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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
06.10.2008
Can Palin Grow?

Pondering Sarah Palin's political future in the event of a McCain loss next month, Ross Douthat writes:

[S]he would become a not-implausible contender for the GOP nomination in 2012. In those circumstances, the temptation to go for it might be irresistible. But it seems pretty obvious to me that she ought to resist it.... Palin has the luxury of time: She's extremely young, she's going to be a folk hero to the conservative base for years to come almost no matter what, and she can afford to go back to Alaska, govern her state, run for re-election in 2010 and win, and then flirt with a national run in 2012 but ultimately decide against it - because she made a promise to Alaskans, or something like that. Let Huckabee, Romney, Gingrich and Pawlenty fight the right to lose to Obama in '12; even if one of them gets extremely lucky and knocks of the Dem incumbent, by 2020 she'll still be only fifty-six, with plenty of future still ahead of her. Meanwhile, she can hoard her political capital, campaign for GOP candidates in 2010 and 2012 and create a generation of office-holders who owe her, and spend some time reintroducing herself to the American public in a less-partisan context. What Edwards did with poverty, she could do with education or health care or some other issue where the GOP is weak - and better still, she could get involved in overseas charity work, and spend a lot of time shuttling around the Middle East and Africa with Rick Warren and Bono, helping widows and orphans and AIDS patients, occasionally meeting foreign leaders, and filling up the back pages of her passport....

Or, alternatively, she can spend a lot of time on Fox News over the next two years, decline to run for re-election in Alaska, surround herself with the same advisers and strategists who have made the McCain campaign such a glowing success, and run for President in 2012 - and lose to Barack Obama (if she makes it that far) by, oh, seven percentage points or so, amid a flurry of Tina Fey sketches and YouTube clips of the Couric interview. The choice is hers.

I agree with Ross that the former course would be by far the better, but I have a crisp $20 bill I'd be happy to wager with anyone who actually thinks it is the course she'll take. For starters, Palin seems unlikely to spend years preparing herself for a bid at the presidency because, as Frank Rich pointed out over the weekend, she appears terrifyingly convinced that she already is prepared:

[T]here’s a steady unnerving undertone to Palin’s utterances, a consistent message of hubristic self-confidence and hyper-ambition. She wants to be president, she thinks she can be president, she thinks she will be president. And perhaps soon....This was first apparent when Palin extolled a “small town” vice president as a hero in her convention speech — and cited not one of the many Republican vice presidents who fit that bill but, bizarrely, Harry Truman, a Democrat who succeeded a president who died in office. A few weeks later came Charlie Gibson’s question about whether she thought she was “experienced enough” and “ready” when McCain invited her to join his ticket. Palin replied that she didn’t “hesitate” and didn’t “even blink” — a response that seemed jarring for its lack of any human modesty, even false modesty.

In the last of her Couric interview installments on Thursday, Palin was asked which vice president had most impressed her, and after paying tribute to Geraldine Ferraro, she chose “George Bush Sr.” Her criterion: she most admires vice presidents “who have gone on to the presidency.” Hours later, at the debate, she offered a discordant contrast to Biden when asked by Gwen Ifill how they would each govern “if the worst happened” and the president died in office. After Biden spoke of somber continuity, Palin was weirdly flip and chipper, eager to say that as a “maverick” she’d go her own way.

Perhaps more important, the political transformation that Ross envisions--from feisty, parochial partisan to globe-trotting, issue-oriented stateswoman--seems close to inconceivable on purely characterological grounds. Noam has a terrific piece on Palin's political roots that speaks to exactly this question. Describing the experience of a variety of figures in Alaskan politics who thought Palin's fierce political talents could eventually be domesticated, he writes:

The group's efforts reflected a kind of establishment delusion--the hope that if you just surround the rough-hewn outsider with the right advisers and submerge her in the proper environment, she'll eventually assimilate. It's a delusion that's playing out all over again on the McCain campaign, amid all the briefings with the likes of Henry Kissinger and Joe Lieberman. Give Palin a few months in the Old Executive Office Building, the thinking goes, and she'll become Adlai Stevenson. But it never quite works out that way. As Nixon demonstrated, the forces of class resentment can be all-consuming and elemental.

As they say, read the whole thing.

--Christopher Orr

Posted: Monday, October 06, 2008 10:40 AM with 24 comment(s)

Comments

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fougasseu said:

Before we rush to her coronation, check out the fresh numbers from Zogby:

zogby.com/.../ReadNews.dbm

Post-debate, the McCain/Palin ticket is heading downward. She hurts more than she helps the ticket.

(More Palin!)

And with the many revelations coming out about her time in Alaska - a lot of it news to Alaskans - it's doubtful she'll be re-elected.

October 6, 2008 11:03 AM

satyendra said:

She has all the creepy secretiveness and hunger to power that Dick Cheney has, but without any of the insider Washington friends he's picked up over the past 35 years.  If she should be "so priveleged to serve," she'd just wannabe Dick Cheney.

October 6, 2008 11:10 AM

drdannyu said:

Of COURSE Palin can grow.  Why else is she spending so much time these days knee-deep in manure?

October 6, 2008 11:25 AM

wildboy said:

More than Trooper-Gate or a lot of the other misdeeds from Palin's Wasilla days, I think her days as Alaska Governor are numbered because the prices of oil and natural are going to drop significantly in the next two years -- in part due to energy efficiency and a push toward renewable fuels, but primarily due to the steep recession and drop in spending that it will engender in the US during that time period.  And that will mean scaling back her cash giveaways to Alaskans, as well as fewer jobs in the oil and gas sector and increasing unemployment.  Her Alaska gubernatorial race opponent, Tony Knowles, was a formerly popular governor undone by a sharp drop in oil prices and the resulting tough budgetary choices.  How much of a national political future is she going to have after Alaska voters have turned on her for taking away their cash subsidies, slashing government programs and presiding over rising budget deficits and unemployment?  I say not much.  But I hear that Elisabeth Hasselbeck might be leaving "The View", so a spot may be opening up there for her soon.

October 6, 2008 11:32 AM

WaltB said:

She's got enough time to get that seriously needed brain transplant (really needs to upgrade and get some intelligence!), so 2012 might work for her - but that's the only way it would.

October 6, 2008 11:35 AM

adaglas said:

I fear that Sarah Palin does represent the future of the GOP, but not in the optimistic prognostication Douthat lays out.  Rather, the party's careening descent into smarmy, unrepentant anti-intellectualism looks set to continue unabated.  As a lifelong liberal I regard this as a genuine shame.  Societies benefit from robust political opposition, each side keeping the other fresh, creative and honest.  The Democratic Party needs a worth adversary to keep it sharp.  I hope that an honest, thoughtful conservative movement does re-emerge in this country, but I have no confidence whatsoever that the current crop of would-be Young Turks represents anything close.

October 6, 2008 11:43 AM

icarusr said:

"Can Palin Grow?"  Fungus does, so can she.

(With a nod to DrDan.)

October 6, 2008 11:47 AM

wnalpert said:

I have a strong suspicion that Darth Vader himself, Dick Cheney, is acting as her mentor.  I read somewhere among all the blogs and comments on the election that Cheney himself 'discovered' her back in January.  I hope someone can do a little more investigative reporting and see if there is any reportable direct linkage between Palin and Cheney.

October 6, 2008 11:47 AM

Wandreycer1 said:

Oh please, honey - do you think she's in California to convince anyone of anything?  To take in the sunshine?  She's there meeting donors for her 2012 campaign, period.  She's running and she's the frontrunner.  Poor old Bette Davis, oops I mean John McCain, is in the ash heap of campaign history and she's been on it for weeks.

October 6, 2008 11:47 AM

Wasatcher said:

Real growth comes through making mistakes and learning from them. Sarah Palin shows every sign of being a full-blown narcissist. That would mean she has an inherent, structural inability to admit mistakes and therefore to learn on a deep personal level. She will learn, as narcissists do, a lot about the evils of the people around her who caused her defeat, and she will put them on enemy lists and she will punish them. She will learn a lot about the fine art of manipulation at which narcissists excel, and she will learn how to apply her manipulative skills on the national stage. But I do not foresee her doing a George Foreman and emerging from defeat a new and better person as Foreman did after he lost to Ali in Zaire.

But then if Palin wins?

This is Nixon with a smile and no capacity for depth. This is a dangerous woman.

October 6, 2008 11:54 AM

karen1952 said:

As far as I can tell, I am the only one who noticed that in the NYT article on her reign in Wasilla, her then campaign manager reported saying to her 1996 "you could be governor in 10 years," to which she replied "I want to be president."  If this is to be believed, she aimed to be president 12 years ago but has not bothered to learn ONE DAMN THING that she would need to know to actually, you know, do the job.  Grow?  Not a chance.

October 6, 2008 11:57 AM

ironyroad said:

She might, however, consider the career of populist Democrat John Edwards, VP candidate on a losing ticket in 2004, convinced he had an excellent shot at the crown in 2008, and surprisinlgy quickly ground down and out between a new configuration of forces in the party that he hadn't predicted.

October 6, 2008 12:00 PM

harriscrl3 said:

Can Sarah Palin Grow:

Oh Absolutely in dark moist areas like a FUNGUS.

Carol

October 6, 2008 12:01 PM

Geoff G said:

Palin should have a future every bit as bright as Dan Quayle's or Adm. Stockdale's.

October 6, 2008 12:27 PM

csmiller said:

How can anybody take this woman seriously?  Yes, her inferiority complex provides ample fuel for her resentment, "outsider" politics, which she uses to great effect.  But she demonstrations no aptitude towards seriousness when it comes to actual policy.  We've suffered through one George W. Bush.  We can't survive another.

October 6, 2008 12:30 PM

blackton said:

csmiller, actually she makes George Bush look positively genius. I think everyone is taking her way too seriously, if she goes down next month she will simply be a fixture on the rubber chicken circuit. In 4 years, or 8 or however long it is when she goes up against real Republicans who are practiced debaters she will be eviscerated. They are not going to roll over for her because she is a woman. Beyond that, Republicans are happy to have her as number two, but Republican men and women are far more sexist and won't vote for a woman at the top of the ticket. As Governor or Senator, yeah, but as President, not for another generation, at which point Palin will be old news and also old. wannabe VP tits and ass will become wannabe P saggy and crows feet. A still attractive 44 year old woman flirting kind of works, a 64 year old will make men shudder.

October 6, 2008 1:05 PM

dylanposer said:

I'm afraid she will grow, just not in concert with American needs.  

Listen: the economy is tanking, tanking, taking, and it is a clear result of the Bushian/conservative fiscal and foreign policy for the past eight years.  And yet so many states are solid red, while others waver on issues of Obama's race and purported ethnicity.  Sorry to say to those who find him appalling, Andrew Sullivan has it right: the strongest muscle in the Republican body is the social consrvative wing.  As long as they can keep an election that should be a landslide within a 10% margin of victory, she will walk away a champion.  

October 6, 2008 1:08 PM

singlespeed said:

Sarah Palin has all the signs of a demagogue who's 'red meat and potato' platitudes reflect a self-belief that "intellectuals" are not to be trusted because they don't "believe" enough. Her sense of duty stems not from inherent or learned beliefs balanced with logical, rational thought which comes from "thinking" through the issues at hand but instead stems purely from belief.

There is an inherent difference between believing and thinking. Sarah Palin's actions readily exhibit a person who fundamentally does not think in a rational manner but "believes and feels". She doesn't think taxes serve a purpose good or bad, she believes they are bad. Therefore the discussion, debate or contradiction of those beliefs ends at her nose. This is why she feels personally attacked when anyone counters her beliefs with facts or differing opinions. She is a vengeful person and cannot be assuaged with compromise.

She reflects an even lesser level of intellectual curiosity than that of George W. Bush. Bush, we know at least reads My Pet Goat. We have no understanding of Palin's level of curiosity or intellectual capacity to engage in anyone. She feels that anyone who is smarter than her, which constitutes at least 75% of the population is intellectually denigrating her. This has less to do with class resentment and more to do with intellectual resentment. That every slight is an attack on her intellect.

She reminds me of John Hurt's part in Vendetta. The slightest thought that contradicts her personal beliefs is a direct attack on the patriotism of her country and thus upon her. This is a person who will return again and again until she claims her belief in her God given right to be POTUS regardless of the damage she may inflict along the way matters not to her as long as she "feels and believes" her way through the world.

"A long habit of not thinking a thing wrong gives it a superficial appearance of being right. " Thomas Paine

October 6, 2008 1:17 PM

williamyard said:

The GOP may be dead, but it ain't that dead.

Like blackie said, she'll get ripped to shreds before she even sees another Democrat. Especially if a Republican woman decides to run. Biden had to play nice. No such luck for Sarah in a GOP debate with one or more other XXs.

October 6, 2008 2:51 PM

cspencef said:

It would be fun to see what someone like Kay Bailey Hutchinson would do to Palin in a debate.

October 6, 2008 3:59 PM

janus said:

I hope and pray that she runs in 2012 and is taken seriously within the Republican Party. There could be nothing better for developing this November's victory into an actual full era of liberal government, and give us a firm chance to undo the decades of damage conservatives have inflicted.

Hell, I might even contribute to her campaign.

October 6, 2008 5:06 PM

aeromonas said:

Seriously, who gives a shit?  Palin is a loser now and a loser forever more.  She might stroke the wing nuts' erogenous zones, but she's out of step with the majority of the American electorate.  Her career path post her nearly inevitable lose this November is irrelevant to anyone other than herself and the citizens of Alaksa.  She will never--NEVER--be President of the United States.

October 6, 2008 9:29 PM

ndmackenzie said:

Off topic.

The date for this article is given as "06.10.2008." Is this is Canadian format?

October 7, 2008 12:30 PM

fougasseu said:

Now that Palin has traction, she has not imploded, I'd like to see someone take her seriously, "Frontline"-style.

She's the first candidate on the national stage since George Wallace to employ such a hard-edged nativist message. It's white trash-light, a new kind of coarse populism that comes right out of Talk Radio. It's all done with a weird kind of jocularity, but it's deadly serious.

She's the first mainstream candidate to bring the philosophy of Limbaugh, Hannity, Levin and Savage out of the shadows, into the sunlight.

If she's not treated with seriousness, if she continues to be underestimated, we're all going to live to regret it.

October 7, 2008 6:25 PM