voices?
BuckeyeSam on May 20, 2009 at 4:34 PM
……. sitting on a bear skin rug, next to a fire, with a rifle in reach, a flask of whiskey and an inviting smile also comes to the mind’s eye.
Seven Percent Solution on May 20, 2009 at 4:34 PM
Wow! Solid, snark-free analysis of Sarah Palin’s future. Thanks for the needed break, Mr. MacLeod. Hope to see more of you on Hot Air’s front page.
L.N. Smithee on May 20, 2009 at 4:34 PM
Highlander, don’t mean Palinism will have to be redifined?
Because, it has already been defined……by Kylon of Croton.
Palinism already has a meaning, the idea that all men are created equal….without acknowledging differences in genetic or memetic inheritance.
Like Posner says, the idea that will is a substitute for intellect.
From the Horse’s Mouth.
strangelet on May 20, 2009 at 4:34 PM
I’d like her start to hit on the consequences of big gov’t,regarding issues like health-care and energy.
I’d like to see her show up at a Rubio fundraiser.
Iblis on May 20, 2009 at 4:35 PM
Do we have to read all that garbage for a simple Sarah post?
promachus on May 20, 2009 at 4:35 PM
As you usual Sarah Palin’s timing is impeccable and her ability to get to the heart of the issue of the day is unparalleled.
Read the statement closely. It is the affirmation of a team player and a demonstration of Sarah’s ability to read the tea leaves and again prove that she is a major player in national politics as long as she wants to be.
technopeasant on May 20, 2009 at 4:36 PM
By “strident”, which do you mean, grating or shrill and irritating?
CC
CapedConservative on May 20, 2009 at 4:36 PM
I hope she runs for senate. I’ve been asking again and again, which state does she reside in? When can we draft her?
promachus on May 20, 2009 at 4:37 PM
liz cheney NEEDS to be at the forefront of republican leaders. She is EXTREMELY intelligent and like Palin she is very easy on the eyes.
ousoonerfan15 on May 20, 2009 at 4:37 PM
Explain this to me. Strident about what? Do you believe that if she’s elected and a woman wants an abortion that she’ll throw the woman in jail.
Specifically, what’s your problem with her? I think the “stridency” criticism is a canard.
BuckeyeSam on May 20, 2009 at 4:38 PM
good post. I’ve been a fan of the gov for a little over year but I’ve been wanting to hear her speak more on the issues. She’s definitely on the right track
youngO on May 20, 2009 at 4:39 PM
Well, she works for Mit Romney on his Campaign.
Wanna know more?
upinak on May 20, 2009 at 4:39 PM
CK
Palin is a RINO if Huntsman is a RINO.
Huntsman is a tax lowering very good social con.
Palin has supported civil union rights, and huntsman says he wants too.
PrezHussein on May 20, 2009 at 4:39 PM
Yesterday I questioned whether Michael Steele can become a consistent performer. Hopefully, with Sarah’s support he will not have to hedge on conservatism and continue to speak clearly as Sarah Palin always does when she advances her positions against Obama.
technopeasant on May 20, 2009 at 4:41 PM
Thanks for the response. I’m finding her hard not to like. Aside from her dad, she may be the toughest conservative out there. I’d love to see her debate some of these “prominent” dimwit Dems. No contest.
BuckeyeSam on May 20, 2009 at 4:42 PM
I said back in February that the only one who could save Michael Steele was Sarah Palin. Turns out I was right.
Is there any doubt whatsoever that this woman is now the De Facto leader of the Conservative Movement? She is also a shoe-in for the GOP nomination in 2012 if she chooses to run. Noone else comes even close.
Norwegian on May 20, 2009 at 4:42 PM
LMFAO! She vetoed a Gay Marriage bill and told them that civil unions were ok.
Do you see a problem with that? Vetoing a Gay Marriage bill? I sure don’t see any problems with that!
upinak on May 20, 2009 at 4:43 PM
There is no such thing as Palinism: Only a tranparent attempt to wrap the so-called conservative agenda in the guise of someone perceived as a slightly better messenger than the usual piners-for-Reagan.
If you take the ideas away from Palin as messenger you’re left with little other than the complaints of a demographic out of power and unlikely to regain it anytime soon.
Before you’re granted your own -ism, you’ve got to at least understand and articulate clearly what you stand for. Has she really done that?
sanguine4 on May 20, 2009 at 4:43 PM
upinak on May 20, 2009 at 4:39 PM
Liz Cheney also started out as one of 3 national co-chairs for the Fred Thompson campaign, then joined the Romney team well before Palin was announced as VP.
Not sure where her loyalty ultimately lies. I could see her going with Palin in the right circumstances, but she may be a Romney booster. From what I’ve seen, I think she’s smart and a straight shooter, with a good foreign policy mind.
cs89 on May 20, 2009 at 4:43 PM
Palin Rocks!
Firebird on May 20, 2009 at 4:44 PM
Great post, CK. Thanks.
mikeyboss on May 20, 2009 at 4:44 PM
Yeah joey is right… but I would also add that almost everyone “agrees” with liberals. It would be great if we lived in a pretend world where nobody is unhappy….
But the real world simply doesn’t work the way liberals try to make it.
petunia on May 20, 2009 at 4:44 PM
Given the pool of talent available, I don’t believe that’s an indictable offense. McCain, Romney, Huckabee, Rudy, et al., I’m getting ill listing them. They all had warts.
BuckeyeSam on May 20, 2009 at 4:45 PM
Great analysis of Governor Palin’s statement! Once again, Palin gets to the heart of the matter without talking in circles or using big flowery words to make her point. She’s the meat & potatoes to Obama’s Wagyu beef and arugala.
Redneck Woman on May 20, 2009 at 4:45 PM
Don’t get me wrong, I do LIKE Liz. But the Romeny thing has me at a stand still with her.
So I will wait and see where she lands next.
upinak on May 20, 2009 at 4:45 PM
The Cuda strikes again.
NebCon on May 20, 2009 at 4:47 PM
Whoever CK MacLeod is and he wrote the above, to him/her I say “Suck the bone; who cares what you think!”.
I am sending all my political donations to Palin and I am promoting her to everyone I know who has money to do the same.
jarhead0311 on May 20, 2009 at 4:47 PM
Buck totally understand. But remember Huntsman was standing with McCain…. look where he is now.
It makes me wonder what the altering motives of people, who stand behind the “Candidates”.
upinak on May 20, 2009 at 4:47 PM
Me too.
Mr/Ms Webmaster. If you want tips on how to fix this before posting the stories, just email me at the email address I used to register.
Daggett on May 20, 2009 at 4:47 PM
Palin will gather all conservatives together into the GOP tent in her own charming way.
Michael Steele must support her now.
Who’s next?
faraway on May 20, 2009 at 4:48 PM
upinak on May 20, 2009 at 4:45 PM
Fair enough. As an early Fredhead, that part of her history endears her to me. Also heard a bit awhile back about some connections between the Thompson and Palin camps, but haven’t heard much lately.
I think Palin is (wisely) making a few quiet connections, but being careful not too draw a lot of attention to any relationships she has with a lot of national GOP figures. The Steele statement is a good place to start, IMO.
cs89 on May 20, 2009 at 4:48 PM
Okay, sorry to talk about Palin’s stand on abortion, but…..
Look, I have only heard of Gov. Palin’s opinion on abortion. I don’t think I’ve ever heard her calling for criminalizing it. I don’t believe government should fund it, promote it, but simply because I value life, doesn’t mean I think a woman should be jailed for it. If this is her personal opinion, why are so many afraid of her for it? Can’t one disagree without being demonized for it? Don’t answer that because I already know what you’ll say.
I just can’t understand what Gov. Palin has said on the issue of abortion that is so threatening. Have I missed something?
pjean on May 20, 2009 at 4:48 PM
That makes Huntsman and Palin exactly the same on the issue. Yet Huntsman is a Republican in Name Only and Palin is what? Both politicians are right or wrong. But one cannot be right and the other wrong.
petunia on May 20, 2009 at 4:49 PM
Only an idiot or a person who had been like Rip Van Winkle in the last 8 and 1/2 months could accuse Sarah Palin of being a RINO. Give me a break. That’s like saying the Messiah is a JFK liberal.
Get serious. Sarah Palin is a Reagan conservative. Two weeks ago Rush Limbaugh gave Sarah Palin a semi-endorsement by saying he liked her based on what she said during the camapign and how she said it. Rush Limbaugh would never express these sentiments towards a RINO.
technopeasant on May 20, 2009 at 4:50 PM
You know what works well for that?
Dr.Cwac.Cwac on May 20, 2009 at 4:50 PM
Did Huntsman veto a Gay Marriage Bill?
upinak on May 20, 2009 at 4:50 PM
“She’s scared me off.”
AnninCA on May 20, 2009 at 4:28 PM
I think she scares people because many people don’t know who they are so they look at Palin as the oddball.
The irony is that more people should be afraid of Barack Obama than of Sarah Palin. But because their knowledge of both is based on little more than what the MSM tells them without digging just a little further, the opposite is true.
VibrioCocci on May 20, 2009 at 4:50 PM
And…the RINOs aren’t bluffing.
They see what you refuse to acknowledge.
If Palin runs, you will lose.
Last one out, turn off the lights!
strangelet on May 20, 2009 at 4:50 PM
Liberal issues? Liberals are supposed to be about never trusting the govt. Like Mark Levin has so correctly called them, they are Statists.
The hippies of the 60′s would have never put up Obama. The problem is the hippies of the 60′s cut their hair and entered politics. They joined the Democrat party and suddenly changed their tune, they figure if they are in charge, then it’s different. Boy are they wrong.
jeffn21 on May 20, 2009 at 4:51 PM
petunia on May 20, 2009 at 4:49 PM
I think Huntsman’s recent job change should also be part of this comparison. Don’t you agree?
cs89 on May 20, 2009 at 4:51 PM
Palin is becoming divisive and it isn’t her. It is her supporters. Closed minded people are very difficult to agree with.
petunia on May 20, 2009 at 4:51 PM
You’re impossible. The other day you were going on and on about tea party crowd and Sarah’s begun to address their concerns and you cavil again.
promachus on May 20, 2009 at 4:52 PM
I see it as a patriot act and a loss for the party and proof that this party is a very narrow minded group.
petunia on May 20, 2009 at 4:52 PM
Thanks for the warning. We’ll take our chance, now shoot.
promachus on May 20, 2009 at 4:53 PM
upinak on May 20, 2009 at 4:43 PM
Huntsman does not support Gay Marriage
Huntsman should not be maligned as a RINO
PrezHussein on May 20, 2009 at 4:53 PM
I agree, liberals who refuse to listen to conservative arguments without dismissing them out of hand are quite infuriating.
cs89 on May 20, 2009 at 4:53 PM
Am I closed minded because I am tired of Fake people, petunia?
Or maybe it is the fact that even when I bring up items concerning Palin that are true… someone always tries to compare her. Why is that? She isn’t like anyone else on the scene…. at all. Nothing and no one. But then Neither is Romney nor Huck… whom I can’t stand but do not hate.
upinak on May 20, 2009 at 4:53 PM
This seems to be a good start at Sarah Palin defining herself and her policy proposals as a contrast to Obama’s big-government socialism.
Sarah Palin was virtually unknown before August 2008, then burst upon the scene with a wonderful speech, but seemed unprepared for the media onslaught against her and her family. She was also hampered by the need to distance herself and McCain from the unpopular President Bush.
She now has 3 1/2 years to present a coherent set of policy proposals, and compare herself, not to Bush or McCain but Obama, who will be blamed for whatever is wrong in 2012. By then, if she is re-elected Governor in 2010, and sharpens her position on key national issues in opposition to Obama, she may represent “change you can believe in”.
Steve Z on May 20, 2009 at 4:53 PM
Amazing, ain’t it? We have someone who wants to follow the ‘rules’ and others who don’t and the rule follower is unworthy. Only in this America of the Looking Glass are the unworthy set out as an example of being deserving.
Limerick on May 20, 2009 at 4:53 PM
Would you be happy to chase all the Mormons to China?
petunia on May 20, 2009 at 4:54 PM
Comedy right there.
faraway on May 20, 2009 at 4:54 PM
Answer the question.
HAS Huntsman, whom is now an OBAMABOT, vetoed a Gay Marriage bill?
Yes or NO!
upinak on May 20, 2009 at 4:55 PM
Whatever dries the tears, darlin’, whatever dries the tears.
ladyingray on May 20, 2009 at 4:55 PM
Some issues on the right (e.g., outlawing abortion, war on drugs) require substantial government spending.
dedalus on May 20, 2009 at 4:55 PM
Hey, I’m a man who wants to believe that there are a lot of smart, conservative women ready to step into the ring. If they make the Charlie Crists and Lindsey Grahams uncomfortable, tough. I’d just like to see more conservative women getting into the faces of the Nancy Pelosis, Maxine Waters, Claire McCaskills, and Jennifer What’s-her-name (Michigan governor) of the world.
BuckeyeSam on May 20, 2009 at 4:55 PM
Limerick on May 20, 2009 at 4:53 PM
+1
VibrioCocci on May 20, 2009 at 4:55 PM
AnninCA’s credibility has taken a beating today…
ladyingray on May 20, 2009 at 4:56 PM
I see the mention of Sarah Palin has brought out all the trolls and moonbats.
HornetSting on May 20, 2009 at 4:58 PM
When did she ever HAVE any credibility?
HornetSting on May 20, 2009 at 4:58 PM
Yes, it has. Can’t believe I wasted so much time on her.
lol.
promachus on May 20, 2009 at 5:00 PM
upinak on May 20, 2009 at 4:55 PM
Huntsman Voted to ban Gay Marriage by Constitutional Amendment
PrezHussein on May 20, 2009 at 5:02 PM
Norweigan on May 20, 2009 at 4:42 PM
Sarah Palin is becoming like EF Hutton or GOP politics: when she speaks everyone listens.
Where many members of the establishment wanted to hang Steele out to dry, Sarah stands up for the beleaguered leader of the party. Watch RNC donations go up now.
By the way does anybody out there think that the reason that Sarah could throw Steele such a bone is because perhaps SarahPAC is doing far better than expected.
technopeasant on May 20, 2009 at 5:02 PM
Palin Power!
DanaSmiles on May 20, 2009 at 5:02 PM
You shut your mouth Petunia!!! sorry had to =) Hee Hee.
seriously though, SOME Palin supporters are a little rough around the edges. I can be nice, or nasty. If someone comes into the conversation calling Palin an idiot, be prepared for the claws. I think some civility among conservatives needs to happen, I support Romney,Jindal,Sanford etc. on different issues. As a whole I support Palin. If she doesn’t win the nomination, we got a deep bench with some good candidates. 2012 can’t come fast enough.
portlandon on May 20, 2009 at 5:03 PM
OMFG!
Dude, either stop humping his leg and show me some proof positive stuff or just stuff it!
I can show you the Bill that Palin Vetoed. So give it UP already!
upinak on May 20, 2009 at 5:03 PM
What? No, why?
Huntsman will probably be very effective. He did destroy any credibility as a Conservative by taking a job with the Obama administration (IMHO).
If the question is whether he is a “Republican In Name Only,” I personally think taking a job with this Democratic administration offers a very clear answer.
cs89 on May 20, 2009 at 5:04 PM
She hasn’t said anything threatening. I suspect her personal decision on Trig has made some folks uncomfortable. I’m a lot more concerned about her comments on illegal immigration than abortion. I’m hoping she was just supporting the McCain program because she had to, but still,… Other than that, I could easily slip into the groupie column.
a capella on May 20, 2009 at 5:05 PM
CK MacLeod and Allahpundit
have brought out the trolls by making an article about Palin vs other Repulicans
Huntsman has the same record as Palin, but he is compared to Colin Powell, David Frum, David Brooks, Arnold Schwarzenegger
Ridiculous
PrezHussein on May 20, 2009 at 5:05 PM
He hates her b/c she called him for what he is – an AA candidate with no experience that’s a Marxist to the core. His hesitation (and annoyance) to address her statements at the RNC showed (at least to me) that she’d hit a nerve. She showed how to take Obama down (so did Cheney recently) – by hitting him with facts and cutting through all of his lofty BS and finally calling him for what he is.Finally, and perhaps most importantly, she showed that Obama has a very thin skin and will not do well under continuous scrutiny/ridicule. At some point he’ll come unglued if the oppos hammer him enough.
Many of Obama’s plans won’t work and he can be defeated if the Repub’s have the stones to pull a “Palin” and label his actions appropriately. I still think that Obama will end up being a bigger tragedy than Carter and that he’ll have a very hard time in 2012. We’ll see I guess.
volnation on May 20, 2009 at 5:05 PM
…..comes to the minds eye….
Seven Percent Solution on May 20,2009 at 4:34PM.
Seven Percent Solution: And the Cessna 172 on floats,
at the end of the dock,in front
of the cabin:):)
canopfor on May 20, 2009 at 5:05 PM
You are just showing the Huntsman leg tingle.
upinak on May 20, 2009 at 5:06 PM
If you are a conservative or a Reagan conservative what more do you need than a semi-endorsement of Sarah Palin by Rush Limbaugh and glowing praise from Ronald Reagan’s son, Michael!
technopeasant on May 20, 2009 at 5:08 PM
Wow, getalife’s BBQ grill showed up.
Don’t count your chickens before they hatch, kid.
In case you missed it, here in NH our Democrat-controlled House just voted down gay marriage.
http://www.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUSTRE54J6BK20090520
Del Dolemonte on May 20, 2009 at 5:08 PM
Huntsman didn’t have to veto a gay marriage bill because the “fake” conservatives in Utah wouldn’t send him one.
I don’t know that much about Huntsman but I do know that his position is exactly the same as Palin’s on civil unions as a humane compromise yet Palin is still considered a genuine conservative and Huntsman a “fake” one.
I hope Huntsman does good for my country, America, in China. Because people who should be his allies here at home are too far too closed minded allow him to serve outside of Utah.
petunia on May 20, 2009 at 5:10 PM
I think he destroyed all credibility as a conservative when he pulled his “if you oppose the stimulus, you’re just being a partisan brat” routine. Taking a job from Bambi was just the icing on the RINO cake.
ZJPolitical on May 20, 2009 at 5:10 PM
Proud “Palinista” here.
Let me state up front that I’m not one that thinks Palin HAS TO BE the nominee in 2012.
And let me also state that I have no problem with moderates in the GOP – though I will never again personally vote for a candidate either equal to, or to the left of McCain. I also shed no tears for Arlen Specter’s departure and I’d like to see Snowe and Collins go too. Not because they are moderate – but because in the biggest vote of their careers they sided with the Democrats to sell my kids into the slavery of a crushing national debt.
Rudy Giuliani is a Republican – and a moderate – I love Rudy – Rudy is good with me. You can’t say I’m an extremist who isn’t tolerant of other views.
The problem I have right now is that RINO’s – people who don’t give a damn about this party are trying to excommunicate it’s own base. What folks like Megan McCain and David Frum and Colin Powell are doing – is very analogous to a doctor ripping the heart out of a patient while proclaiming he’s trying to save him. The GOP’s natural base are Conservatives. RINO’s are idiots.
I also have a problem with the GOP ELITE. They’ve wasted no opportunity to dump on Palin either outright – or in some snide manner that they can later deny.
There is a battle going on, it’s called THE BATTLE OF SARAH PALIN. At the core of that battle is a conservative woman was minding her own business when she was asked to save the flailing Presidential hopes of a “moderate” Republican nominee. She put her heart and soul into the task and electrified the campaign as none other in my almost 50 years of life. She turned a surefire “disgraceful beating” at the polls into an “honorable loss” for McCain. She did all of that for us …
But because she is who she is – the Pro-Life mother of a down syndrome child – and because she holds conservative opinions (which she’s never, ever thrown into anyone’s face by the way) – and most importantly – because is SHE IS SO GOOD AT WHAT SHE DOES AND COMMUNICATING OUR IDEAS – she has been marked for TERMINATION by the left. They aren’t just trying to destroy her politically – but personally.
And the GOP elite seem content to allow her to suffer the wrath of the left and drive-by media until there is nothing left of her.
I will not leave her out on the battlefield like that. That is NOT what a GOOD REPUBLICAN does. ALL Palinistas feel this way.
And I’d be good if I could just see SOME INDICATION that the GOP ELITE will not leave her on that battlefield. If I could see that – then I’d be much less critical of the GOP Elites and more willing to discuss with them the future of this party. No – Sarah Palin doesn’t have to lead this party – but she has to be rescued from the left and her ideas (our ideas) need to be listened to and given the attention they deserve.
Not sluffed off – which is what the elites are doing now. If they don’t change – I’ll support a third party CONSERVATIVE ticket next time around and they can see how well the GOP does with it’s heart ripped out.
HondaV65 on May 20, 2009 at 5:10 PM
Seven Percent Solution on May 20, 2009 at 5:11 PM
I sincerely hope conservatives will continue to promote Palin as the future of the republican party.
Constantine on May 20, 2009 at 5:11 PM
Doesn’t cost a dime to simply STOP funding abortions.
CC
CapedConservative on May 20, 2009 at 5:11 PM
You know Petunia, for some Governors who are supposedly EXACTLY the same. I don’t see any “Conservative” Gov.’s whom are jumping up and down for being picked via a Socialist to do their work.
Do YOU see a problem with this?
I sure do.
upinak on May 20, 2009 at 5:11 PM
I have yet to meet a liberal who has either will or intellect.
1) Global Warming. There’s something wrong with denying something that doesn’t exist?
2) What’s wrong with using religious criteria to judge a person?
3) “the neglect of management and expertise in government”
This from someone who backs Obama. Now that’s rich.
MarkTheGreat on May 20, 2009 at 5:13 PM
Wow I was holding out for her to appear on a cereal box. What more do we need indeed? Maybe applying some brainpower and looking carefully at a candidate and all they stand for. Can’t happen in 20 seconds so I assume most people pass on that.
dpierson on May 20, 2009 at 5:13 PM
Then your appraisal of what it means to be a Republican needs to be rethought. Being a Republican means you are an American first.
It isn’t about whether Obama fails… it is about whether the country fails to stay on solid ground with the one country who is holding all our debt!
Would a true American really turn down that assignment because of some close minded “Republicans” might dislike it?
I am an American first.
petunia on May 20, 2009 at 5:13 PM
volnation on May 20, 2009 at 5:05 PM
That’s one reason why I want to see her on the stage debating him rather than anyone off the bench. I don’t doubt that our other contenders can debate and beat Obama; it’s just that she adds the extra element of rattling him just by being there. I honestly believe she can make him lose his infamous faux coolness and expose the cruelness and anger that resides in him.
Hillary came very close to it during their debates, but Sarah can unmask him for all the world to see.
yogi41 on May 20, 2009 at 5:14 PM
steele and palin together… a match made in (Democratic) Heaven!
benny shakar on May 20, 2009 at 5:14 PM
upinak on May 20, 2009 at 5:11 PM
If Palin was called on by her President to be an ambassador to China, assuming she had any qualifications for such a call… would she really say, “No I’m too good of a Republican to serve my country.”
petunia on May 20, 2009 at 5:15 PM
Huntsman ran in 2004 saying he would vote for the ban on gay marriage at the polls while running as governor.
Campaigning with voting for the amendment as one of your positions is good social conservative support.
I would support anyone who supported a constitutional amendment against gay marriage.
I do not like civil unions, but the majority does.
PrezHussein on May 20, 2009 at 5:16 PM
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