Examiner vs Examiner on Palin
posted at 12:05 pm on July 6, 2009 by Ed Morrissey
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Ever since Sarah Palin announced her resignation from office, conservatives have debated on the merits of the choice, including in the lengthy comment threads at Hot Air. Even the Washington Examiner, one of the leading new lights of conservative media, has found itself at odds internally over Palin’s actions. Editorial page editor and longtime conservative stalwart Mark Tapscott says that conventional wisdom cannot explain Palin:
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin’s announcement of her resignation cannot be read in terms of the conventional wisdom of politics - i.e. that she’s getting out ahead of some damaging political revelation she knows is right around the corner, she’s fed up with the constant personal attacks on her and her family, or she’s running for president in 2012 and wants to be free of the constraints of office.
A close reading of her actual words in her announcement reveals otherwise. The key fact about Palin is that she is not a conventional politician. She actually means what she says, which is why her statement must be read in light of that fact, not that she has ulterior motives. …
Palin is embarking on an independent path in nationa politics that, if she is successful, will lead to a new third force. Not necessarily a third party, but definitely a populist insurrection that could reshape American politics for years to come. Does the Tea Party Protests movement come to mind?
Prisoners of conventional wisdom almost certainly will miss the significance of Palin’s decision. But they’ve never understood why she struck such a powerful chord with everyday Americans in 2008, so we ought not be surprised that this announcement is [completely] beyond their ability to understand what is really happening.
Chris Stirewalt, the political editor at the Examiner, says that Tapscott’s missing the point. Palin’s problem has been the incessant drama, and that this only adds to her credibility problem with the majority of the electorate:
Sarah Palin learned a lot of things in her time as John McCain’s running mate — about the savagery of the media; about the duplicity of politicos; about her own gifts as a politician.
But she did not learn the most important lesson of 2008: no drama. …
David Letterman’s gross, unfunny joke about Palin’s teenage daughter, the ongoing skirmish among the former McCainiacs and the frivolous ethics complaints against her by Democratic hacks are all just part of life for Palin these days. But rather than rising above the squalor, Palin has fully engaged on each point. She stayed in the headlines blasting washed-up Letterman for days, continued to dish about the failings of McCain’s campaign and quit office blaming the ethics complaints for her departure.
There is always a lot of sound and fury around Palin, but does it signify anything other than her status as a celebrity?
Michael Barone, who is, well, Michael Barone, just throws his hands in the air:
I was astonished by Sarah Palin’s announcement that she is going to resign as Governor of Alaska. I’ve read over her “point guard” explanation for doing so, and I still don’t get it. She’s says he going to advance the causes she believes in by leaving public office? She will evidently leave office with only 16 months to go in her term (she says she’ll resign July 26 and Alaska governors take office in December); why not serve out the 16 months? It’s not that long a time. …
Some are hailing her resignation as a political masterstroke. I’m just puzzled. How does resigning as governor strengthen her as a presidential candidate?
All of these have elements of the truth. If all Palin wants to be is a speaker and activist, then her resignation as governor of Alaska won’t hurt her at all. Thanks to her notoriety, Palin will attract crowds and media wherever she goes and whatever she does. If she chooses to be chair of the Tea Party Movement, I suspect most would be happy to grant her the title, and she’d be effective at it.
If, however, Palin wants to pursue national office rather than just be an activist for the rest of her life, her resignation will prove a very messy hurdle. Alaskans trusted her with their higher office on the assumption that she would take it seriously enough to complete the term. Voters would have understood if she had to resign in January to become Vice President, but because — in her own words — she didn’t want to deal with governing as a “lame duck.” The first question in any campaign debate for Palin from now on will be, “Will you quit in the middle of a presidential term if you get disenchanted or get ethics complaints filed against you?”
Palin’s supporters might think that resigning is a brilliant strategic stroke, but those are by far not enough to get her elected President, as the last election pretty clearly showed. Palin needed to build a sober resumé as an executive, someone who could show that the media had her all wrong — someone, as Stirewalt points out, could have her substance eclipse her celebrity. Palin needed to build a broader base, not narrow it down to the true believers, and she had an opportunity to do that by finishing out her term in the tough conditions of an economic downturn. Instead, she resigned to leverage her celebrity, which will not convince current non-believers and political agnostics of her substance. Instead, it gives them even more reason to distrust Palin.
In the end, perhaps the two sides of the Palin debate have talked past each other for the last few days. If Palin wants to be freed up to give speeches and focus on the faithful, her resignation will not dim those possibilities at all. If she plans to advance in national office, though, she has to address the “conventional” as well as the unconventional to win national office, and resigning halfway through a first term is no way to go about it.
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Waits for all hell to break loose.
upinak on July 6, 2009 at 12:07 PM
Every time you doubt the wisdom of Sarah Palin’s sudden resignation, Satan strangles a puppy to death.
Please, think of the puppies.
MadisonConservative on July 6, 2009 at 12:07 PM
Why don’t they just take a wait and see attitude?
roux on July 6, 2009 at 12:09 PM
That’s what makes Palin so irresistible.
Daggett on July 6, 2009 at 12:10 PM
Excuse me, but Obama hobnobbing with unrepentant terrorists didn’t stop him.
You forget. Americans don’t know what happened last week, much less years ago.
Aquateen Hungerforce on July 6, 2009 at 12:10 PM
And the real question to ask if she plans to advance in national office- Is she the right person with the right skills to undo the mess that we are watch Obama and his henchmen make of this nation. In July 2009 the answer to that question is a resounding NO! You don’t fix untested socialist inexperience with untested conservative inexperience.
highhopes on July 6, 2009 at 12:10 PM
I’m actually torn between the two. I’m afraid Ed is right on this, but I would still vote for her tomorrow if I could. As I said before, it might be my ‘Cuda colored glasses, but if there is anyone out there today that can actually succeed with something so unconventional, it would be her with the strong base and adoration she commands.
JamesLee on July 6, 2009 at 12:11 PM
ed, I think we should just wait and see what Sarah’s next real plan
ousoonerfan15 on July 6, 2009 at 12:12 PM
Exactly how could Palin have built a “broader base” if everytime she tried to set foot outside of Alaska to speak or participate in anything non-Alaskan she got ethics complaints filed against her?
katiejane on July 6, 2009 at 12:12 PM
Like Ed, Barone didn’t pay a lick of attention to what she said. If they had, they’d know why. If this is the most competence
weyou can muster, RIP conservatism. Been nice knowing you.Darth Executor on July 6, 2009 at 12:12 PM
Can’t we just hide and watch instead of beating this to death. Because, guess what, none of us knows.
Cindy Munford on July 6, 2009 at 12:12 PM
I’m with Barone on this one. I could see some supporters of Palin even arguing it is a great strategy if she showed up on a reality television show.
Vashta.Nerada on July 6, 2009 at 12:13 PM
uh?
Phoenician on July 6, 2009 at 12:13 PM
1. Arkansas’ electorate of 1990 is on the phone. They don’t give a flip that Billy Jeff BROKE HIS PROMISE and ran for president, and then became president.
2. So Ed, is “Alaska GOvernor” an important office or not??? How many times have we read from Dems and the RINO illuminati that “she has no experience, just the governor of alaska”. NOW the RINOS are immolating that she left the God-like post of Alaska governor.
IS THE ALASKA GOVERNOR’S OFFICE = KING OF THE WORLD or CHIMNEY SWEEP???? WHICH IS IT, RINOS???? MAKE UP YOUR SILVER-SPOONED MINDS!!!!!!
battleoflepanto1571 on July 6, 2009 at 12:13 PM
“Ever since”? It’s been, what, 2 1/2 days? Going on 3?
The race to be the first pundit who Can See Sarah Palin’s Future In His/Her Crystal Ball is a little embarrassing.
I agree with roux’s 12:09 commment. Let’s wait and see.
Missy on July 6, 2009 at 12:13 PM
OT – I was browsing the delightful hate filled huffy-poo and the commenters are discussing organizing a legal fund for WILLIAM AYERS so that he can defend himself against defamation, too. I kid you not.
GUILTY AS HELL, FREE AS A BIRD – liberalism is a disease with no cure (well, there is a cure, but I would get banned for posting it) – God help us all.
Ris4victory on July 6, 2009 at 12:14 PM
Yep. The last election proved that someone with no experience couldn’t possibly get elected.
So the media, right and left, now gets to proscribe the elements of qualification? Both sides would have more gravitas in their current opinions if they had done a better job during the last election. More manipulation.
genso on July 6, 2009 at 12:14 PM
How is there any other choice? This speculation is going to make many people look like asses, and likely no one will have it right. We need to wait and either trust SP or not, but we’ll find out when we find out.
zeebeach on July 6, 2009 at 12:14 PM
Have we gotten to the point that we no longer believe anything that anybody says? Must we think that they are always hiding something or have an agenda? Palin has always been pretty blunt and straight forward in the past; why doubt her now?
Luthien on July 6, 2009 at 12:15 PM
Except most Americans didn’t hear that the guy was rubbing elbows with bombmakers. However, most heard that Sarah Palin didn’t know Africa was a continent. Hell, I had to clarify to two of my conservative friends a few days ago that that particular incident was a hoax. They thought it was simply part of the Katie Couric interview.
MadisonConservative on July 6, 2009 at 12:15 PM
Than the pundits wold not be punditating.
Que Sera Sera was ment to be, its gonna be
WashJeff on July 6, 2009 at 12:15 PM
Another Palin thread.
**face palm**
You are a glutton for punishment Ed. Keep up the good work.
Knucklehead on July 6, 2009 at 12:15 PM
Good point, the federal bureaucracy is a multi-trillion dollar byzantine mess that requires patience and deal-making to reshape.
dedalus on July 6, 2009 at 12:15 PM
Sigh…………..
R E P E A T A F T E R M E R I N O S
1. Only Alaska has an insane ethics law that lets anyone sue any govt official
2. Palin spent 80% of her time in court with ethics laws
3. That’s no way to run a state, and nothing got done for Alaska
4. Palin realized Alaska was hurting by the lawsuits, and she could also do more for the GOP as unelected
WHY IS THE GOP NOT SAYING THESE TALKING POINTS
battleoflepanto1571 on July 6, 2009 at 12:15 PM
And you don’t win elections with gawd awful boring droning from candidates who no one is interested in or from positionless candidates who try and outpander the Dems.
katiejane on July 6, 2009 at 12:15 PM
You’re missing the obvious reality here: She can NOT “build a sober resumé as an executive, someone who could show that the media had her all wrong” in Alaska. That ship has sailed because the people filing the ethics complaints have turned the governor’s office into a circus, and there is nothing she can do about it. She wouldn’t be viewed as a capable executive if she finished her term. She would be viewed as the most controversial governor ever (probably have 100+ ethics complaints by then… all frivolous, and all defeated, but still there).
She’s been dealt a crappy hand. She made a decision to get out of that hole and define herself. We’ll see if it works.
BPD on July 6, 2009 at 12:16 PM
Conventional wisdom doesn’t apply in unconventional times. Our present national crisis is unprecedented. Why should anyone think the cure will be according to old standards? She’s thinking outside the box,..something that apparently dumfounds pundits and bloggers. It’s gotta be frustrating trying to play catch up.
a capella on July 6, 2009 at 12:16 PM
So … you’re saying that this is the first question asked in any campaign debate for someone any politician who spent time in one office campaigning for another (which includes a huge percentage of politicians) or if they left one office early because they actually won another office?
Didn’t Shrillary promise, over and over, to complete her Senate term? Did The Precedent ever finish (or even start to work) at any of his political positions?
Why would this be the first question for Palin but no others?
Palin explained in her resignation speech that her administration had completed the promises she made campaigning for the position (which immediately puts her in a different class from the other politicians who did not complete anything, even when serving to the end of their terms) and she is turning Alaska’s Executive over to her Lt. Governor who will carry on with no interruptions.
Why does Palin rate a different standard, in this respect, than every other politician?
Why have so many failed to see her broadsides against The Precedent and his junta in her speech? (This is the strangest aspect of this whole event)
progressoverpeace on July 6, 2009 at 12:17 PM
Wait. And. See.
Why is that so hard to do?
MikeA on July 6, 2009 at 12:18 PM
Or we could take this advise:
http://www.moviesoundclips.net/misc1/americanpolitics/kennedy1.wav
Jeff from WI on July 6, 2009 at 12:18 PM
Exactly. Change the rules since she was going nowhere playing in the box she was forced into.
genso on July 6, 2009 at 12:18 PM
If every minute of my life were being scrutinized and I had numerous people and entities who didn’t like what I represented because I threatened their bread and butter, yes, I’d probably have my share of “drama” as well. She invites “drama” by simply being Sarah Palin. Some who do not like Palin would call the least interesting tasks or actions, “drama”. Her mere presence is “drama”. How does any one person, let alone someone with a family escape such “drama”.
More power to this woman.
pjean on July 6, 2009 at 12:19 PM
+1 – thanks for reminding me of that little “problem” they’ll have to explain.
Thunderstorm129 on July 6, 2009 at 12:19 PM
I still believe that Palin is going to come out blazing against the cap and trade bill. As she stated many times, Alaska’s oil and gas reserves are important to tap for many reasons – both for Alaska and the country as a whole. The cap and trade bill will kill all of her efforts on that front. If she is able to damage the steamroller to cap and trade, she will be a hero and will increase her chances of attaining higher offer drastically. She has a sane, sensible approach to energy independence that will be very welcome by most in this country.
She doesn’t have to be president to effect great change in this country – in fact, she might be able to do more not in public office.
KickandSwimMom on July 6, 2009 at 12:19 PM
And her first answer will be, “If I am personally spending 80% of my presidential term in COURT answering frivolous charges instead of running the country, YOU BETCHA”
*gold. she would win the nom then and there*
battleoflepanto1571 on July 6, 2009 at 12:19 PM
Why is it okay for them to quit to go work in a President’s cabinet or as a Prez himself? Did voters in various states vote a person as governor, or as a future-cabinet member?
eforhan on July 6, 2009 at 12:20 PM
Perhaps she realizes that she is too polarizing to ever achieve the Presidency. What if she just intends to influence public opinion? What if she actually is saying what she believes? What’s wrong with a voice raised in opposition to Obama?
Metanis on July 6, 2009 at 12:20 PM
Thing is, this new “third force” is a segment of the GOP. She’s only going to cause damage to the party if…IF…she decides to run in 2012.
As much as I do admire her, I hope she doesn’t run.
JetBoy on July 6, 2009 at 12:20 PM
And who’s responsible for that?
(answer: Palin)
Phoenician on July 6, 2009 at 12:20 PM
Why don’t they just take a wait and see attitude?
roux on July 6, 2009 at 12:09 PM
——
Because a correct guess now builds “cred” which apparently means something to pundits….
You’ve hit upon the issue here, roux. None of us know what Sarah will do next. We all must “wait and see”… but while it’s a logically correct attitude to take, it’s almost impossible for the emotionally driven to do so.
Even if Sarah does decide to go run the front office for Todd’s fishing boat business and enjoy the grandkids for the next 20 years, she’s done conservatism a great service by this action – providing a litmus test to tell emotional-conservatives from pragmatic ones…
“What did you do when Palin resigned?” …
Mew
acat on July 6, 2009 at 12:20 PM
Perfect.
BPD on July 6, 2009 at 12:20 PM
Today I register as an Independent.
pjean on July 6, 2009 at 12:20 PM
That would be the logical thing to do but it’s more fun to make Sarah the new messiah and beat the crap out of those who refuse to play along.
Knucklehead on July 6, 2009 at 12:21 PM
To nitpick, Ed, I think this is a bit of a Non Sequitur. By your own quote here, you have her using this resignation as a springboard upward (President).
Now if Palin’s ultimate goal is to be President and (in her mind) she sees freeing herself from governing Alaska as a wildcard and the only way to accomplish her final goal, why would she quit the Presidency if times go bad? By how you’ve defined this hypothetical, her MO would be constantly moving upward but you have her quitting the Oval Office just to quit. Is my point clear?
LastRick on July 6, 2009 at 12:21 PM
So instead we’re supposed to respect the Kerrys, Clintons, and Obamas who just “phone it in” from their elected Gov jobs while running for President? Be serious. This and using the courts to sue people into submission is a big part of the politics as usual problem… isn’t it?
rhombus on July 6, 2009 at 12:21 PM
What??!!..and do without the winking I so love?!
Jeff from WI on July 6, 2009 at 12:21 PM
Why would we? Look around at the other posts here. Very few are articles on things that have already been settled and decided. That sort of thing is for history books, not blog postings or newspaper articles.
Maybe you’ve forgotten, but what makes you think the MSM will let anyone forget this, especially if Palin has her eyes set on 2012.
Esthier on July 6, 2009 at 12:21 PM
“I will not run for President in 2008″ – Barak Obama.
Letting people down – okay for thee, just not me?
Quitting to take another job – okay for thee, just not me?
Thunderstorm129 on July 6, 2009 at 12:21 PM
I don’t know if its ‘brilliant’ strategy, but the status quo for Palin was also untenable. She couldn’t travel, she couldn’t adequately defend herself, she couldn’t devote the time necessary to prepping herself on national policy. She made a Hernando Cortez/Keyser Soze like decision to remove what had become a weakness. We’ll see if she can make it work. There’s a coherent, although risky, logic there.
Robert_Paulson on July 6, 2009 at 12:21 PM
Wisest words spoken on Hot Air in the last three days.
MadisonConservative on July 6, 2009 at 12:22 PM
http://www.moviesoundclips.net/misc1/americanpolitics/kerry1.wav
Jeff from WI on July 6, 2009 at 12:22 PM
Why is it the onus of the GOP to defend Palin’s resignation or Sanford’s refusal to do so? That isn’t the role of a political party.
If Sarah Palin is anticipating run at high national office then she had damned well be able to articulately defend herself when the mud is flying. Ask GWB how much worse it gets once one is actually elected. She made all the points you outline, this is her battle and not that of the GOP any more than they should be out there defending Sanford for refusing to resign despite his infidelity.
highhopes on July 6, 2009 at 12:22 PM
Phoenician on July 6, 2009 at 12:20 PM
—-
*BZZZT* Wrong.
Correct answer is those filing ethics charges every time she leaves the state, even if she’s leaving to negotiate on behalf of the state.
Mew
acat on July 6, 2009 at 12:22 PM
+1 to that
JetBoy on July 6, 2009 at 12:23 PM
Wow, so Sarah Palin wrote the entire legal code of Alaska all by herself? I wonder what laws Alaskans followed from 1959 until 1963, after statehood but before the birth of St. Sarah?
Hey, I also heard she personally nursed young Romulus to health by taking the form of a she-wolf in 753 BC, AND she visited Han China and invented fireworks. And also, she drinks at night from the holy grail.
IDIOT!!!
battleoflepanto1571 on July 6, 2009 at 12:23 PM
I don’t blame her for quitting. After months of allegations about her baby, attacks on her daughters as being “whores”, attacks on her, attacks on her family, I’d get out too.
I don’t know why she’s resigning, but I suspect it’s not to run for any kind of office. I suspect there’s something going on in the family. Perhaps with the baby?
mjk on July 6, 2009 at 12:23 PM
My comment is limited to this:
I look forward to what Sarah Palin does next.
Mr. Joe on July 6, 2009 at 12:23 PM
It must be hard for you to wake up every morning and be a martyr for those who do not support Palin.
portlandon on July 6, 2009 at 12:23 PM
Ed the “yes” man brings out the reinforcements. More pundits digging a deeper hole from the inside.
horatio on July 6, 2009 at 12:23 PM
Excellent point.
Thunderstorm129 on July 6, 2009 at 12:24 PM
I’m glad Obama built his sober resume as an executive…oh wait.
elduende on July 6, 2009 at 12:24 PM
You could be right about the need to stay in office. However, there are ways to get national credibility without going the traditional route.
In the late 70’s, Reagan’s path (after serving as gov., of course) was speaking and getting his message out. In the past few campaigns, a “book tour” kind of strategy has seemed to be effective at mass communication. Get a book out that tells your bio, lays out your philosophy/worldview, and if it gets wide readership the voters think they know you.
Palin has the book thing coming out, I’ll be shocked if it isn’t widely read and discussed (and criticized, by many), and if she chooses to she could raise funds and attend rallies for 2010 candidates.
The “why’d you quit?” question will come up, but doesn’t have to be the nail in her coffin. I understand it could be, but I would like to see others acknowledge that it also may not be.
FWIW.
cs89 on July 6, 2009 at 12:24 PM
People are paid to write and to express their opinions. Palin is the only one who has given them something to write about at this point, this week.
Since none of them can actually see the future, I am taking thier opinions with that in mind.
myrenovations on July 6, 2009 at 12:25 PM
Truth is, the GOP was hoping that the media would destroy her. Now what are they going to do… it may get messy.
The GOP left her hanging in the wind after the election and in some cases, I’m certain, was encouraging the false legal claims. The party disgusts me.
stenwin77 on July 6, 2009 at 12:25 PM
This Powerline piece (a little way down the page) about Palin has made me completely lose respect for that blog
Chiasmos on July 6, 2009 at 12:25 PM
Conservatives, Rinos, moderate Dems, patriots better hope and pray that Sarah did the right thing, because with pundits like Powell, Trotta, and the rest we are doomed. Find me a lefty that will even mildly criticize another lefty….Nevah………But I assume the cocktail party invites are a lot more important than preserving the USA. When Sarah stood before America and said “Aren’t you tired of politicians saying one thing to one group of people and something else to another”, that opened the hearts of many people. The idea that she fight the msm, pop culture, rinos, and lefties with no money or machine around her is astounding……She represents many things to many groups, and lucky us, we conservatives “get her”, and hope and pray that she is willing to sacrifice herself again.
nondhimmie on July 6, 2009 at 12:26 PM
She wouldn’t from me. Who says she wouldn’t have to answer frivolous charges if she were elected president?
Look, if it was all too much for her, I understand, and she has my full sympathy. But if that’s the case, then I don’t want her as my president.
The election is over three years away. Big difference. Had she said she wouldn’t seek re-election because she wanted to run for president, I would love her for it and agree that politicians should all follow that lead.
Besides, she needed a full term in office for credibility, if she wants the presidency.
Esthier on July 6, 2009 at 12:26 PM
battleoflepanto1571, the GOP is not using your talking points because the establishment GOP hates her guts. And that’s one of the reasons she draws the crowds. Too much drama? It sure beats watching the GOP establishment that exudes the drama of drying paint. One of Reagan’s best qualities was he was never boring.
Personally, I’d like to see her take a prominent role in the Tea Party movement.
michaelo on July 6, 2009 at 12:26 PM
16 months is an eternity! Look how much damage Obama has done in just 6 months. And nary a peep from the GOP, other than the occasional strong word from John Boehner or Mike Pence. Conservatism needs a uniting voice NOW. 16 months from now might well be too late, if it’s not already.
aero on July 6, 2009 at 12:26 PM
Cmon Thunderstorm, you should know by now —- Barack Obama was merely a senator from Illinois, home to Chicago, 12 million people, and the ONLY black senator.
Sarah Palin was governor of Alaska –THE MOST IMPORTANT JOB ON EARTH***
***job only became important on july 3. anytime during 2008 campaign alaska governorship was ridiculed as ‘not important enough’, ‘provincial’, ‘inexperienced’, and ‘not worthy of commanding the alaska national guard’
battleoflepanto1571 on July 6, 2009 at 12:26 PM
What I don’t understand is why is she being so aloof about her reasons for resigning? I would think a governor should provide an explanation to the people of Alaska who voted for her. She owes them that much.
JetBoy on July 6, 2009 at 12:26 PM
I support Sarah Palin. That doesn’t mean I can’t still think this is a bad move. I support Fred Thompson, and I’m still annoyed that he backed McCain.
Blind faith in some political leader like they are a religious figure, combined with scorn and ridicule for those who refuse to approve of every move they make, used to be reserved for the Left. I guess our side is jumping on the Messiah bandwagon as well.
MadisonConservative on July 6, 2009 at 12:28 PM
Now you get it. Until now, no one, and I mean no one, dared to challenge obama, and his policies head on. Everyone is afraid, and has the “Joe the Plumber” syndrome; the chorus of people singing in unison about how great an orator he is nauseating (he is an awful speaker). I have a feeling this will change as Palin gains time, resources, tools and support. Those are only achievable for her outside the public office. In fact, it may help Palin to present herself as the ultimate “anti-politician”, not afraid to leave the cozy confines of the governor’s mansion (to the able Lt. Governor), to pursue cause that is just.
runner on July 6, 2009 at 12:28 PM
If Sarah started a third party; I would vote for her in a second. Who do you think vast numbers of conservatives would follow in 2012: Sarah’s Tea Party or some washed up, RINO infested Romney candidacy?
The GOP is rotten to the core, as is the DC-NYC punditry.
Norwegian on July 6, 2009 at 12:28 PM
Why weren’t the people of Alaska protesting about these bogus ethic charges? Did Sarah ever go talk to the people of Alaska and explain the wasting of money over these charges?
I do know one thing, if my governor decided not to fulfill his obligation and serve out his term (unless there was a medical reason), that he was elected to, I would not be very supportive of them.
moonsbreath on July 6, 2009 at 12:28 PM
SIGH…
1. Only Alaska has an insane ethics law that lets anyone sue any govt official
2. Palin spent 80% of her time in court with ethics laws
3. That’s no way to run a state, and nothing got done for Alaska
4. Palin realized Alaska was hurting by the lawsuits, and she could also do more for the GOP as unelected
battleoflepanto1571 on July 6, 2009 at 12:28 PM
*shakes his head*
Say it with me, children:
Sarah Palin is not the Conservative Messiah to be worshipped like the One. Sarah Palin is not the Conservative Messiah to be worshipped like the One. Sarah Palin is not the Conservative Messiah to be worshipped like the One. Sarah Palin is not the Conservative Messiah to be worshipped like the One…..
Vatican Watcher on July 6, 2009 at 12:28 PM
I’ve heard this particular spin a couple of times and it is within the realm of possibility that she’s setting herself up as the true anti-government maverick come to take government away from the ruling political class. It still doesn’t answer the fundamental question that should be posed…..
Is Sarah Palin the right person to come in and fix the Obama mess in four years. Does she have the practical and political experience, skills and saavy necessary to counteract years of bad stewardship and rampant socialism? For me at this point the answer is 100% no and that opinion will not change if she simply goes around campaigning as an activist for change the next three years. That is how we ended up with the filthy liar that is currently infesting the White House.
highhopes on July 6, 2009 at 12:28 PM
I am of the conventional wisdom that it is going to take someone who is not an insider of the GOP, or DNC, or Washington DC to get America back from the brink of total destruction. It was these inept insiders who got us here.
I am all for out of the box leaders at this point. Be it Palin, or someone who has not yet emerged.
If you had anything to do with getting our country into this debt, you will NOT GET MY VOTE.
portlandon on July 6, 2009 at 12:29 PM
Read her speech. It’s all in there, including her direct attacks against The Precedent and his junta, which clearly indicate where she is headed.
progressoverpeace on July 6, 2009 at 12:29 PM
Negative Ed Morrissey. Revised Ed Morrissey: I look forward to what Sarah Palin does next.Negative Allahpundit. Revised Allahpundit: I look forward to what Sarah Palin does next.Negative Ace. Revised Ace: I look forward to what Sarah Palin does next.Negative George Will. Revised George Will: I look forward to what Sarah Palin does next.Negative Krauthammer. Revised Charles Krauthammer: I look forward to what Sarah Palin does next.Negative Vokkapundit. Revised Vodkapundit: I look forward to what Sarah Palin does next.Negative J-Pod. Revised John Podhoretz: I look forward to what Sarah Palin does next.Negative Stephen Hayes. Revised Stephen Hayes: I look forward to what Sarah Palin does next.Negative Victor Davis Hanson. Revised Victor Davis Hanson: I look forward to what Sarah Palin does next.Does that make you all feel better?
Mr. Joe on July 6, 2009 at 12:29 PM
Maybe she has a Democratic congress that prevents her from getting anything passed, and she decides rather than compromising with Pelosi, Frank, Reid, and signing off on legislation she doesn’t believe in (while fighting an unfair press corps) that she can, instead, make a difference in the world through humanitarian efforts that save and improve lives of millions.
She wouldn’t be the first to see Washington as a corrupt culture that is resilient even in the face of change.
dedalus on July 6, 2009 at 12:29 PM
But she has the unique problem of being drowned by frivolous ethics complaints and personal attacks against her children. So as far as quitting goes, she at least has a point to make about doing whats best for the Alaskans and her family.
Thunderstorm129 on July 6, 2009 at 12:30 PM
Well then she let them down already by running for VP , no screaming then i remember?
She made a tactical retreat , as a potential 2012 candidate she became a problem and a threat against Alaska.
All in all , she made a brilliant move. Now she got plenty of time for activism to win conservative majority in 2010.
If she succeeds in that , no one will doubt her shrewdness.
the_nile on July 6, 2009 at 12:30 PM
well i guess we should all wait with bated breath on what Palin, former mayor of Wasilla, decides whether to bless us with her governance. After all, she is this country’s savior. have never commented on her before here but getting quite tired of the Drama Queen.
TruUSA on July 6, 2009 at 12:30 PM
quick, which of those pundits is NOT a ‘rino’
ie, which of them was NOT thrilled at pre-”conservative” mitt, or DIDNT buy the tripe that mccain was our ‘best hope’
which of them ever attacked bush in 2005/2006 for excessive spending and govt growth?
*crickets*
battleoflepanto1571 on July 6, 2009 at 12:31 PM
The net is usually full of knee-jerks, but the knee-jerk-o-meter has gone off the scale this weekend.
As Limbaugh said: Everyone wants to be the smartest guy in the room.
eforhan on July 6, 2009 at 12:31 PM
Sure, she can’t get all the blame for them, but as governor, surely she could have done something about them. If she really believed they were wrong and needed to be changed, it only makes her look worse that she’d instead cut and run.
Either way, as a private citizen, there’s very little she can do to help the next person in her position.
Esthier on July 6, 2009 at 12:32 PM
It allows her to focus on the issues, instead of the incessant attacks on her character, every single charge has been found baseless.
Why is it that no one is taking these ethics complainants to task? Why does Sarah have to carry non-existent baggage? This alone should rally conservatives to her side…but some are falling for the left’s narratives about her, repeating ad nauseum every single cliche and accusation.
Richard Romano on July 6, 2009 at 12:32 PM
WHY IS THE GOP NOT SAYING THESE TALKING POINTS
battleoflepanto1571 on July 6, 2009 at 12:15 PM
——
Because the GOP hierarchy in D.C. are too insulated from those they claim to represent, those whose votes they wish to acquire.
Because the people who lead the Republican party are more akin to those leading the Democrat party than those who hold down actual jobs out here in flyover country.
Both parties are, after all, coalitions built to “game” the electoral college system.* Coalitions, by definition, that agree to disagree on certain values.
Palin’s a lightning rod for those who want to re-negotiate the deal that the Republican party is based on. Reagan was similarly a lightning rod.
Mew
* The electoral college was intended to allow a short-cut to the white house in the event of a consensus candidate – but the founders didn’t expect it to be the norm – the congress was intended to elect the potus. Don’t believe me? Blame a history teacher….
acat on July 6, 2009 at 12:32 PM
Question to those who rally against any criticism of Sarah Palin:
Are there ANY pundits or bloggers whose conservative credentials you won’t call into question if they state that this resignation was a bad move?
MadisonConservative on July 6, 2009 at 12:32 PM
Let me see if i get this straight. George W. Bush ran for governor in 1998. In January of 2001, he was president. Barack Obama ran for Senator in 2004. In 2009, he was president. Neither of them could be trusted to finish “their term”, but it is Sarah Palin that is the quitter. In fact, this whole thing is totally hypocritical. Palin is viewed as a quitter for handing off the reigns to someone that would have power, while the last two presidents never even bothered to finish their term because of personal ambition.
If Palin is viewed as a “quitter” then so is every politician that quits early for any reason. I can’t see how it’s suddenly all right not to finish your term because you are seeking a higher office, but it is NOT all right not to finish your term to do other things.
mike volpe on July 6, 2009 at 12:33 PM
You know who this helps?
Mitt Romney.
/Hugh Hewitt
omnipotent on July 6, 2009 at 12:33 PM
Those are problems with Alaskan politics, not reasons to step down.
moonsbreath on July 6, 2009 at 12:33 PM
Why don’t we just wait and see what happens before we write her off? NO ONE KNOWS what will happen in the next three or seven years. NO ONE KNOWS her plans or how she intends to build her resume. For all we know, she’s already struck a deal with Mitt and she’ll run on the ticket with him. There’s no crystal ball here. Just because this is not the way it’s always been done before doesn’t mean it’s not going to work.
upinak, what is the reaction to all of this up in Alaska? I’d think those are the opinions that really matter in all of this.
NoLeftTurn on July 6, 2009 at 12:33 PM
J.R.Dunn
maverick muse on July 6, 2009 at 12:33 PM
That messiah thing seldom works out for the designate and only once for the rest of us. See, now we can have a atheist vs. believer thread along with a Palin thread! Save money, time, and space.
Cindy Munford on July 6, 2009 at 12:33 PM
I think we’re in a war. We should find the best generals and troops. When/if they get shot or otherwise can’t serve, we get fresh troops, experienced or not.
You go to war with the army you got.
JiangxiDad on July 6, 2009 at 12:33 PM
Never knew the executive made laws. I guess the governorship of alaska IS the MOST IMPORTANT JOB EVAH
battleoflepanto1571 on July 6, 2009 at 12:34 PM
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