As this writer makes clear, the
media attacks on Sarah Palin have been astonishing, over the top, and they remain
unrelenting. Yet the media support for
Barack Obama even prior to his decision to run for the presidency could have
been described with exactly the same language.
Just swap out support for attack.
As I posted when Sarah Palin
first erupted onto the national scene, the American people may have doubts over
her leadership and potential, but her enemies on the left had no doubt
whatsoever. Her good fortune is that
they have spent themselves stopping her on the wrong battle field.
If she chooses to enter the 2012
presidential campaign, it will be the battlefield of her choosing and her
opponents have utterly spent their best ammunition to the point that they cannot
really make it up anymore.
At some point the American people
will speak and I suspect that her campaign could be a rout from beginning to
end. Tea party support has opened a way
station for independents and she is leading that charge. The old line GOP and religious GOP factions
have no place to go and she will owe them nothing. That is why they are so grumpy.
Obama has been revealed as a
socialist college professor type with no resonance with that seventy percent
plus of the electorate that the tea party and GOP easily appeals to. The mish mash of the health act is deeply
resented as his utter disregard for the eleven million unemployed and the
housing disaster. He too obviously
respects power and wealth and that is not a basis of electoral trust. Even then he still can pull something out of
the hat that will make him electable. He
does have incumbency.
The real fight will take place in
the early primaries. If she wins through
those skirmishes, them I suspect that she is unstoppable. Recall this is a lady whose idol and indirect
mentor is Margaret Thatcher.
Sarah in 2012?
Among the most astonishing phenomena of the current political scene in
the U.S. is the relentless percussion of hatred, animadversion, revilement and
outright dissimulation hurled against Sarah Palin—the mirror image of the orgy
of adulation which Barack Obama enjoyed prior to his election and in the
auroral days of his administration. One is put in mind of the vicious and
slanderous campaign waged by the liberal-left against George Bush. But this is
something different from Bush redux. The difference is that Bush was a
sitting president whose policies many felt, rightly or wrongly, were steering
the nation in a perilous direction, whereas Palin is without public office and
executive power. The media have clearly gone beyond the limits of reason or
propriety.
The question is why. What is it about Sarah Palin that has generated so
intense a degree of tractarian misprision, that has turned almost the entire
mainstream media against her, and has even led many reflective people to doubt
her competence and her intelligence? What explains the abuse she has had to
absorb, from being dismissed as a rabble-rousing populist lightweight to being
accused as a murderer by proxy in the Tucson
shooting?
In an article for FrontPage
Magazine, Evan Sayet has essayed an answer to this provocative enigma. “What is
it about her that they hate?” he asks, and replies, “It has to be her life
story” which, pace her critics, “could not be more laudable.” And
that, of course, is the problem. Everything she represents violates the
Democratic left’s agenda and narrative: she is a self-made woman, enjoys a
stable marriage with her high school sweetheart, has raised a together family,
refused to abort her Down Syndrome child, is equally at home in the
wilderness and in the halls of State, was a successful mayor and an effective
governor, upholds the Constitution, is a doer and not only a talker, and
exemplifies the traditional American virtue of self-reliance. Thus, as Sayet
writes, “at every turn, Ms. Palin’s story debunks the myths of victimization
and self-centeredness that is at the heart of the Modern Liberal ideology.”
In other words, Palin is neither a liar nor a parasite, but a truth-teller
and an industrious worker—two attributes that have cost her dearly in a liberal
environment dominated by special interest groups, entitlement seekers,
political predators, fiscal sycophants, tax evaders, people addicted to
welfare, single-parent families living off the dole, labor union apparatchiks,
official and media appeasers in the “war against terror”—in short, the swarm of
barnacles that have battened onto the ship of state.
Historian and commentator Victor Davis Hanson concurs. In a summarizing article
for Pajamas Media, he concludes that Palin’s being “a mom of five children
flies in the face of the demography of yuppie careerism.” In the “binary world”
of network columnists, late-night TV hosts and the culture of the left,
“Sarah Palin is apparently all that they are not.” Moreover, Hanson points out
what is palpably obvious but often unadmitted. “And how can it be fair that
Sarah Palin seems stunning after five children when so many in the DC-NY
corridor after millennia on the exercise machine and gallons of Botox
are, well, ‘interesting looking’?” This latter phrase is the most tactful—and
tactical—of satirical put-downs, and says volumes about unconfessed resentment.
Palin’s undeniable beauty works against her, especially among the feminist
sorority, no less than her candidness, moral rectitude and integrity of
character feature as liabilities in the eyes of her detractors.
Hanson believes that Palin is “scary not so much in 2012” as an
antidote to Barack Obama, but that “she could be around—and around in an
evolving way—for a long time to come.” Here I would be inclined to vary,
however modestly, from Hanson’s analysis of the menace Palin represents to the
liberal-left constituency. The veritable tornado of hatred and defamation to
which she has been subjected argues something far more immediate in its
implications. What the Democrats and their supporters earnestly fear is not
only that Palin may be around for the indefinite future, but that she is
indeed potentially electable in 2012 and must be stopped at all costs.
This is perhaps the principal motive for so libelous a spectacle as the left’s
all-out debauch of vilification. But will the strategy work?
We need to remember that the liberal-left ideology which seems so
potent and widespread in contemporary America is to a large extent the creature
of a progressivist elite and its media organs, busy collimating their
quarry. It does notspeak for the vast majority of Americans but, as Arthur
Brooks clearly sets out inThe
Battle, accounts for at most 30% of the nation. What he calls the 30%
coalition, grounded in “European-style statism…expanded bureaucracies,
increasing income redistribution, and government-controlled corporations,”
advances an agenda that is not shared by the remaining 70% of the population.
And it is precisely here, in the preponderant sector of the electorate, that
Palin’s real strength lies.
Palin has, as I’ve written before, all the right political instincts, a
love of country and a practical understanding of foreign and domestic affairs
that the ostensible sophisticates in the newsrooms and in the galleries of
officialdom sorely and demonstrably lack. And she has the common touch. She
does not fly over flyover country; she connects with the people who live there,
often dismissed by their supposed betters as rustics and “clingers.” She is, to
put it succinctly, down to earth.
Lest I’m beginning to sound like a hagiographer, let me assure my
readers that I’m only trying to set the record straight. Does she
have flaws? As the saying goes, you betcha. Does anyone else on the Washington conveyor
belt have character flaws? You double betcha. Is there anyone today among
the political actors we know and read about who is without blemish? The fact
is, nary a one. To single out and denounce Palin for her personal beliefs or
for aspects of her conduct, whatever these might be, while letting so many
others off the hook, is the epitome of bad faith. And besides, would we really
want the Dalai Lama for president?
The reason, then, that Palin may appear “dicey,” a long shot for the
White House and unconvincing as a savvy political player is owing not to any
calamitous personal deficiencies—after all, she has succeeded brilliantly in
most of her undertakings—but to the well-coordinated offensive launched against
her by the media, the special interest groups and the entrenched Beltway power brokers.
That is, she has been targeted for extinction by the 30% minority who control
the levers of power and influence. They have her in their “crosshairs.”
But this is to ignore the 70% majority of center and center-right
Americans, many of whom have become more and more skeptical of the press and
who are correspondingly fed up with the techniques of character assassination
employed by the agencies of the generic left. Paradoxically, Palin’s
electability can be reckoned as an inverse function of the virulent campaign
intent on her delegitimation. The “war against Sarah” is a clear indication of
the feasibility of her candidacy for the presidency. The greater the fury and
bluster and dissembling she is met with, the greater the likelihood that she
poses a genuine threat. One does not raise a mallet to crush an ant.
The hatred meter going off the charts registers a force not easily dealt with
or pragmatically resisted.
Nothing, of course, is guaranteed. As Myra
Adams, who served on the McCain Ad Council, suggests,
electoral calculations at the primary level require stringent caution and
militate against nominating what she calls “Kamikaze Republicans” or
“doctrinaire conservatives,” who could well lose in key states like Pennsylvania or Florida .
Her warning is certainly opportune.
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