How Palin caught Obama off-guard
Because she is a mum who shops at Wal-Mart and disembowels moose many Americans, suspicious of intel
By Andrew Stephen Published 18 September 2008
The Democrats have finally chosen their woman. The stand-in for Sarah Palin who will tussle with Joe Biden in closed-door rehearsals for the vice-presidential debate on 2 October will be 49-year-old Governor Jennifer Granholm of Michigan - a brilliant Democrat who would undoubtedly be a presidential contender herself, had she not been born in Canada and thus constitutionally ineligible to occupy the White House. She will undoubtedly give Biden a hard time, but will Palin?
Three weeks ago, just the thought of this year's vice-presidential debate would have made most Americans yawn. But the sudden emergence of Governor Palin on the world stage on 29 August has electrified this election and turned just about every previous assumption upside down. Biden's little finger, for example, probably knows more about foreign policy than Palin. However, I can easily visualise him patronising or bullying her - which would be catastrophic. Palin, just as easily, could reveal her ignorance or extremism in some equally disastrous way.
The very fact that it is the vice-presidential debate that is suddenly the hottest ticket in America - far more so than any of the three presidential confrontations between Barack Obama and John McCain - is indicative of the disaster that Palin has been for the Democrats so far.
The polls, which now show McCain and Palin ahead, tell their own story. The celebritydom market that Obama had cornered for himself was suddenly hijacked by a brand new political celebrity, spawning more media coverage, gossip and excitement than either Obama or McCain. Picking Palin to be his running mate was a high-risk gamble for McCain, but there are now only six weeks left in which she must maintain rigid discipline and avoid gaffes.
If she and McCain can pull that off, I suspect they will win on 4 November. It is certainly a very big if. But, precisely because it was so very unexpected, even by those close to McCain, Palin's emergence flummoxed and panicked Obama. Faced with a competing political celeb rity suddenly hurling invective and jokes at his expense to vast rallies of people roaring with laughter - an experience to which he had never been subjected - Obama visibly wilted and made the error of responding to her attacks rather than concentrating his fire steadily on McCain, a much more vulnerable and important target.
Michael Dukakis, the former governor of Massachusetts, made the same mistake in 1988 by campaigning against poor Dan Quayle, George H W Bush's running mate, rather than Bush himself. The result was that Bush and the blatantly inadequate Quayle won by a 40-state landslide. Adlai Stevenson had done exactly the same in 1952, handing two presidential terms to the Republicans.
So, if Obama does not speedily change course, and McCain-Palin do not present him with any gifts, he could well be heading for the same fate. His "change" theme was snatched from him in a single strike by the Republicans - but, at least so far, Obama has failed to adapt to the drastically changed political landscape. He seems unable to confront the inconvenient reality that rather than being the small-town mayor she once was, Palin is now the highly popular governor of a state with 29,000 full- and part-time employees and an annual budget of $12bn, and thus has more executive experience than Obama himself, McCain and Hillary Clinton put together.
The Sarah Palin/Alaska phenomenon is one, I suspect, that will never be properly understood in Britain. It is because she is a mum who shops at Wal-Mart, runs marathons and disembowels moose that so many Americans, ever suspicious of intellectuals or elitism, have granted her instant celebrity status. Alaska, a state I know well, still has more than a whiff of the frontier mentality. "We don't give a damn how they do it Outside" is an ever-popular bumper sticker, "Outside" being the rest of mainland America.
That kind of defiance, personified by Palin, is widely admired by Americans. The Democrats underestimate her at their peril. I would guess that Granholm, Palin's fellow governor from Michigan, is politically astute enough to know that the Democrats must now reserve most of their fire for McCain, and that when they attack Palin the target should be her extreme right-wing views rather than her celebrityhood.
Yet she also knows that the Democrats have selected a previously little-known male celeb rity to be their presidential candidate, who in turn chose a 65-year-old man to be his running mate, rather than the woman who finished in a virtual dead heat with him in the Democratic primaries.
Have the Republicans outwitted the Democrats again, this time by finding a little-known female celebrity as a supposed riposte to sexist hubris? Time, I fear, will tell.
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42 comments
this is a current affairs blog AL. not somewhere to launch your personal crusade against all things good in this world. grow up mr bean!
FYO i am in the travel business. unfortunately we do not provide one way tickets to nowhere. tell me, where do you, george bush and the rest of your right wing mates buy yours from?
Palin factor or no Palin factor, the deeply-seated racism of at least 50 percent of American whites was going to come to the fore sooner or later, and it is just convenient for racist DEMOCRATS that they can excuse their (inevitable) turn away from Obama by giving it a 'gender' or anti-elite explanation.
"Drudge realized how bad this would look for the Obama campaign."
Don't be absurd. The Drudge report is Republican. Well known fact. Do your homework. Wiki is your friend:
"During the 2008 US Presidential campaign, the Drudge Report showed bias against Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama, while supporting the Republican candidate John McCain.[28]"
Sarah Palin has not been honest and naive on things other than Alaska. If she had not been telegenic, she is a nobody unless of course the American voters are stupid.
Attacking Palin is not at all belittling the millions of ordinary Americans like I am. These ordinary Americans are smart enough to realize that we do not qualify to take over a high level VP job just like that. Only Palin has the blind ambition not to blink when accepting such a job she is plainly not (yet) qualified for. To get America out of the financial mess, the mess in Iraq and all the other problems brewing, we need someone a lot more intelligent and a lot better than just "ordinary".
and wiki isnt biased to anyone???
bleeding jayus this woman is a nutter the michael jackson of politics the only state in america where no wildlife is safe yet she spent 200 million dollrs on a bridge to nowhere praise the lord america u need it
"Palin, just as easily, could reveal her ignorance or extremism in some equally disastrous way...."
Arrgh, Andrew Stephen, you' don't take long to reveal your own sexism just as the swathe of pro-Obama/anti Hillary Clinton journalists did in the USA. Sad for them, too, that they were wrong-footed by a woman from Alsaka, ha ha.
But the "The Sarah Palin phenomenon" is nothing to do with Alaska, alas for you and your simplistic ideologies. It is an entirely new religion and it is feminism-based, again something far outside your comprehension, uhh. It also has a Nature-based element as she is married to a man of Eskimo/native American ethnicity. That is more significant than you might want to assume. See Alaskan Palintology http://palintology.com/
You also erroneously assume that Sarah Palin's right-wing views are "extreme". Actually, they are not and neither is her Christian evangelism that far out, either. If you were at all honest with your journalist opportunistic self, you would see that a little more clearly.
Barack Obama privately tried to persuade Iraqi political leaders to stall an agreement on scaling back American troops in Iraq while publicly campaigning for a speedy withdrawal, Obama’s campaign is not a train wreck; it’s Chernobyl.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bKqHFk-3yQM
I am a Scot and I think that America does get bad press – like ourselves here in the UK. Thing is though, both our countries spend so much time sorting out other countries problems and not paying enough attention to issues closer to home. We can see where it all goes wrong, but politicians don’t. Here in Scotland, we export Oil, Gas, Petrol and Diesel and we have no shortage of supply, but we pay well over £5 (9$) per gallon and the refinery’s are on our doorsteps, they don’t even have to transport it far so there is no excuse. It is just plain greed by our Government. Now, our utilities bills are going up – doubling in fact, but get this, All of these organisations are making huge profits and add to that, that our food has doubled in price and the fact that our spending on arms is just out of control and you can see why people at home are thinking that the politicians have lost touch with reality. Problem is, once politicians are in, it is very difficult to get them out and here in the UK we have a very sophisticated system of party membership which makes sure that independents get know where fast. They even tried passing a law by the back door to hide their expense from the public? And we pay their salaries! As they say here in the UK – You can’t beat the system! I think you experienced that also with Bush in Florida one time, but you know what you can try. Charity begins at home. Put the power in people’s pocket, by sorting out the economy - not sorting out other rebel countries. Good luck in your forth coming elections. I do hope it falls in favour of the democrats and they have they the common sense to realise that current foreign policy, is just costing far too much in both young lives and money. Lets educate our kids, support, family values and lets rejuvenate our economies through sensible taxation and spending on revised foreign policy. All the best from Scotland.