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Wednesday, July 08, 2009
Tony Blankley :: Townhall.com Columnist
Sarah Agonistes
by Tony Blankley
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Professional politicians and political journalists don't waste energy on political corpses. They reserve their energy -- positive or negative -- for viable politicians.

Thus, an intriguing part of the Sarah Palin phenomenon is the intensity of response to her every word and move -- from both Republican Party and Democratic Party professionals and from the conventional media. The negative but sustained passion being expressed by the professional Washington political class against her tends to belie its almost unanimous assertion that she is washed-up.

I happened to be on CNN Friday just as the story was breaking of Palin's resignation as governor of Alaska, and for the next hour, I was the only on-air guest -- Republican, Democrat, journalist, politician -- who was not overtly contemptuous and dismissive of Palin and her political future. On Sunday, as a panelist on ABC's "This Week," I was similarly situated.

What is it about Palin that elicits such furious bipartisan Washington dismissiveness? After all, the polls show her to be tied with Mitt Romney and Mike Huckabee for the very early lead in the 2012 Republican primary. As an outspoken conservative with about an 80 percent favorable rating among Republicans and a high-40s percentage favorable plurality among independents, objectively she should be seen as quite competitive nationally compared with other Republicans, particularly given that Republicans are generically weak and that she has been targeted so viciously by the media.

Palin draws by far the biggest crowds of any current politician, other than, perhaps, the president. She was the only news phenomenon capable of knocking the Michael Jackson story off the cable news lineups. Impressively, while George W. Bush was able to elicit a Bush derangement syndrome from liberal Democrats and President Barack Obama has succeeded similarly with many conservatives, only Sarah Palin has induced simultaneous derangement from both Republican and Democratic professionals.

At a time when governments around the world -- left, right and center -- are failing to gain public confidence and even the winning Democratic Party in the U.S. struggles to match independents for the leading political category (while the Republican Party struggles to get to 25 to 30 percent market share), it might behoove those same party professionals who have been failing to connect their parties to the public to pause before calling Sarah Palin an incompetent politician. Conventional wisdom may not be reliable in unconventional times -- or for unconventional politicians.

For instance, as the story was breaking Friday, fellow politically professional panelists were pointing out on-air how stupid Palin was to put forward her big story on a late Friday afternoon during a three-day holiday weekend. Everyone "knows" one buries a story that way. It became my grim duty to remind my fellow interlocutors -- in case they had not noticed -- that all the cable news shows were dropping their programming to switch to wall-to-wall coverage of the Palin announcement and that we were, at that moment, telling a national audience that the story we were talking about was being buried. The story persisted and expanded over the weekend, and my guess is that if any political topic came up at America's millions of Fourth of July backyard barbecue parties, it was probably Sarah Palin. So, who's the fool?

Well, I have had the honor of working for two politicians before they rose to their heights (as well as during their heights) -- Ronald Reagan and Newt Gingrich. And though they were vastly different men, both of them were considered, for different reasons, beyond the political pale in their earlier political years. If only Ronald Reagan could behave more like George Herbert Walker Bush and if only Newt Gingrich could behave more like Bob Michel, maybe they could succeed better at elective politics. Continued...

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About The Author
Tony Blankley served as press secretary to then Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, Newt Gingrich. Tony Blankley is the author of The West's Last Chance: Will We Win the Clash of Civilizations? .
 
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©Creators Syndicate
Lets look at columnists' track records.
Some of the columnists who are so eager to dismiss Sarah Palin's political future are old enough to have written about the consequences of Richard Nixon's press conference after he lost the election for the governorship of California.

Nixon said something like "You won't have Richard Nixon to kick around any more." At the time, I thought Nixon's political career was over, and I believe most columnists then came to the same conclusion. Seven years later, Nixon was elected President, and I was happy to have voted for him. (I'd have been much happier to have voted for Barry Goldwater, but I doubt Goldwater would have done as well as Nixon did in 1968.)

Anyway, if any of George Will, Kathleen Parker, Peggy Noonan, et. al. wrote in 1968 that Nixon then had a political future, I'll be very surprised. And I'll reread more carefully their present analysis of Sarah Palin's abilities and chances.

Sarah Palin was the only reason I was eager to vote in the last election. Before McCain picked her as his running mate, I considered McCain just the lesser (admittedly far lesser) of two evils. I admire McCain as a Navy pilot but not as a RINO politician. The McCain - Feingold act was a terrible assault on our freedom of speech, and that alone would have made me hold my nose as I voted for him.


MellorSJ2
Timing is everything in politics. The certain fatigue and failure of the Obama presidency will enhance the more conservative policies of the Right sooner than later. You ain't seen nothin yet as to how bad the economy will get. All pertinent indicators show that Obama was and is wrong and that a conservative, such as Sarah Palin, will emerge to the hieghts of American politics. It may not be Palin but she can help by pointing out the consistent failures of the current political leaders. She can do it better if she is not the governor of Alaska. Even a dismal speaker and politician as was Richard Nixon rose to the top after failing to win the California governors seat. Palin's early exit from Alaska is a wise move because Americans will not vote for an Alaskan Governor for President. Not yet. White female politicians have a longer road to go than black males in this country. But when the timing is right, the conservatives will win again. And they should. Now you know.
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