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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
03.09.2008
Palin's Speech Was Fine. But What's The Goal Here?

Just about every liberal I know thinks that Sarah Palin unleashed a terrifyingly effective speech tonight. I'm not convinced. It was a solid red-meat speech, sure, and she was smart to take up the attack-dog role: It will create a fresh storyline, and it was light years better than having her weakly protest that she is too ready to lead. And, yes, she lied about opposing the "Bridge to Nowhere," but maybe she thinks the press won't call her on it. (Certainly this speech won't stop the swarms of reporters digging into her past, but nothing she could've said would've done that.) Did she look presidential? The whole thing looked like one big surreal circus to me, but I'm biased and not a median undecided voter in Ohio or wherever, so I'll beg off on that one.

The main problem for the Republicans, I think, is the overall message: The McCain campaign is gambling that they can pull off a dramatic reversal here and hop on the "change" bandwagon—as a friend points out, they're essentially rehashing Hillary Clinton's strategy from the Democratic primary: Palin's attacking Obama for offering nothing more than empty speeches while claiming that she's the real agent of change. But that didn't work for Hillary Clinton, and I have a hard time seeing it work for McCain, who still has the Bush albatross around his neck and a far less compelling economic message to work with.

--Bradford Plumer

Related: More from TNR on Sarah Palin's Big Convention Speech

 

Posted: Wednesday, September 03, 2008 11:48 PM with 7 comment(s)

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benjamin81 said:

I don't think her speech was that great. Maybe good for riling up the base with the old Republican chestnuts of the liberal media and Democrats who secret want to lose a war, but nothing that gives any indication of her ability to "take the 3 AM call." If anything, it will remind Joe Biden not to be overconfident in his debate and open the floodgates for the same kind of nasty attacks on her that she's layering on Obama.

September 4, 2008 12:22 AM

jacksondyer said:

"Sarah Palin's Speech Was Fine. But What's The Goal Here?"

Is this a trick question, because the answer is self evident:

To get more votes than the opposition.

September 4, 2008 12:30 AM

Eos said:

The change message of McCain and Plain is carried by the personal traits of the individuals themselves. They seem much less like traditional politicians than do Obama and Biden.

September 4, 2008 12:59 AM

jts44 said:

She's power hungry... she's had a taste of it and wants more.  And if that means being an attack dog for the GOP, she's going to run with it.  After all this is a once in a lifetime chance. The second highest position in the land has been handed to her on a golden platter. No questions asked, no resume needed, and it doesn't matter if anybody has even heard of her.   Is it a brilliant choice or stupid. Time will tell. In the meantime, she needs to be thankful for the opportunity, so she will do or say ANYTHING they tell her. I've been saying all along, "she's poison."

September 4, 2008 1:01 AM

ironyroad said:

Eos:  "They seem much less like traditional politicians than do Obama and Biden."

To you, maybe.  But, to be fair, Biden is a traditional politician although Obama isn't.  However, the "hey we're the reformers" shtick is hollow and seems to be trying to say something like "our party has been in charge for eight years -- they fucked it up -- so give us four more years to put right what they've done!  Yaayyy Alaska!"

Will this work come November?

September 4, 2008 1:50 AM

LDuncan said:

Eos, give me a break.  Sarah Palin is an absolutely traditional politician. She's Ann Richards but with a Northern Exposure twang.  This is a recognized archetype.  She's a decent practitioner of it, but she is within a well-worn mold.  

Neither Ann Richards 1988 speech nor Pat Buchanan's 1992 speech -- both of which gave orgasms to partisans -- persuaded the people who really needed to be persuaded.

September 4, 2008 2:44 AM

icarusr said:

LDuncan: Funny, I had the same reaction to the excerpts of the speech; it reminded me of Ann Richards.

Bradfor: Good post.  

September 4, 2008 1:13 PM