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Sarah Palin: Strengths or Weaknesses?

 

Picture of the Top Tier Democratic Candidates at Yesterday's Debate

“I’m looking forward to voting for the first REPUBLICAN woman President.”  (Laura Bush on CNN, June 20, 2007)

 

“Mrs. Bush, do we have a deal for you!”  (Me, along with the other Palin supporters)

 

 

Hi Steve (e-mail to me from a potential Palin Supporter):

Thanks for the rousing endorsement of my blog! I appreciate your enthusiasm, conviction and positive words.

I haven't had much time to read everything about Gov. Palin yet, but after the little ones are in bed later, I will spend some time on it.

I wanted to ask you a couple questions ... looking for your gut reactions and honest opinions here ...

1. Gov. Palin, being from
Alaska, is as unknown as a candidate could be (unless I was running of course .... talk about "unknown"!). Do you see that as something that could truly be overcome? There are people in the US that view Alaska as another country (same with Hawaii
).

2. Gov. Palin is VERY young (politically speaking) ... goodness, she's younger than me! Little national political experience. People who look seriously at the VP candidate, look for someone who would be able to take over as President and represent the
US
on a world stage.

3. I have heard some rumblings/rumors that JC Watts from
Oklahoma
might make an excellent VP candidate. I am more familiar with Congressman Watts and wonder what your thoughts might be on that, and maybe give your comparison between the former congressman and Gov. Palin.

OK - enough for now. Suddenly I feel like I am giving a final exam to a Civics Class!

I look forward to your thoughts.

 

“Mommie with a doctorate”

 

 

Hi MommieDoc:  Good questions.  As you'll note on my site and others, we've talked a lot about the need to "change the code."  The Democrats could be running (Pres.) a woman and a Black man (VP) or a white woman and a Hispanic (Richardson).  Few Americans would have imagined that even a few years ago.  Mike Huckabee is an ordained minister, and he’s a serious candidate for the ticket.  

As I've said, we shouldn't run against the Dems the same two "older white guys in gray suits."   I'm an older white guy, but in shorts because it's 85 degrees here.

(1) Our governor in PA is Ed Rendell, and the guy in NY State is Elliott Spitzer, and I doubt many people known them.  I think Sarah is pretty well-known in the National Governors Association.  She's a very aggressive leader in
Alaska.  I think she could get known in a hurry, much as has happened with Obama.  She’s an expert on energy.  Her husband is a "normal" guy, a commercial fisherman and oil field production worker.  He's now a "house husband."   People ask me what's her position on immigration.  I seriously doubt she has a position, and that may be a plus.  (They want people to come to Alaska
, not to stay out.)  She is Christian, pro-life,  pro-family, and pro-traditional family. 

Age: She will be nearly 45 when she is inaugurated as VP in January, 2009.  Here are some comparisons:  John Edwards just turned 54, and he was was 51 when he ran for V-P in 2004 and basically had little "national" experience

Barack Obama will be 46 soon.  He's been a Senator for two-plus years.  Sarah's children are mostly older than Obama's.

Sarah is 43, the same age JFK was when he was elected Presiden.

(2)  She’s been Mayor of Wasilla, a small but fast-growing city for two terms.  Before that, she served on the City Council.  She ran for LT. GOV and lost (see the picture on my site).  She ran for governor in the primary against Republican Frank Murkowski, the incumbent, and won (to everyone's amazement).  She then ran against a guy named Tony Knowles, a former Democratic governor, and won by 8 percentage points (again, amazing a lot of people).  

Her major issue has been taking on the Big Oil companies in
Alaska (who are used to running everything) and telling them she now runs everything.  The key issue in Alaska
is a natural gas pipeline to take huge amount of gas to the lower-48.  I believe she can deal with the "big boys."  You will hear she is a conservative "populist."  What that means is that she is very people-oriented and believes that the state's resources should go in large part to the benefit of Alaskans.

(The palinforvp.blogspot.com, linked on my blogroll, has information about the politics of
Alaska
and some of the political battles she's been in.)

(3)  I have mentioned J. C. Watts in talking about V-P candidates.  The other ones I've mentioned are, of course, Sarah, Michael Steele (Black man, former LT. GOV. of Maryland and a candidate in 2006 for the U.S. Senate, wonderful man); Condi Rice (you know who she is, but she’s not a candidate) and Mike Huckabee. 

The polls say Mrs. Clinton has an unfavorability rating nationally of about 45%.  Right now, Sarah's unfavorability rating nationwide is about zero. 


Sarah is very ambitious -- hey, you better be in that business!  I expect her to surface in a big way later this summer.  I believe there's a good chance she will be a candidate for President in 2016, or maybe 2012 if Hillary Clinton wins the next election. 

I think the  pictures on my site tell a lot about Sarah Palin. 

I hope you'll endorse her today.  If you change your mind later, I'll still like you just fine, but we're at the point where we are establishing a foundation.  Supposedly, once you have a foundation, the house sort of builds itself. 

Sarah appeals to some groups where the Party has trouble, including women like you (professionals, mothers concerned about what's going to happen in regard to their children's futures, etc.)   I expect Hillary Clinton to go after Sarah at some point, and I expect Mrs. Clinton to lose that one.  In her campaign for Governor, she said
Alaska politics was "dominated by an Old Boys Club."  She closed down the Club.

Would love your support.

steve maloney

Sanity102 (http://outsideofthebox.townhall.com) is a woman who's written on her blog about Sarah, including one amazing column called "The White Goddess."  You'll find a link to Sanity on my blogroll.


Is Sarah aware of all this activity?  I believe she and her staff are very aware.  They have said nothing, and I don't expect them to until maybe this fall.

When you have some time, take a look at www.irey.com.  It's the site of a candidate I worked with in her race for Congress (against John Murtha).  Diana is another candidate who's 44 but looks 34.  She's wonderful and has national aspirations herself. 

Thanks for your interest.  C'mon in, the water's fine. 

 

Later today, I’ll add some comments about “regional identity,” and whether the GOP will insist on having a Southerner on the ticket.

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Thanks to Mad's Dad for This on Sarah

NOTE TO VISITORS LEARNING ABOUT GOV. SARAH PALIN AND CONSIDERING WHETHER TO ENDORSE HER:  I'M GOING TO LEAVE THE PHOTOS "CURRENT" AND ADD TO THEM, BECAUSE I THINK THEY TRULY ARE WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS.  THE EFFORT TO BRING THIS FINE WOMAN TO NATIONAL PROMINENCE IS ONE BY A RELATIVE FEW PEOPLE NOW -- AND MANY PEOPLE LATER -- TO CHANGE THE DIRECTION OF OUR BELOVED (BUT CONTENTIOUS) NATION.  TOMORROW (WELL, ABOUT MIDNIGHT TUESDAY) THERE WILL BE A COLUMN ABOUT QUESTIONS PEOPLE HAVE RAISED CONCERNING THE VIABILITY OF SARAH'S CANDIDACY.  (SHORT VERSION: SHE'S VERY VIABLE.)  PLEASE AVOID THE RUSH AND GIVE HER YOUR BACKING NOW. 

Today's (Tuesday's) Campaign2008Victory has a guest column from Madeline's Dad on Sarah Palin, as well as several graphics of Sarah and her family.  My favorite is Sarah as a basketball star at the Wasilla state championship city.  If you're interested in being a "Blogger 4 Palin," please let me know in the comments section or in an e-mail to TalkTop65@aol.com.  Thanks for your support!


The following post is from Madeline's Dad.  Thanks, "Mad's Dad" 
Monday, June 18, 2007 7:33 PM

 Steve Maloney does.

And he wants you to know who she is as well.  Steve is working hard on what the blogosphere does best.  "It" gets the word out.  In this case, Steve and his buddies are working on getting the name of Sarah Palin out there.

I did a quick run-thru over Steves previous posts on Ms. Palin, and on first glance, she does appear to offer some interesting options for some of the frontrunners for the Republican nomination.  Obviously, the "woman factor" would pose a nice opposition in case Hillary! makes it thru to Denver as the nominee.  Personally, I don't think she'll get it, but if she does, Ms. Palin would offer those pesky "undecided" voters a female choice in both parties.

As a bit of disclosure, I briefly dated a gal in college that hails from the same hometown as Ms. Palin.  As our ages are fairly close, Wasilla, Alaska is a small town, and both ladies were athletes, I'd venture a guess that the two ladies probably knew each other in high school.  I can say with 100% certainty that women from Wasilla are pretty, intelligent, and good athletes, based on personal prior history.

While I haven't done enough homework to support Ms. Palin or not, a big shout-out to Steve over at Campaign2008Victory.  It's good to see the blogosphere being used for some grassroots stuff, and not just for forwarding clips of dumb stuff that Paris Hilton did.

Check out his blog, and take a look at Sarah for VP!






RISING STAR: Wasilla mayor was groomed from an early political age.

Sarah Palin and her family live at Lake Lucile in Wasilla. From left are her husband, Todd, and her daughters, Piper, 5, Bristol, 16, and Willow, 12. Palin's son, Track, 17, is attending high school and playing hockey in Michigan. Sarah and Todd, a three-time Iron Dog snowmachine champion, eloped in 1988. (Photo by MARC LESTER / Anchorage Daily News)


Sarah Heath (Palin), No. 22, was the point guard of the Wasilla Warriors in 1982 when they won the state championship. (Daily News archive 1982)


Palin was first elected to the Wasilla City Council in 1992. (Photo by BILL ROTH / Daily News archive 1999)


Palin was Miss Wasilla in 1984 and also Miss Congeniality. ( )


Wasilla Mayor Sarah Palin attends a youth football game in Palmer in 1999. (Photo by BILL ROTH / Daily News archive 1999)


Wasilla Mayor Sarah Palin shoots sporting clays during a charity event at Grouse Ridge near Wasilla. (Photo by ERIK HILL / Daily News archive 2000)


Todd Palin holds the Bible for his wife, Sarah Palin, as she is sworn in as governor in Fairbanks on Dec. 4.

Photos Courtesy of the Anchorage Daily News
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The Selling of Sarah Palin: Why the Effort?

Note:  Thanks to Christopher, a YoungRepublican (http://youngrepublican.townhall.com) for signing up today as a "Blogger 4 Palin."  People supporting Sarah are part of what Ronald Regan called a "Big Tent," a diverse group of people supporting the Republican ticket.

Today, BlackTygrrrr - four "r's" please - asked me to: (1) check out his blog; (2) put it on my blogroll - if I thought my viewers might like it.  I've done both.  In return, I'm going to ask "Black" to review the Sarah Palin (Governor of Alaska) material and, if he agrees with it, to become a "Blogger 4 Palin."   It's a reasonable request.

Why would I do such a thing? First, because I believe strongly in Sarah's candidacy.  Second, because I know it's essential to get people - many of them - to find out who Sarah is.  Third, if you don't ask people to take an action - in this case, to support Sarah - they won't act on their own.  As generations of salespeople have observed, "You have to close the deal." 

Townhall, like other political sites, is - or should be - all about coalition-building.  It's not really about aging white guys pursuing a self-directed course in "Anger Management."  It's not about repeating the same slogans over and over again in the "Comments" section.

Rather, it's about people with similar views getting together to influence the making of public policy, which certainly includes supporting specific candidates.  "Supporting" means voting for such candidates, asking others to do so, and SENDING THEM MONEY - even if it's only a few bucks.  In fact, sending a candidate $20 is a lot better than writing 200 comments in the essay section of TH. 

Half the people on TH - and we know many of them - by name border on uselessness.  They recite the same slogans (against amnesty, against liberals, against feminists, against homosexuals) endlessly.  They never make a reasoned, fact-based argument for their "opinions."  They just intone them, as if they were so many "Popes" speaking ex cathedra (with infallibility). 

Don't get me wrong: it's absolutely critical to "talk up" candidates.  It's essential to present simple, coherent, fact-based arguments for them. 

I've talked recently about the importance of "viral marketing."  In this case, that means I - along with a growing number of others - want support for Sarah to spread quickly among people.  We want Sarah to become the hottest political commodity in America.  We want so many people to support her that the Republican presidential candidates won't be able to ignore her.

We want Sean Hannity, Bill Bennett, Michael Medved, Hugh Hewitt and others to compete to get Sarah on their talk shows.  We want the MSM media (including FOX) to start talking about the "Sarah Phenomenon." 

Who's this "we" I'm mentioning?  Right now, it includes Elephantman (Palin for VP), Sanity102, GenXDad, Appletonian, Will, Young Republican, and other bloggers.  It's not exactly a mass movement - yet - but it could soon be exactly that.

Bloggers are the key, because they're magnets.  They attract other bloggers.  Also, they're people who take actions - regularly doing their blogs - designed to influence others.  In fact, blogging at its best is not about "expressing" oneself.  It's about making converts.

Will Sarah be the next candidate for vice-president on the Republican ticket in 2008?  I don't know the answer to that question.  But I do know that the Republican Party couldn't come up with a better candidate.

Many years ago, Father Keller of something called the "Christophers," used to say this on the radio:  "It's better to light one little candle than to curse the darkness."  In this case, the way you create a wildfire is to start lighting matches.

To that end, I'm committed to being a pest, a lighter of matches.  If you're a blogger, or even if you're not, I'm asking you right now for your support for Sarah.   She needs you, and the country needs her.

BlackTygrrrr, among many others, this means you!

Contact Stephen R. Maloney at TalkTop65@aol.com


The Case For Rudy

Note:  This is actually my column for tomorrow (Tuesday), but I think it’s important to get it out today because it raises important issues.  I’m responding in part here to Sanity102, who questioned if the NRA and the Christian Coalition would allow Rudy to win the nomination and the election.  Here’s what I replied:

 

Because TH has gone so completely in the tank for Romney, who has no chance of winning the nomination, it's sometimes hard to get truly accurate assessments of the presidential race. The old Republican "strategy" for winning the nomination may not hold this time -- in fact, I'd say it has no chance of holding. Rudy is trying to win the nomination by doing well in the Super Tuesday primaries, most of which he has a good chance to win.

 

Candidates who are pandering to the extremist elements of the supposed Republican “base” are making a bad mistake.  They will paint themselves into an ideological corner that will make it impossible to win the national election.  Someone like Romney seems to believe he can head the Republican ticket with a slogan like:  America, I was only kidding!” 

 

The influence of the NRA and the old Christian coalition in critical states like NY, CA, NJ, CA, and FL is questionable. For 35 years, the leadership (key word) of the Christian Coalition has been pursuing a somewhat curious anti-abortion strategy (NOT a full pro-life approach unless we define life as existing only in the womb). It has failed to change much of anything.

 

Is there another direction that will save more lives of the unborn -- AND ALSO BRING THE STRATEGY TO A "WHOLE-LIFE" APPROACH?

 

The primary focus for any Republican or thoughtful Independent has to be defeating Hillary Clinton, the presumptive Democratic nominee.  All other considerations are secondary.  If Hillary gets in, she may appoint three or four more Ginsburg-Breyer types to the Supreme Court, and that will make the pro-life issue moot for at least another generation.    If we narrowly focus on which Republican candidate passes this or that pro-life litmus test, then we’re putting ourselves on a downward slope to a major defeat. 

One reason I'm backing Rudy is my strong belief that he will prevent more abortions than any of the supposed "pro-life" candidates, some of whom  are incredibly cynical on this issue. The real pro-life candidates (Huckabee, Hunter, Gilmore, Tancredo, Paul) have ZERO chance of winning a national election. 
 

Rudy has said he will appoint strict constructionist judges.  That means he would be positively inclined toward justices whose judicial philosophies resemble those of Roberts and Alito. 

(I meant what I said in my previous column about Rudy needing to bypass the extremist segment of the Republican base. He regards such people as a liability in winning the general election. They probably should go to a third party, which might get 2% of the national vote.)

This issue is a lot more complicated than most people on TH could imagine. One reason I'm so strongly for Sarah Palin is that she's a pro-life candidate with staying power. Right now, we don't have a compelling pro-life candidate on the national scene, and if we don't bring Sarah front-and-center, I don't see another such candidate emerging.  I want Sarah elected to two terms as President (2016 and 2024) during which period she can appoint pro-life judges.    

Will the NRA oppose Rudy if he wins the nomination?  NO!

 

Frankly, the NRA doesn’t want an overwhelmingly liberal – and anti-gun – national government, which would be the case if Hillary wins.  The NRA has recently shown a gratifying desire to compromise on certain issues, especially prohibitions on selling guns to people with mental disorders (“The Cho Factor”).

 

As the campaign unfolds, The Fred Thompson element will be intriguing to watch, but I haven’t seen any evidence that he could win against Hillary.  Also, right now he's the "none-of-the-above-candidate," and he will lose that status as soon as he formally enters the race.

 

About McCain (my second choice)?  Don't write him off just yet.  He's strong on national security, and that's a critical issue.


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Diamonds in the Landfill: The Best Blogs

 

Every Sunday until Labor Day I’ll have a continuing series on the best blogs on Townhall.  Occasionally, I’ll feature blog from other sites.  Currently, TH has about 4500 blogs, the vast majority of them inactive.  I’m taking a look at all of them and will choose the best ones.

 

I regard this as something of a public service.  Most blogs – including even the best ones – get relatively few visitors.  How would people even know they existed?  As my title suggests, it’s a little like looking for a diamond in a landfill.  It’s my assignment – and I do choose to take it – to tell you where those diamonds are. 

 

Frankly, I’m not concerned with blogs that appear to be a self-prescribed form of anger management therapy.  Relatedly, I also pass by those that are nothing more than a collection of right-wing slogans and name-calling.  Instead, I’m most interested in blogs that emphasize originality of ideas and images.  I like the blogs that make me think, not those that try to reinforce prejudices.  If a blog does a good job capturing my attention, it may very well appear in this series. 

 

About 10 a.m. each Sunday you’ll see 2-3 blogs featured on this site.  I hope you’ll visit them.  I also urge you to look into the ones already on my blogroll, especially the ones containing the designation “4 Palin,”  which means they support the candidacy of Alaska Governor Sarah Palin for the vice-presidential slot on the Republican national ticket.

If you have your own favorite blogs, please don't hesitate to recommend them for inclusion in this series.  Comments are welcome.


This Sunday I’m focusing on three blogs by Pennsylvanians: Kelley Smith, Scott Ott, and Skye. 

 

Kelley Smith, a senior political science at Grove City College, does http://kelleysblog.townhall.com.  Kelley, a summer intern at Townhall, is new at blogging. She doesn’t yet have one of the best blogs, but it’s a good one, and she shows great promise. 

Her first three blogs are titled:  "I'm Conservative Because"; "Flying the Gay Old Skies"; and "The Fine Line Between Judgment and Opinion."

Kelley's a talented young writer but has an occasional tendency toward verbal sloppiness.  She needs, for example, to remember the difference between the possessive "its" and the contraction “it’s” ("it is”).

I like the fact that she's willing to examine her conservatism in an effort to find out why precisely she embraces that point-of-view.  She avoids Christian judgmntalism, especially as it relates to gay and lesbian people. 

Her comments on judgment and opinion reminded of Pat Moynihan's famous comment:  "We have a right to our opinions, but we don't have a right to our own facts."  We live in a country overloaded with "opinions" -- one of the dubious contributions of "talk radio" -- and underloaded with facts. 

On the "gay" issue: Kelley's bright enough to discover that one of the major failings of conservatives has been a tendency to dismiss various groups as unworthy of the "movement," including Blacks, gays, lesbians, working women, and -- recently -- Hispanics.  That's an approach which will end up making conservatives a permanent minority, one that complains ceaselessly but has little influence.

(I read yesterday that the gay vote -- 4% of the electorate -- was the reason Bush won the presidency in 2000.  Nationwide, Bush got 23% of that vote.  As you remember, he won the crucial state of
Florida by roughly 600 votes.  Without the efforts of gay Republicans in FL, Al Gore would have won the election.) 

One concept I hope Kelley tackle in a future column is the tendency of some conservatives to rely on buzz-words ("liberal . . . feminist . . . amnesty") and slogans ("gay agenda . . . Rudy McRomney") rather than discussing issues. 

She’s a work-in-progress but is off to a good start with her blog. 

A truly superb blog is one by Scott Ott:  http://scrappleface.townhall.com.  This is a very funny man, a conservative counterweight to someone like Jon Stewart.  Few people on Townhall know that Scott exists, and that’s a real shame.

 

As someone who's tried, I know that writing good humor -- funny, insightful stuff -- is difficult.  Scott Ott (great name for a humorist) is excellent.
 
Here’s how he describes himself:  “Scott Ott is editor-in-chief and anchor overseeing the vast editorial staff of ScrappleFace.com, the daily news satire site which covers the globe like a patina of dental plaque. Author of the good-selling book, Axis of Weasels, Mr. Ott works from an undisclosed location where he is crafting his next book, tentatively titled The Lost Speeching of George W. Bush.

His most recent piece on his blog is "Poll: Majority Say Paris Hilton's Plight Good for America"

In it, he quotes a (fictional) resident of Pittsburgh as saying, "Just knowing that rich, famous, beautiful people can be miserable, pathetic losers gives me hope that my own troubled existence may have meaning.  I can't get enough of this story on TV.  Every moment is like a multivitamin for my ego." 

He adds, "Researchers say their findings show: 'What's bad for Paris Hilton is good for
America.'"

He continues, "The CBS News/New York Times survey showed that 58 percent of Americans were willing to see Ms. Hilton suffer further disgrace, prolonged imprisonment, or even death for the good of the nation."
 
In another column Scott informs us that, in response to appeals that he pardon Scooter Libby, President Bush instead pardoned (former State Department official) Richard Armitage, "who actually leaked Valerie Plame's name to the media."

Writing about the problems Democrats are having with Iraq War funding, he gives some tips from Hillary and Obama on saving money, including having the military use the "economical Toyota Priuses" rather tan "gas-guzzling HumVees." 

When you visit Scott's site, check out some of the comments.  At least two of the respondents (including one outraged Mormon) seem to have no idea that he's writing humor.

Please visit Scott frequently.  Why on earth Townhall doesn't have him doing regular columns for it is beyond me.  His talent enables him to make us look at some tired news stories in new ways, and that's a major contribution. 


Townhall delights in publishing the geriatrics of the conservative movement, Wm. F. Buckley, Jr., Bill Rusher, pat Buchanan, and others who long ago ran out of interesting things to say.  Conservatism badly needs some fresh blood.
 

The third Pennsylvania blog I recommend is Skye’s Midnight Blue, a dedicated web site that has a link from Townhall:  http://midnightbluesays.blogspot.com.

 

Midnight Blue is a creation that deserves the designation of “gorgeous,” with its rich and colorful array of colors, images, and words.

 

Skye Describes herself as a “conservative Democrat,” which I guess makes her a member of a rather small minority group.   She says that attachment “makes life interesting in Philadelphia,” a major stronghold of liberal Democrats. 

 

If you want to do a blog – and have lots of money to spend on professional designing – you might come up with something as good as Midnight Blue, but I doubt it.

 

Please take a look at this site to get a sense of the “limits of the possible” in blogging.  You won’t regret it.

 

Kelley, Scott, and Skye, you all have my permission to take a bow! 

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A STRONG VOICE FOR SARAH PALIN

 

Today, I’m reprinting an essay “GenXDad” wrote about why he’s a blogger supporting Governor Sarah Palin of Alaska for the Republican vice-presidential nomination.  To me, GenXDad is one of the shining stars on Townhall.  He’s a centrist Republican who actually thinks about issues rather than just chanting angry slogans.  GenXDad has one of the very best blogs I’ve ever seen.  He puts some of the supposed “stars” of TH to shame.

Find him at http://genxdad.townhall.com.   He’s worth reading every day.

 

I salute GenXDad for the following piece on Sarah Palin, a remarkable American and a great candidate. 

 

 

Palin for VP?

Thursday, June 14, 2007 2:41 PM

 

For those of you new to the latest center-right blog phenomenon, a "blogroots" movement is growing in support of Alaska governor Sarah Palin for the 2008 VP spot.

I have to admit, I was originally skeptical of the idea of putting a governor of one of the reddest states in the nation on the 2008 ticket, but I'm warming up to the idea, and not just because I'm
blogrolling one of her biggest fans but because she has the look and feel of someone who could very well be the future of the Republican Party.

And she might even help the ticket win.

Let me break down that last point first, because to me, it's the most important.  We cannot - absolutely cannot - throw away 2008, and every little thing matters, including the choice of VP.  So how can a little-known conservative governor from a solidly Republican state help put the GOP ticket over the top?  Three reasons:

1.  She is the ideal contrast to Hillary Clinton (who I believe will be the Democratic nominee).  Think about it, a young, beautiful, charming, articulate woman who represents the "flyover mother" with a blue-collar husband and four kids next to the shrill attorney married to a philandering ex-President with only one kid.  You cannot draw up a clearer contrast between "red state mom" and "blue state mom."

2. It solidifies the biggest weakness of the current GOP field: the gender gap.  For Republicans to win, we don't need to win over single moms, DINK wives and urban mothers.  We do, however, need to get a large percentage of the wives whose husbands will vote Republican.  Right now, Rudy, and Fred have some problems with that demographic.  Well, guess what, Palin IS that demographic!  She can talk directly to the women we absolutely must get to the polls to win and calm their concerns with Rudy's marital difficulties and Fred's cradle-snatching.  (I'm leaving Mitt out of this one, not because I don't think he can win, but because he has ZERO baggage on this issue, but he'd benefit from having someone like Palin on the ticket for the same reasons, just to a much lesser extent than the other two.)

3. Cheney proved that picking an intelligent and competent VP choice from a "safe" state won't hurt your campaign.  Palin has intelligence and competence nailed down, and a personality to boot, which means she'd be at least as strong as Cheney was for Bush in 2000.

So that covers the "how Palin could help us win."  Now, let's look at the other side - the future of the GOP.  Regardless of what happens in 2008, the GOP needs to build a Presidential bench.  Palin is smart, charming and brilliantly successful in
Alaska.  She has over an 80% approval rating in a state that elects Democrats to the statehouse and where a GOP senator found herself in a difficult race.  You have to earn that kind of support, and you don't earn it by being a mediocre governor.

She's right on the issues - she fits right in with the GOP's core values.  Pro-life (a good balance if Rudy is the nominee), lifetime NRA member, fiscally conservative with strong religion and family values.  She's the Republican's Republican on the issues that matter, and she's been able to parlay that conservatism into sky-high approval ratings among those who know her best.

Her one drawback is she comes from a small state, and thus lacks the national stage.  But this is the kind of person who deserves a national stage.  If the rest of the nation got to know her, she could possibly find herself on the top of the ticket in a couple election cycles.  Putting her on the ticket puts the small-town, small-state girl on the national stage and she could develop a large following in no time.

Obviously, I couch my endorsement with the caveat that she passes the background tests and whatever else the eventual nominee throws her way.  Being from a small state, there's a risk she could stumble badly or something in her background that Alaskans don't care about could come out and damage the ticket.  But assuming she passes the vetting process, there's also a very good chance she could be a very pleasant surprise for the GOP, and a welcome alternative to Hillary.

 

Note from Steve:  I believe Sarah will pass those “background tests” with flying colors.  Alaska is a state with more than its share of political corruption, but Sarah has always been on “the side of the angels” and has fought hard against political lawbreakers.  As I’ve said about her and others, we have a right to demand that our candidates be honest – which she is – not that they be perfect, which no one is. 

 

______________________________________________

"I Don't Read That Slop"

When I complained about some (not all) of the essay on TH, that was the response of one of the best-known names on the site.  Any essay that attempts nothing more than to confirm people in their prejudices is contemptible.

Frankly, some of the TH essays -- including most of those on the subject of immigration -- are journalistic versions of dumbness pills.  "Why don't we just enforce the laws we have?" is a frequent question.  The answer is that the nation, for good reasons and bad, doesn't have the political will to enforce those laws.  Somehow, throwing nursing mothers in jail while their infants are home doesn't go over very well with the nation.  Also, at a time when our jails are full, we don't really have any place to put an additional 12 million people.  What's more, since we don't have a tamper-proof I.D. card, it would take the Oracle on the Mount to decide who's actually illegal.  Finally, how do we conduct a search for "illegals" (a term that basically means Mexicans) with irritating the nation's 45 million legal Hispanics, who might demonstrate their ire in the voting booths?

Of course, the much celebrated "Base" doesn't have answers any of these questions.  The Base consists not of people who answer hard questions, but rather individuals who whine and threaten. 

The following is a comment I wrote in response to one of the many essays on immigration.  I give it the head "Base Making Us a Permanent Minority?"

Even though this essay [by Rich Tucker] is beautifully done in part, like all discussions on TH of immigration, it misses the point. Republicans who generally favor the immigration bill (I'm one) see the victory of the base as an awful development. Let me explain: in 1964, key Republicans (especially Barry Goldwater) opposed the Civil Right Act. That decision caused us to lose the Black vote, seemingly forever.

Apparently, we are doing the same thing with the Hispanic vote. We are offending a large majority of the 44 million American Hispanics, the biggest minority group in America. Somehow, getting great visceral satisfaction from so doing is supposed to be compensation for a political disaster. Why do Tucker and others ignore this rather significant political reality?

On my own blog, I've been cosidering these inconvenient truths, along with some others. Somehow, the name-calling and sloganeering that have been the responses have convinced me that I'm probably right. As the "base" pats itself on the back, perhaps it might give a moment or two to considering the real issues involved. We are setting ourselves up to be a permanent minority, and that shouldn't be a cause for celebration.

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Palin for VP: What You Can Do

Friday Night: 

In Saturday’s column, I’m going to talk one more time about Alaska Governor Sarah Palin the “Bloggers for Palin” campaign.  Sarah’s candidacy for vice president on the Republican ticket will continue to be a regular topic on this site, as well as on many others. 

 

This Sundayand every Sunday through the summer – I’ll be talking about the “Best of the Bloggers,” with emphasis on people who blog on Townhall.  As part of my Palin efforts, I’m going through every blog here, all 4500-plus of them. 

 

I’m finding diamonds in the rough, almost literally.  So far, I’m been through approximately 300, including all those from PA (148), NJ (66), Idaho (20), and Utah (53).  Why there are nearly as many bloggers from Utah as there are from New Jersey (a much more populous state) is a question I can’t answer. 

 

How many of those 300 blogs are worth your attention?  Unfortunately, fewer than 10 of them.  Blogs don’t seem to follow the legendary Bell Curve, which would lead to a few excellent ones several more qualifying as “good,” and many falling in the “fair” category.  In fact, the typical blog is no-longer-active.  That was a surprise to me.

 

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

In regard to Sarah Palin’s candidacy for the vice-presidential slot on the Republican ticket, all of us in the Palin movement are delighted by the number of people signing up to support her.  You can find links to them on my blogroll and on Elephantman’s blogroll (at
http://palinforvp.blogspot.com).  Some excellent material about Sarah is appearing on various sites, including Sanity102’s and GenerationXDad’s (see links). 

Please pass along (to me or to Elephantman) the link to any blog that endorses Sarah's candidacy.  We'll list them on the blogrolls.  As we get into the fall, we'd like to have 100 bloggers (or more) supporting Sarah.  The way that will happen is for each blogger who backs Sarah to find one (or two) more allies for her.  "Each one find one (more)" is the way this movement will proceed.  No one is a follower; everyone is a leader. 

So far, Sarah's backers include people who support one of the following:  Rudy Giuliani, John McCain, Fred Thompson, Duncan Hunter, and Ron Paul.  Supporters of any of the Republican candidates are welcome in the Palin Movement.  The emphasis is on what she could bring to the eventual Republican ticket, no matter who heads it.  By February 5, 2008 ("Super Tuesday"), we presumably will know the name of the Republican presidential nominee, and we want that gentleman to decide that his best possible running mate would be Gov. Sarah Palin. 

Of course, this effort will have its ups and downs, but there be more of the former than of the latter.  We strongly believe that at some point Sarah will in fact hold the nation’s highest offices, including the presidency.  We’re asking everyone who blogs or participates in any way in the blogosphere to endorse Sarah.  Her staff is aware the “draft” movement is going on, but it is taking place independent of any effort on her part.  In this sense, it is one of the purest “draft” movements ever to occur.


Before Independence Day, we will have the names of many additional bloggers who support Sarah.  Stay tuned.
 

At some point, Sarah will have to make her own decisions about which steps to take in actively seeking the nomination, and we wish her – and our country – only the best.  Please encourage your friends and Internet contacts to participate in this undertaking!  This is a nation “of, by, and for the people” – and YOU are the people.

 
________________________________________________________________________
Why Sarah? A Short -- and Sad -- Trip Down the GOP's Vice Presidential Memory Lane

I’d like to take a little different approach than I planned.  One commenter asked GenXDad, a strong Palin supporter, why Sarah wasn’t running for President.  He indicated that it’s unusual for someone to run for vice-president, which has a small degree of truth to it.

 

As a first-term Governor, Sarah is not ready – yet – for the “Ultimate Prime Time,” a full-fledged run for the presidency.  From all evidence, however, she's a very fast-learner and shows every sign of being ready to assume the presidency – if necessary – by Inauguration Day in 2009. 

 

It’s critically important that Republicans play an active role in determining their vice-presidential candidate.  In the past, some very curious choices have been made for vice-president, and they haven’t advanced the Party.  In fact, they’ve done damage – sometimes great damage – to the cause of Republicans.

 

Go way back to 1964.  Barry Goldwater chose as his running mate one William Miller, a congressman from Western New York.  No one denies that Miller was a good husband and father, but he added basically nothing to the ticket.  He was a “just-say-no” Republican, mainly noted for his opposition to what became the Civil Rights Act of 1964.  His opposition, coupled with Goldwater’s, to that proposed legislation was an important factor in turning Black voters away from their historic allegiance to the Party of Lincoln.

 

What about the next vice-presidential choice?  That would be Richard M. Nixon’s naming of Spiro T. Agnew.  A popular figure with the Republican “base” of that era, Agnew established a dubious “first.”  Just as Watergate became a national scandal, Agnew resigned in the face of bribery allegations.  Thus, as Nixon clung by his fingernails to the Presidency, he had no vice-president (until he appointed Gerald R. Ford).

 

Ford then named Nelson Rockefeller, a good man but someone who was an interim appointment.  In the 1976 election, Ford ran with Robert Dole, a war hero and a good Senator, but a terrible campaigner at the national level.  He had a habit of saying things like:  “People know where good ole Bob Dole stands.”  If they did know, apparently they weren’t impressed.

 

In 1992, George W. Bush – not exactly showing political acumen – named young Indiana Senator Danforth Quayle as his V-P running mate.  Quayle was a national joke, “Mr. Potato Head,” and never became a serious candidate for the Presidency.

 

As for Dole’s running mate, even as a political junkie, I couldn't remember who it was!  In fact, the answer to this political trivia question is:  economics wonk Jack Kemp.   As was foreseeable, he and Dole lost badly to Bill Clinton.  If that campaign had a point, no one could figure out what it was. 

 

In 2000 and 2004, George W. Bush ran with Dick Cheney.  For a good part of Bush’s first-term V-P Cheney spent much of his time “in an unknown location.”  Some people think it might have been if he’s spent the remainder of the Bush presidency in said “location.”   (Note:  I'm part of the world's smallest fraternity, people who like Dick Cheney.)

 

You’re getting my point: Republicans have done an abominable job in choosing vice-presidential running mates.  It’s hard to imagine any Party doing a worse job over more than a generation.  It also makes you wonder how we won a majority of the presidencies during the time.

 

The vice-presidency should be a road to the presidency.  For Republicans since 1964, it’s been anything but that.  More often, as with Miller, Agnew, Kemp, and Quayle, it’s been a path to oblivion.

 

Can we do better than Sarah Palin?  I don’t believe we can.  We could name better-known candidates, true, but we couldn’t name one with her reputation for honesty, charisma, and popular appeal. 

 

Leaving the choice of a running mate entirely in the Presidential nominee’s hands hasn’t worked well at all.   It has damaged the growth of the Party and its reputation among voters. 

 

Those of us who back the Alaska Governor so strongly think it’s time to go in a dramatically different direction.  That direction leads directly to Sarah Palin.  “Now she belongs to America.”

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Gov. Sarah Palin: Our Republican Rock Star

TODAY, TWO VERY FINE BLOGGERS -- GENERATION X DAD AND SANITY102 -- WROTE COLUMNS ENDORSING SARAH PALIN FOR V-P.  YESTERDAY, WILL SIGNED UP "FOR PALIN."  YOU'LL FIND ALL OF THEM IN MY BLOGROLL (WITH THE INDICATION '4 PALIN' AFTER THEIR NAMES).  WE'RE LIGHTING "MATCHES," BUT WE DON'T HAVE THE WILDFIRE YET.  IT WILL COME.  I'LL REPRINT GENXDAD'S COLUMN EARLY NEXT WEEK AND DIRECT YOU TO TRY OUT HIS EXCELLENT BLOG, ALONG WITH SANITY'S AND WILL'S.   


I'd like to welcome those interested in the candidacies of "Rudy," Fred Thompson, John McCain, and others to this site.  I hope you'll bookmark it and return often.  This week's columns are all about Sarah Palin, Govenor of Alaska, and a remarkable woman.  Please scroll down and read about why so many people support Sarah as the best possible vice-presidential nominee.  Your comments are welcome.  If you'd like to join "Bloggers 4 Sarah," please let me know.
 

 

Historically, the Democrats have been better at developing “rock stars” than the Republicans.  Franklin Roosevelt was a rock star, a man with tremendous popular appeal.  He was jaunty and optimistic when few men were in a Depression-era.  He smoked his Chesterfields in a cigarette holder, gave off a sparkling smile, and exuded optimism even in most dire of times. 

 

Who were his opponents?  One was Herbert Hoover, the slightly overweight guy with the starchy collar and sour look.  The next one was Alf Landon, who carried Maine and Vermont, but not his native Kansas, a state not known as “the cradle of rock stars.”  The third opponent was Wendell Wilkie, who believed in “One World” (as opposed to three or four?) and wore rumpled suits. 

 

The final political rival was Thomas E. Dewey, Governor of New York.  I don’t know FDR’s height, but he gave off an impression of being tall.  Dewey was about 5-5 with a moustache.  Someone once said he looked “like the little man on the wedding cake.” 

 

JFK was a rock star.  Bill Clinton was a rock star – complete with the mistresses.  Obama is a rock star.  Tommy Thompson, Duncan Hunter, and Jim Gilmore are not.  Mike Huckabee is trying to become the first Baptist preacher ever to become the political version of “Elvis.”

 

Sarah Palin is a rock star.  Sanity102 put it well:  Sarah has a speaking voice that’s strong but feminine.  She’s pretty.  She has four “adorable” kids.  Her husband has one of the last of the macho occupations: fisherman.  

 

Sarah is something of a Scarlet O’Hara type also, someone who excels at beating the “guys” (including the then-current Republican governor and his Democratic predecessor) at their own game.   As a former point guard in basketball, she likes to run things, and her sky-high approval rating shows she does it well.

 

Ergo, an authentic “rock star.”

 

What are the odds that Sarah is going to realize our “impossible dream” and get the vice-presidential nod from Giuliani, McCain, Thompson, or whoever?   Those odds may be a lot better than some people think.

 

You can’t market a used politician – unless you’re Richard Nixon in 1968.  But Sarah is a new politician, a first-term governor after serving two stints as Mayor of “metropolitan” Wasilla, Alaska. 

 

Sanity102’s business partner asked: “Isn’t Sarah too good to be true?”   Good question. 

 

Someone once said of an American politician (Daniel Webster?), “No man could be as GREAT as he LOOKS.”   In terms of appearance, Sarah looks a lot better than Daniel Webster.  Also, she has a kind of charisma that, as Sanity102 observed, you couldn’t buy for a billion bucks.  The one thing she has in common with Gov. Dewey is that, like him, she’s also a crime-fighter.

 

With her small town background, the fisherman husband, and the number of children far exceeding her standard allotment of 2.2, Sarah is a throwback to an earlier America.  Even though very few of us live anymore in such benign times, we all yearn for them.  We want to retain at least a piece of that “Father Knows Best” world when things were simpler, kinder, and gentler.

 

If Sarah is at least partly an illusion – that is, if Sanity’s partner is right – well, so what? Wasn’t it Ralph Waldo Emerson who said that our illusions are critically important?   At their best, our illusions may be pretty close to what we call our ideals.

 

Sarah reminds me a lot of my friend and political ally Diana Lynn Irey, who ran for Congress against John Murtha.  Diana a tiny woman with a big voice – one of the best speakers in the country.  At 5-feet-tall and 99 pounds, one of her strongest supporters was a member of “Rolling Thunder,” a Viet Nam vet was about 6-4, 280. 

 

Was she as devout a Christian as she seemed?  She told me in all sincerity that her two favorite books were: (1) “The Holy Bible”; (2) “Listening to God.”   To her, God is a friend, someone Who might just decide to move in next door. 

 

“Little Diana,” my friend, my heroine, tiny in body but huge in spirit, became a leader among American servicepeople and their families.  She became a symbol of hope to people who saw that everything seemed to be falling apart.  Diana talked the talk, and she walked the walk. 

 

What you saw with Diana was what you got, and I see the same with Sarah Palin.  Diana Irey, whom many people see as the “perfect” woman, once told me, “I can’t stand ‘Perfect’ people.”   We don’t a right to ask Sarah, or any elected official, to be free from all known human flaws.  Remember, “The perfect is the enemy of the good.”   Sarah: being good is, well, good enough.

 

Look at her, listen to her, and meditate on what she’s achieved in her relatively short life.  It’s not hard to imagine her seizing the day and becoming vice-president of the U.S.  It’s not hard to imagine her taking a step up after that.

 

Yesterday, I talked about “viral marketing,” and I’ll do so again tomorrow.  But what it means in this case is spreading the word about Sarah, a remarkable woman.  It means showing enough people the positive qualities she can bring to leadership in our nation’s capital.  It means telling your friends and neighbors her story, and then asking them to do the same.

 

Sarah has had some great triumphs in her life.  It just may be, however, that the best is yet to come.

 

 

(Tomorrow: What Can You Do?)

 

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Palin Campaign: Viral Marketing a Key

NOTE: FOR ANYONE VISITING WITH AN INTEREST IN SARAH PALIN'S CANDIDACY FOR VICE-PRESIDENT ON THE REPUBLICAN NATIONAL TICKET IN '08, THERE ARE SEVERAL COLUMNS BELOW.  I ALSO RECOMMEND HIGHLY THE BLOGS OF ELEPHANTMAN (HTTP://PALINFORVP.BLOGSPOT.COM  AND HTTP://SANITY102.TOWNHALL.COM   THERE ARE LINKS TO THEM BELOW, AS WELL AS TO OTHER SITES SUPPORTING SARAH.  YOUR SUPPORT IS MUCH APPRECIATED.  OTHER LINKS WILL BE COMING UP SOON, INCLUDING VIDEO AND AUDIO LINKS.  THIS IS YOUR TIME TO HAVE A GREAT INFLUENCE ON THE DIRECTION OF THIS COUNTRY.  AS FOR SARAH, A WONDERFUL HUMAN BEING, "NOW SHE BELONGS TO AMERICA." 


Sarah Palin: The First Blog-Driven National Campaign

 

Right now, Gov. Sarah Palin of Alaska isn’t exactly a household name.  There, I’ve just produced the understatement of the year.  It’s a long way – geographically and politically – from her hometown of Wasilla, Alaska, to Washington, DC.  However, it’s a trip a growing number of people believe she will take after Election Day, 2008.

 

In a little more than a year from now she could be vice-president of the U.S.  She would also be on the fast-track to become our first female President. 

 

What will take her on that journey?  Of course, the most important thing is her personality, character, and experience as an extremely popular governor of a state that’s small in population, but big in importance, especially as it relates to energy.

 

Here’s what popular blogger and Palin supporter Sanity102 wrote to me about Sarah:

 

Good Lord, Steve!”

Have you SEEN this lady's family? I've just watched a bunch of her campaign for Gov ads; her family is GORGEOUS and her voice practically oozes "trust me." Strong but feminine...today's Donna Reed type mom.
She's a PR dream!
Oh if she runs on the ticket, people are going to compare her with Hil...if that happens and I was running Hil's campaign, I'd cry.
Seriously, BILLIONS are spent on shaping the public's perception. This women doesn't even have to try.
Oh unfair (hehehehe).”

 

Who exactly is Sarah?  In addition to being Alaska’s governor, she’s a wife, a mother of four, a former basketball star, a fierce political campaigner, a reformer, an economic libertarian, and a populist conservative.  She has the highest approval rating of any governor in the U.S.  – a rating roughly triple that of George W. Bush.

 

She’s not quite ready for the ultimate “Prime Time,” the presidency.  But she’s close. 

 

Being a good President derives essentially from being a Good Person – one who's smart, informed, caring and – yes – ambitious.  There’s more than a hint that Sarah may be the long-awaited political prize: a conservative, female version of JFK.  No, she’s not Ronald Reagan.  She’s Sarah Palin, and she’s still a work-in-progress.  So, we won’t reserve a space for her yet on Mt. Rushmore.

 

How will Sarah become known to the American people?  Her “coming out” party is taking place on this blog – and on a growing number of similar sites. 

 

As a milestone of how she’s doing, keep an eye on "Elephantman's" blog roll at www.palinforvp.blogspot.com.  If by Labor Day, there are dozens of blogs listed as supporting Sarah, she’ll be doing just fine.  By January 29, 2008, the date of the Florida primary, there should be 100-plus names on palinforvp’s blog roll. 

 

If blogsters begin to embrace Sarah, and there are signs that’s already happening, shell go far.  It’s a matter of viral marketing, the approach made famous by YouTube.   People start sharing content – visual or words – with their friends, and then the process mushrooms. 

 

Viral marketing is the electronic version of the old word-of-mouth.  That’s the key to the success of a product, an idea, or a candidate. 

 

The concept of “viral marketing” took hold nationally when Malcolm Gladwell, an important New York author, described it in his book The Tipping Book.  He talked about the way some products and political candidates spread very rapidly, just as we see with viruses.  Think about it: a child comes to school with the flu virus, gives it to a couple of other children, and soon everyone in the town has it. 

 

One of Gladwell’s examples of a “good virus” is the way Rudy Giuliani dramatically reduced crime – especially the murder rate – in New York City.  Essentially, Rudy knew he could cut into crime by making a substantial (and expensive) increase in the number of police officers. 

 

But he opted instead for establishing the conditions that make for law-abiding communities (closing down the porno districts, enforcing laws against public drunkenness, arresting graffiti artists, making people repair broken windows).  He was right.  Crime just didn’t go down; it almost disappeared in many places.  He spread the “virus” of caring communities that led to much less crime. 

 

His point was this:  crime takes place in certain types of communities.  Revitalize those communities, and the crime goes away.    

 

Within the past week, there’s been an example of the kind of viral marketing I’m advocating.  CBS cancelled a show, “Jericho,” that had a modest, but dedicated fan base.  The fans revolted and deluged the network with e-mails.  There were agitators – their version of “ElephantMan” with his palinforvip site – who served as agitators, or virus-spreaders.  They encouraged people to encourage others to protest.

 

Here’s how the AP described what happened.

 

“[CBS head man Les] Moonves said the network's decision last week to reinstate a canceled show called "Jericho" following an outpouring of viewer e-mails and other protests spoke to the growing influence of the Internet on broadcasters.”

"’It was a campaign that couldn't be ignored,’" Moonves said of the mobilization of "
Jericho
" fans, saying it was "astonishing and well-organized."

”As part of the campaign, disgruntled viewers delivered thousands of pounds of peanuts to CBS's corporate offices, a reference to a scene in the season finale where a character replies, ‘Nuts!’ to a demand that the town in Kansas, which had been isolated by a nuclear attack, surrender.”

 

Some individuals – Elephantman, Appletonian, me, Sanity, and many others – can work hard to take this in the direction of the tipping point.  But if we do it right, we supposed “leaders” soon become the followers.  The campaign “takes off on its own.” 

 

Viral marketing – in the form of spreading the good news about Sarah – can work.  It won’t take off immediately, but it will eventually.  If you want to add your site to the growing list of those supporting Sarah, let us know.  Join us in making history!

 

To Sarah, we have this to say:  Your life is about to undergo some big changes!

 

 (The fourth column about Sarah -- what precisely you can do to advance her campaign -- will follow tomorrow.)

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Why Sarah Palin For V-P?

The title of tomorrow's article will be: "Sarah Palin: The First Blog-Driven National Campaign."  It will show one way Sarah will get the nomination -- through "viral marketing,'  information that spreads like wildfire.  That differs from "virile marketing," which I guess is the way they peddle Viagra.  :-)   Is it possible that a candidacy like Sarah's could just spread like wildfire?  Here's what Sanity 102 said about her research into Sarah:

“Good Lord, Steve!”

 

Have you SEEN this lady's family? I've just watched a bunch of her campaign for Gov ads; her family is GORGEOUS and her voice practically oozes "trust me." Strong but feminine...today's Donna Reed type mom.

She's a PR dream!

Oh if she runs on the ticket, people are going to compare her with Hil...if that happens and I was running Hil's campaign, I'd cry.

Seriously, BILLIONS are spent on shaping the public's perception. This women doesn't even have to try.

Oh unfair (hehehehe).



Note:  The following is part of a series that began Monday on the candidacy of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin for vice-president on the Republican ticket. 

The following is from http://palinforvp.blogspot.com.  Written by “ElephantMan,” a college student and political strategist now working in
Washington, DC, it is the original shot fired (soon to be heard “around the world”) for Governor Sarah Palin of Alaska.  Please join us in this effort to revitalize the Republican Party and win the 2008 election.   She’s not even fully aware of it yet, but Sarah is beginning a long journey that will take her first to the vice-presidency and then, hopefully, to the presidency.  “Now she belongs to America.”

Why Sarah Palin?

This blog is the result of about a month's worth of research on potential Republican Vice-Presidential candidates for the 2008 election. I had been considerably less than thrilled with all of the early speculation, mostly swirling around second-tier presidential candidates, so I decided to see if there was anyone better suited for the job that I hadn't been hearing about. I developed the following profile for the perfect VP candidate (using Rudy Giuliani as my presumptive presidential candidate):

1) A energetic, young, fresh face who will energize the electorate
2) Not connected to the current administration
3) Pro-Life
4) Pro-Gun
5) A woman or minority to counter Hillary or Obama and put to rest the idea that America only elects white males

One of the first names I found that fit these qualifications was that of Sarah Palin, the recently elected Governor of Alaska. I knew that I had stumbled upon a fantastic candidate for national office, but I kept looking in the hope that I could find other potentially viable choices. However, after looking at every GOP governor, senator, and congressperson, I found that Palin had only become more appealing.

She was certainly energetic and young, having become governor at only 42 years of age. Watching her speeches and campaign ads, I discovered that she was definitely a new kind of leader, coming off more as a spunky soccer-mom than a stuffy career politician. As for abortion, she was staunchly pro-life; and as a lifetime NRA member she was the most pro-gun candidate in the country. Furthermore, her experiences in rural
Alaska provided a perfect complement to the big-city credentials of candidates like Giuliani. Her moderately libertarian positions on most other issues also match up perfectly to Giuliani.

There was thing about Palin that initially worried me - "lack of experience". She had only been elected governor in 2006, and her only previous experience was as a two terms as a city councilwoman and two more as mayor in
Wasilla, AK (population 8,471 in 2005) followed up by a failed campaign for lieutenant governor and a brief stint on Alaska's Oil and Natural Gas Conservation Commission.

This didn't seem very appealing at first, but then I took the time to look closer at Palin's history. What I had failed to realize was that she had habitually knocked of powerful incumbent opponents and was a quick learner on the job. In the 2006 gubernatorial election, she rolled over scandal-prone incumbent Frank Murkowski in the GOP primary, and then went on to defeat former governor Tony Knowles in the general election - pretty impressive.

Further back, she had knocked off an entrenched incumbent to become mayor of Wasilla, and then developed a reputation as a hard-nosed, effective mayor. Her performance in Wasilla got her elected president of the Alaska Conference of Mayors and earned her the nickname "Sarah Barracuda".

In the end, I decided that Sarah Palin had actually compiled a rather astounding record of achievements in her 42 years, and was more than capable of making the jump to the national level. So now I ask you: who you would rather have as your Vice-President? You could accept conventional wisdom and choose from the lineup of old men currently being bantered about, or you could choose an inspiring leader like Sarah Palin.

As for me, I'm going with "Sarah Barracuda", a candidate who will help us win.

 -------------

Our Country, Her Time: Sarah Palin

ElephantMan, who wrote the piece above, may be a young man, but he’s also a wise one.  Sarah Palin is precisely the kind of principled conservative that Republicans must bring to national attention.  In an age where so many candidates in both Parties look – and act – tired, Sarah is full of energy and good ideas.  “She is fresh, and (almost) everyone else is tired.”

For too long, the Republican Party has shown a tendency to be one that attracts mainly older, white males, and that’s something we must resist.  The future of this Party depends upon its being able to attract more minorities and more women, especially female doctors, lawyers, teachers, journalists, and businesswomen – groups we’ve been losing to the Democrats.

If we offer the electorate nothing but aging Caucasians in gray suits, white shirts, and red ties, voters will turn away from us, and they’ll be right to do so.   Frankly, most people want to vote for candidates who not only promise them a better future, but also will be around to share some of it with them. 

No, I’m not prejudiced against older white guys, especially since I happen to be one.  But our political leaders should present a look and a spirit that reflects the diversity and drive of our country.  It should always be “morning in America,” and there must be leadership roles not just for our sons but for our daughters.

I want a Party – and I firmly believe Sarah shares this vision – committed to offering people of all genders, races, and ethnicities a real stake in America.  If people work hard and dedicate themselves to preserving liberty, they should experience The American Dream, one where life is better, freer, and more secure.. 

As you’ll be reading, Sarah’s approval ratings in Alaska are almost mind-boggling: up around 90%.  Why?  Because the people in that state, Democrats, Independents, and Republicans, trust her.  They believe – correctly – that she cares about them and has their interests at heart. 

She won races against a powerful Republican incumbent and a Democratic former governor.  This is not a woman that shrinks from a tough fight. 

The mother of four children and the wife of an Alaskan fisherman, Sarah stands for everything that’s good about this wonderful nation.  I urge you to join the growing number of people who say that now is her time to aspire to and achieve greatness as a national leader. 


Stephen R. Maloney
Ambridge, PA


My comment to "Sanity 102" on Sarah's terrific personality and her telegenic family:  "Sanity, I was wondering where you were! (Just kidding.) Yeah, we're all on to something very significant here. As I said, all the kids have modern names, but thankfully not a "Moon Unit" among them. She's a very appealing person, and I love the fact she's married to a fisherman.

There's a place in York, Maine called "Rick's All Seasons" (think it's still there), and it opens at 2:30 a.m. (breakfast for the lobster fishing group) and closes after lunch. The clientele: rich people from Boston with vacation homes, tourists, locals, fishermen (and a few fisherwomen), and riders of Harley motorcycles (of which Rick is one). Welcome to America!

Breakfast was wonderful -- a week's worth of cholesterol in one meal!

A key for Sarah is to run as herself. Going back to JFK (who memorized 100 5X8 cards prepared for him by Schlesinger and one or two others) and convinced the MSM (easily convinced of many things) that he "knew everything.' Actually, he knew the cards.

A generation ago, somebody asked George Wallace a question about Afghanistan. He immediately avoided the question & launched into a denunciation of foreign aid. Wallace's wife said in amazement, "I wasn't even aware that George knew anything about Afghanistan." :-)

Sarah needs to talk about principles -- ideas -- rather than take off on what she thinks Hamid Karzai needs to do about the war lords.

Somebody said today that Congress is trying to put too many different things in the Immigration Bill, and it needs to be 'segmented.' I agreed. Doing something is better than doing nothing. Doing things in pieces is sometimes the best way to go. Leave everybody a "little" disappointed and not most people a "lot" disappointed."

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Sarah Palin: "Now She Belongs to America"

Giuliani-leaning visitors.  I have a June 1 column on him.  Scroll down and do the appropriate clicks!
This site has endorsed Rudy Giuliani, but I enjoy the dialogue with supporters of all the significant candidates, including Senators McCain and Thompson and Governor Huckabee. 


Today, I'm going to launch a week-long (!) discussion of Sarah Palin for vice-president of the United States (and down the road, perhaps as the first female President of our wonderful country).  This young woman, the wildly popular governor of Alaska and an important social conservative, is someone people on TH need to know about.  My material on her is beginning to show up this morning -- and will continue for the rest of the week.  It should be very interesting to readers, and it will include material from several other frequent visitors to this site.  Enjoy!  (Any material that appears on this site will be offered to the Anchorage Daily News and other media outlets in Alaska and elsewhere.)  The following (scroll down a little way) article on wikipedia (www.wikipedia.org) offers a good introduction to Gov. Palin.  (Also, I have a column on May 27 about Sarah -- scroll down and click away.)


If you want to encourage Sarah Palin to get out front and take the fight to the Democrats, please be kind enough to forward to 10 friends and family members this column (or, alternatively, the e-mail you received from me).  If everyone does his or her part, we can use this kind of "viral marketing" to make sure the next female President (8-plus years from now) is NOT Hillary Clinton.  Thanks for your help.  I've sent out 300-plus e-mails to media contacts, friends, and political activists from sea-to-shining-sea.   The ulimate goal in the Palin effort?  A gathering of a quarter-million people in DC next spring, with an address not only by me and others but by a "Mystery Speaker."  :-)
------------
 
 

Sarah Palin

 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

 

Sarah Palin          

11th Governor of Alaska

               

Incumbent            

Assumed office

December 4, 2006             

Lieutenant(s)        Sean Parnell       

Preceded by         Frank Murkowski

Succeeded by      Incumbent            

               

Born       February 11 1964 (age 43)

Sandpoint, Idaho

Political party        Republican          

Spouse: Todd Palin           

Profession            Journalist             

Religion Non-denominational Protestant      

 

Sarah Heath Palin (born February 11, 1964) is the current Governor of Alaska. She is the youngest governor in Alaskan history (forty-two years old upon taking office), as well as the first woman to hold the office. In addition to being Alaska's youngest governor, Palin is also the first who was born after Alaska achieved statehood. She is also the first Alaska governor to not be inaugurated in Juneau, instead choosing to hold her inauguration ceremony in Fairbanks. She took office on Monday, December 4, 2006. Her Lieutenant Governor is Sean Parnell. Palin is the former mayor of Wasilla, Alaska.

 

Palin's education includes a degree in journalism from the University of Idaho. She briefly worked in the media and utility industry.

 

She served two terms on the Wasilla City Council and became a two-term mayor and manager of Wasilla, one of Alaska's fastest growing communities. She was also elected President of the Alaska Conference of Mayors.

 

In 2002, Palin made a failed bid to become the state's lieutenant governor, coming in second place behind Loren Leman in a four-way race due to her inability to raise campaign contributions equal to that of her opponent. After Frank Murkowski became governor, resigning from his long-time U.S. Senate seat, Palin was considered by some to be a candidate for the job.  However, Murkowski appointed his daughter, then State Representative Lisa Murkowski.

 

Governor Murkowski did appoint Palin to serve as a commissioner on the state's Oil and Gas Conservation Commission, which she served on during 2003-2004, but later resigned, in protest over what she perceived to be the "lack of ethics" of fellow Alaskan Republican leaders. This included the state party's chairman, Randy Ruedrich, a fellow commissioner, who was accused of doing work for the party on public time and providing a sensitive email to a lobbyist. She filed formal complaints against both Ruedrich and former state Attorney General Gregg Renkes, who was eventually found not guilty.

 

She served an elected term on the Valley Hospital board. In 2006, Palin won the Republican primary for Governor, defeating then-Gov. Frank Murkowski; she went on to win the general election in November 2006, defeating former Gov. Tony Knowles.

 

Despite being considered a maverick by many for filing accusations of some top Alaska Republican officials for ethical violations, Palin's political credentials remain intact as a populist.

 

Recently, she joined efforts to promote an "all-Alaska" natural gas pipeline, which would have been built by a political subdivision of the State. Palin describes an all-Alaska pipeline as the only proposal which brings the maximum benefit to the people, and later softened her stand by claiming she is not opposed to the alternative of running the pipeline through Canada, to the Lower 48, if doing so represents the best deal for Alaska.

 

She also supports rotating legislative sessions, at least on occasion, out of the state capital, Juneau, and re-establishing the distribution of state wealth — municipal revenue sharing — to help local governments, and other assorted entitlement programs which have left many conservatives questioning her fiscal political orientation.

 

Palin says that education, public safety, and transportation will be three focuses of her administration. She is strongly pro-life, opposes same-sex marriage, and has gay friends.

 

While the earlier administration did not implement same-sex benefits, Palin followed the Supreme Court order and signed them into law.  She supports a democratic advisory vote from the public on whether there should be a constitutional amendment on the matter. Alaska was one of the first states to pass a constitutional ban on gay marriage, in 1998, along with Hawaii. Her first veto was used on legislation that would have barred the state from granting benefits to gay state employees and their partners. In effect, her veto granted State benefits to same-sex couples. The veto occurred after Palin consulted with her attorney general.

 

In the first days of her administration, Palin tried to follow through on a campaign promise to try to sell the Westwind II jet purchased by the past administration, on state credit [6].Since the election the state has put up the jet on EBay three times. To date, the jet remains in State ownership yet parked and not used.

 

Shortly after becoming governor, Palin canceled an eleven-mile gravel road outside of Juneau to a mine. She also rescinded the appointment of former chief of staff, Jim Clark, to the Alaska Natural Gas Development Authority. Both of these acts reversed actions in the closing days or hours of the prior Administration.

 

In April of 2007, Palin announced plans to create a new sub-cabinet to address climate change and reduce greenhouse gas emissions in Alaska.

 

Palin's husband, Todd, works on the North Slope and is a commercial fisherman. She also has four children: Bristol, Piper, Track, and Willow. 

 

Prior to political life, Palin competed in the Miss Alaska contest after being chosen Miss Wasilla 1984. In the Wasilla contest, she played the flute and also won the title of Miss Congeniality. 

 

In the past, Palin was named one of Alaska's "Top 40 under 40," Alaska's Public Works "Person of the Year," and was recently inducted into the Sigma Beta Delta Honor Society at Alaska Pacific University. She is also a lifetime member of the National Rifle Association.

 

 

·          In 1984, Palin was a beauty queen, when she was Miss Wasilla.

·          She eats moose burgers and rides snowmachines.

·          Palin was the point guard for the Wasilla High School Warriors when they won the state small school basketball championship in 1982.

·          She admits that, when marijuana was legal in the state, she used it; however, she didn't like it.

·          After she became governor, the nationally read and irreverent political blog, Wonkette, began covering Palin, often focusing on her physical attractiveness.

 

CAMPAIGN2008VICTORY strongly endorses Sarah Palin for nomination as Republican vice-presidential canidate in the election of 2008.  This blog, along with other bloggers on TH and various other sites, is dedicated to launching a powerful grassroots campaign to make this fine young woman the next V-P of the United States.  Godspeed, Sarah!  Now you belong to America!

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Media Manipulation on Townhall??!!

Tomorrow (Monday), I'm going to write some on one of my favorite issues: the segment of America that makes up what Senator Moynihan called a 'warrior nation."  All over the world all during the last century, people have being slaughtered (in Darfur right now).  The funny thing about Americans is that we don't wait around for people to slaughter us.  We fight back.  Often, when other people (Kosovo, Iraq, Afghanistan) are too weak to fight for themselves, we fight for them.  Does someone like Nancy Pelosi understand this propensity to fight back?  Not really.  In fact, it horrifies her.  That, my friends, is what we call a political problem.  It's one not likely to be resolved soon.
 

"Stormy" is a new visitor here, and he (?) thinks a good ticket would be Fred Thompson and Sarah Palin.  He (?)may be right.  I have fun on here with Fred, because he's not the world's most energetic individual, but he's bright and extremely personable. 

Sarah may seem like a "right-field" choice (maybe evern "beyond the bleachers") to many people, but her chances are decent to good.  There is a real logic, given the rise of Mrs. Clinton, to consider a woman for V-P, and Sarah is the best one available.  As I said, the "two aging white guys" ticket choice, the traditional one, seems very yesterday.  Keep your eye on Sarah.  Better yet, read the Wikipedia article on her, which is a good and accurate one, unlike some other "Wik" pieces.  She's a woman who may very well be President of the U.S. at some point. 

Now, on the media, Townhall in particular.  Obviously, TH has some major positives, the individual blogs being the best of them.   However, the constant Romney propaganda, and that's what it is, detracts from the quality and credibility of the site.

Recently, there have been several articles about how Romney (TH calls it "Team Romney!") is dominating "The Ames (Iowa) Straw Poll."  Now, the Ames Straw Poll is about as important as its name suggests -- not very.  We also hear regularly with the links how well "Mitt" is doing, usually in states so small we need a magnifying glass to pick them out on a map.

Most of the TH people plugging Romney have a financial stake in his doing well.  They sorta forget to tell you that.  Every time anyone clicks on TH, there's a campaign picture of Romney's mug, usually telling you how much he "likes vetoes" (except, of course, vetoes of politically popular expenditures),  Hugh Hewitt wrote a book about his favorite candidate, Romney.

TH doesn't like McCain, and they will regularly tell you how his campaign is falling apart -- with staffers supposedly considering leaving and the campaign finances drying up, and the "base" loathing the man.

Is any of this really true?  In the USA TODAY national poll released on Sunday, May 11, it shows Giuliani (barely mentioned on TH) with 30%.  It shows McCain (loathed by Hugh and friends) with 22%, and Fred Thompson with 12% (much less than TH would like for Fred, the site's second choice).  I doubt TH will even mention the latest poll, perhaps on the theory that bad news really isn't news.

And where is Romney in that poll?  Well, he's below Fred Thompson (the real bad news for TH) but ahead of Tommy Thompson and Ron Paul (which I guess is the good news).   In short, Romney is spending twice as much money as the other candidates, but not even enjoying it half as much. 

Romney is one of the richest men in America, with a fortune estimated at more than half a BILLION dollars.  He got this for doing something or other -- nobody's exactly figured out what -- at Bain and Company in Boston.  Clearly, he made lots of wealthy friends -- as befits someone who's George Romney's son and named after J. Willard Marriott.   (His real first name is "Willard," but he never uses it.  The name "Mitt" is a shortened version of the name of a family friend, Milton.)

Overall, he has a lot more money than he does supporters.  If you read only TH -- and were a dedicated fan of Hugh Hewitt -- most of this information would surprise you. 

McCain does have trouble raising money.  He thinks too many candidates come with dollar signs tattooed on their foreheads.  He hates to ask people for cash, and it shows in his fundraising efforts.   But the man has the persistence of a pit bull, and he has solid support from roughly one in four Republicans. 

Giuliani is similar.  He hasn't spent a lifetime cultivating rich people as "friends."  But as the frontrunner, he will continue to draw a good level of contributions, although not as much as mega-bucks Romney.

My suggestion:  if you want to read fair-and-balanced coverage about the candidates, come to this site.  Go right on by Hugh's effusions about "Team Romney."  If you see words like "Ames Straw Poll," flee in terror.

Hey, I might have been the first serious analyst to say very good things about Mick Huckabee, one of the real "finds" of this campaign season.  I'll always try to tell you the truth as God gives me the ability to do so.

Keep coming back!
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Thoughts on Next Pres. & V-P

I see Hugh Hewitt is breathlessly announcing that National Review is calling for the rapid construction of the "fence" (hereafter known as "Berlin Wall, South") as a precondition to opening up discussion of the Immigration Bill, etc.  I have a better idea (or two):  (1) The President and the Congress should bring to an end construction of the Wall and spend the money on more pressing matters; (2) There should be no reconsideration of the Immigration Proposal.  As they say in New York, "Forget about it."  It would be preferable to wait until after the election of 2008 to even mention the subject again.   No Republican in his right mind is going to grab that tar baby in our lifetime. 

NOTE:  I'M WRITTEN OUT ON IMMIGRATION.  I WON'T WRITE ANYMORE ABOUT THE SUBJECT NOR WILL I RESPOND TO ADDITIONAL COMMENTS ON THE SUBJECT, ALTHOUGH I WILL READ THEM.  THANKS FOR YOUR FOREBEARANCE.  THE ISSUE IS DEAD -- HERE & IN THE US GENERALLY.

Following is Sunday's column:


The rest of the summer I’d like to stay pretty much away from issues like immigration and the Iraq War.  Immigration is a dead issue, one that’s toxic to Republican candidates, and Iraq’s future will be determined in large part by General Petraeus’ report in late-September. 

 

There’s much going on behind the scenes in regard to Iraq.  You can see this in the early retirement of General Peter Pace, a superb military officer, and the downgrading of Stephen Hadley, Bush’s excellent director of national security. 

 

I think I know what’s going to happen in Iraq, but I’m not telling right now.  However, by a year from now, we will have a much-diminished presence there.  Otherwise, they might as well not hold an election in November, 2008. 

 

In terms of Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, I’m inclined to have to agree with the generally disgusting Donald Trump, who noted that she travels about a lot but doesn’t come close to closing any deals.

 

For a time, I thought about the possibility of her being a choice for vice-president.  Reasons?  First, she’s a woman; second, she’s Black.  Third, she is an extremely bright, if somewhat indecisive, woman.   Don’t ever accuse me of disregarding practical politics.

 

Why did Condi enter my thoughts?  I do believe the Democratic presidential candidate will be Hillary Clinton.  If she’s more daring than the Clintons generally are, her vice-presidential running mate probably will be Barack Obama.  (It won’t be Edwards; Mrs. Clinton knows he will forevermore be the hypocritical hair-cut man.)

 

I don’t think the Republicans could  beat such a ticket with the usual two older white guys in gray business suits and the mandatory red ties.  

 

One reason I’m leaning toward the little-known, but richly talented Sarah Palin (Governor of Alaska) is that the ticket will need vitality – and, frankly, a different “look.”  If Mrs. Clinton gets the Democratic nomination, we need to remind the electorate that we like women also. 

 

Much as I like George W. Bush, we cannot in any way make the Republican candidate look in any way like an extension of the Bush presidency.  The American people are bushed out.   This might be especially difficult for Giuliani, who genuinely likes and respects Bush. 

 

The next President can learn a lot from GWB’s mistakes.  The old idea that everything is “secret” for national security reasons doesn’t play anymore. 

 

The next President should keep few secrets from us.  That individual must tell us what he (or she) knows and, beyond that, what he or she doesn’t know.  The old PR theory that if you don’t say anything, you can keep your foot out of your mouth, doesn’t play anymore with the American people.

 

Presidents hate to give out bad news, but that tradition also has to end.  We need to know what’s happening that’s positive and, even more important, what’s happening that’s negative.

 

In fact, GWB should have talked to the nation every 3-4 weeks – at length – about how the war was going, what our strategy was, what hadn’t worked, and what was showing REAL promise.  Many people look at Iraq as a war that went well for two months – and has gone badly for four years.  Historically, that’s the way wars go, but that’s not acceptable in our own time.   This is not 1942.

 

The fact that five soldiers got blown up Friday and six more Saturday is not a message that inspires enthusiasm or hope.  Why is this happening?  What are we doing about it?  Who, pray tell, is falling short of what we had a right to expect?  In short, have you fired anybody lately Mr. President? 

 

“Stay the course” is not a message that will resonate with the American people now – if it ever did.   “Blow the blankety-blanks to smithereens” is a message that has a positive ring to it. 

 

What I’m saying is that we need a V-P who doesn’t look like all those other guys because she’s a woman – or, alternatively, because he’s a dynamic young Black (like Michael Steele of Maryland) or an Hispanic guy or woman.   We also need a President who talks to us under the assumption that we’re grown-ups – an assumption that may be questionable at times, but he should humor us.

 

I know people are going to tell me Sarah Palin doesn’t have enough “experience” to be a heartbeat away from the presidency.  Trust me: the kind of experience she doesn’t have is mostly the kind she doesn’t need or want.  Much as I love the Cheney family (including Mary), we don’t need another dour guy sequestered in an unknown location.  We need somebody full of fire and vinegar and highly visible.  Soon, I’ll tell you why that person is Sarah Palin of Alaska.

 

If Guiliani or McCain chooses Sarah, they’ll be saying more than that they want her to be vice-president.  They’ll be saying that they believe she should be America’s first female President.  If they say that, who am I to disagree.

 

Business as usual – the old white guys in suits – will not win us the White House in 2008.  It will lead us down the road to defeat.  We need to think new thoughts – and consider new people.

 

GWB had a good reason for wanting to privatize Social Security – and for wanting the Immigration Reform Bill.  However, he never adequately explained those reasons to us.  I think I know what they were, but we shouldn’t have to play guessing games with the President who represents us. 

 

The next President – be he Giuliani or McCain or be she Mrs. Clinton – has to be a model of candor.  That person also has to lead a nation that isn’t exactly loaded with good followers.  I wish him or her the best of luck. 

 

Stephen R. Maloney 



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What Would Reagan Do? Bruce on Immigration

 

Bruce Sherman wrote the following in response to my remarks about Reagan and the need for a bigger and better Republican Party. 

 

Steve,

Today's column should be required reading for every Republican. It truly embodies the essence of Reagan's "Big Tent."

As I have mentioned previously, both sets of my grandparents were immigrants, arriving in this country between 1914 and 1925. At that time, the Republican Party was isolationist and anti-immigrant. It was the party of Henry Ford, Charles Lindbergh and, later, the John Birch Society.

The Democrats became, largely by default, the party of the immigrants. The following DECADES of Democrat election dominance were no mere coincidence. For most immigrants--and their descendants--to be a Republican (and thus join the party of the bigots and immigrant haters) was simply unthinkable.

My own family was hardly left-wing. As Jews from
Russia
, they had seen evil firsthand. They loved FDR because he was willing to fight the Nazis. They loved JKF because he was aggressively anti-Communist. As the Democrats moved to the left, my family rallied around the remaining Democrat hawks, such as Scoop Jackson.

My point is that once the Republican Party lost that generation of immigrants, the GOP could not win them back. In
New York
, it has been said that Jews live like Republicans, but vote like Puerto Ricans. Collective memories die hard.

As Republicans, we stand at another critical juncture. Will we again become the party of isolationism and xenophobia, or will we become the party of the immigrant by stressing those things critical to the immigrants' success in
America
: equality of opportunity, lower taxes, freedom from excessive regulation and government intrusion, and basic respect for human dignity?

Given the Left's cognitive dissonance regarding the very real threats we face today, it has never been more critical for Republicans to--once again-- erect Reagan's "Big Tent" and to be the guardians responsible for protecting and enhancing that "Shining city upon the hill."

As the Gipper concluded in his farewell address:

"I've spoken of the shining city all my political life, but I don't know if I ever quite communicated what I saw when I said it. But in my mind it was a tall proud city built on rocks stronger than oceans, wind-swept, God-blessed, and teeming with people of all kinds living in harmony and peace, a city with free ports that hummed with commerce and creativity, and if there had to be city walls, the walls had doors and the doors were open to anyone with the will and the heart to get here. That's how I saw it and see it still.

And how stands the city on this winter night? More prosperous, more secure, and happier than it was eight years ago. But more than that; after 200 years, two centuries, she still stands strong and true on the granite ridge, and her glow has held steady no matter what storm. And she's still a beacon, still a magnet for all who must have freedom, for all the pilgrims from all the lost places who are hurtling through the darkness, toward home."

Bruce Sherman
Oakland, Oregon

 

 

Bruce, you said this very well.  Thanks for the compliments.

 

You and I are both familiar with the stories of ships packed with Jewish refugees sailing about, hoping – in vain – that someone, anyone would take them in.  They got turned away from everywhere, including the U.S.  So, they sailed back to Germany to certain death. 

 

It was one of the worst moments in our country’s history.  I guess it would have violated some “law” or other to let those poor people in.

 

I do realize that we as a country can’t take in everyone who wants to come here.  Otherwise, we’d have a population bigger than that of China and India combined.  But we certainly have to do more to help those in desperate need of assistance.  "Those to whom much is given, much is asked in return."

 

I liked Rudy Giuliani’s definition the other night of who really is an American:  basically, he said it could be someone who’s been here only one day but truly loves liberty and the values of this country, and such a person is true American.  Being an American is not some technical aspect of citizenship.  Rather, it's a state of mind and of heart.  It's about people who have a true "yearning to breathe free." 

 

John McCain talked about the large number of soldiers of Hispanic backgrounds that he encountered in Iraq.   When we hear the names of those who’ve died in Iraq and Afghanistan there seem to be a lot of people named Lopez and Sanchez and Guitterez.  Some of them, of course, are “illegals” who get their citizenship by serving in the Armed Forces.  For some of these people, the path to citizenship is going to lead to an early military funeral.   

 

Ronald Reagan was my kind of conservative.  He could talk tough (“Mr. Gorbachev, tear down that wall!"), but he had a gentle hand and heart.  He genuinely loved people, and the American public picked that up.  In a tradition you know well, he was a mensch. 

 

Bruce, I’ve never read anything you’ve written – and I’ve read a lot – that didn’t teach me a great deal.  You're one of those Americans Giuliani talked about the other night. 


Note: The Following deals with ongoing exchanges between Sanity102, Wil Keepers, and me regarding the (now-dead?) immigration reform legislation.  Your comments are welcome.

There are some fascinating comments/exchanges going on at this site.  Wil Keepers has said that the proposed immigration legislation had some enforcement flaws, and Sanity102 has said he’s wrong.  The first note is from Sanity, the second from me.  Wil’s comments are to the right in the Comments section.  I will put up Wil’s comments on “Blog Central” tomorrow and give my reactions.  To let the cat out of the bag, I agree strongly with Sanity on this point.  I also agree that immigration reform is dead unless and until the Democrats win the White House in 2008, at which point a new bill will be written by the Democratic President.  Very few Republican Senators – and there may be significantly fewer of them in 2008 -- are ever going to want to touch this “electrified” issue.  The immigration situation will go from bad (currently) to much worse.  That is the great “victory” for the increasingly strange and dysfunctional conservative ‘base.” 

 

 

 

Wil, Let's be frank here...you DO know that the bill HAD those 2 things you claim the majority of people want...a way to track the illegals and a way to enforce the enforceable laws we have. But you and that "majority" no longer believe the GOP minority, remember?

So exactly what bill would satisfy you guys since you won't back it until you have proof and they can't give you proof until the bill is passed.

It's a no win, catch 22--and now the GOP senators who really did try to make the IIA [the anti-immigration absolutists] happy know it. They will not touch this issue again. -- Sanity102



Wil, Sanity102 severely challenges some of your basic points about the immigration legislation.  It strikes me that if we assume the government will not follow up on any proposed legislation, and then nothing -- as in NOTHING -- would ever go forward in DC.  It would be gridlock unto eternity.  It's a little like a spouse who assumes her husband is cheating on her, and nothing he can say or do will change her mind.  The treatment of Hispanics in this country is a very tricky matter.  It's not as if they're a handful of immigrants from the
Maldives Islands.  There are 40 million legal people in the US of Hispanic background.  No elected official in his or her right mind can ignore that reality.  I won't even assert that they SHOULD ignore that.  "Politics is the art of the possible."  It doesn't take place in a hermetically sealed room.  On something like the fence: it may be necessary, but it also brings with it some unintended consequences because of the message it sends to hundreds of millions of people south of the border, most of whom don't want to emigrate to the U.S.  To ignore those unintended consequences is just plain stupid.  -- Steve


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Immigration: The "Base" Hits Bottom

Note:  I apologize for calling JONAH Goldberg by the name of "Noah" Goldberg.  Obviously, Jonah is the one without the Ark.  I don't apologize for calling Jonah basically a dishonest man, one of the many National Review staffers singing for their suppers by pandering to people who are so far-right that they're about to fall off the earth.  (Note 2:  in an earlier stage of my life I wrote for National Review.  I no longer do so.) 



The following are comments by Linda Chavez, conservative activist, former government official, and former Senatorial candidate:   "Some people just don't like Mexicans - or anyone else from south of the border. They think Latinos are dirty, diseased, indolent and more prone to criminal behavior. They think Latinos are just too different from us ever to become real Americans."

She continues: "Where once the xenophobes could advocate forced sterilization and eugenics coupled with virtually shutting off legal immigration from undesirable' countries, now they must be content with building walls, putting troops on the border, rounding up illegal aliens on the job and deporting them, passing local ordinances to signal their distaste for immigrants' multifamily living arrangements, and doing whatever else they can to drive these people back where they came from."

Lest there be any doubt, I agree completely with Linda's comments.  My conservative friends, if we lose the Linda Chavezes of our movement, we've lost more than something of value.  In fact, we will have lost everything.

Please add Linda's name to the distinguished conservatives mentioned below who believe we must cleanse our Party of racism and nativism.  As conservative Rep. Bobby Inglis of SC said recently, we must do everything possible to avoid becoming some sort of South African-type White People's Party. 

Noah Goldberg of National Review and a Townhall essayist bristles at Linda’s comments.  He says that opponents of immigration reform are merely calling for the enforcement of our laws and border security.

I don’t believe it for one minute, and Noah Goldberg is being intellectually dishonest when he confuses his own commitment to a narrow legalism with anti-immigrant fever sweeping much of the country.  Tom Tancredo, supposedly an opponent of illegals, let the cat out of the bag the other night.  He called for an end to “LEGAL” immigration.  Gee, that seems a little . . . whacko.

If you want to know the real driving force behind MUCH (not all) the opposition to immigration reform, just read the comments on TH.  Check out especially people like Pasadena Phil, VirginiaPatriot, and Renee.  Such people look at illegal immigrants (and perhaps also legal ones?) not as our brothers and sisters, but rather as some sort of human slime. 

Gee, Noah Goldberg, I don’t see Renee – or thousands (millions?) of others really making a case for the rule of law.  I see them, to borrow from Linda Chavez, as people who don’t like individuals from south of the border.  Too many of them see Mexicans as some form of human slime, unworthy of any of the love of neighbor that Christ defined as the Second Great Commandment.

When the “law” is used to harm innocent human being, then the “law” becomes something that should disgust decent human beings.  Somehow I keep thinking of Rosa Park disobeying the “law” by refusing to go to the back of the bus.  I think of the Founding Fathers participating in the ultimate disobedience of the law by launching a revolution.   When the laws of man conflict with the laws of God, then it is our duty to adhere to the latter, a point made compellingly by Martin Luther King in his “Letter from the Birmingham Jail.”  Yes, at times the good people are in jail, and the bad ones are outside, looking in. 

I obey the law.  In general, I respect the need for law.  However, I do not revere it, meaning I don’t treat as some sort of Gospel Truth.  There are good laws, such as the ones against murder and rape, and bad laws, such as the one that said Rosa Parks had to go to the back of the bus.   People like Rosa Park and Linda Chavez are well aware that bad laws have been used frequently to undercut the rights – and the dignity – of minorities.

Sometimes, as our Founders put it, “in the course of human events,” it becomes necessary to violate laws that are intolerable.  Noah Goldberg might reflect on the “laws” in another country – Germany – that allowed the mistreatment of minority groups in that country.  In fact, our country was founded on the breaking of laws established by the British Government. 

The argument that it’s illegal to cross the border in order to feed your family is not one that impresses a lot of Hispanics.  If you or I were in their position, it wouldn’t impress us either.   Feeding your family and ensuring that their general welfare takes precedence over any law ever passed.  In this I find myself in agreement with Cardinal Mahoney (no relation) of Los Angeles, a man with whom I rarely agree on anything.

A month ago I offended a lot of people when I uttered a truism of social thought: “perception is reality.”  I hear from a lot Platonic idealists who insisted that there was an objective reality and, coincidentally, it mirrored exactly whatever was in their heads. 

A conservative heroine – and an Hispanic – like Linda Chavez has paid the price for her conservatism.  She has tirelessly supported political principles in conflict with the beliefs of many in her ethnic group.  Her perceptions should be important to us because of the character she’s demonstrated over many years.

Her perception is that many (most?) people who oppose immigration reform are hostile to people who come from south of our borders.  Most Hispanics share her perception, as do I, a non-Hispanic.  I salute her for her candor. 

In what important sense is perception reality?  People – nearly all people – vote on the basis of perception.  They aren’t political scientists, philosophers, or economists.  They’re not concerned with issues of ultimate reality.  The vote on the basis of what they see to be true.

In 1960, Richard Nixon against John F. Kennedy and received 32% of the Black vote.  If a Republican presidential candidate could get anything like that percentage, they might not even bother to hold an election.  Nowadays, it’s more like 5%-6%.  That makes it almost impossible to win elections in many of the biggest states.

What happened? In 1964, Republican presidential candidate Barry Goldwater, whom I supported generally, opposed the Civil Rights Act.  He was wrong to do so.  In essence, the Civil Rights Act was nothing more than human decency applied to Blacks.  It was a disastrous moment in the history of Republicans, the Party of Lincoln.

After Goldwater opposed the proposed legislation, Blacks deserted the Republican Party, their home since the Lincoln Era.  After that, Republicans were lucky to get even a small percentage of Black votes.

I fear the same thing might happen with huge Hispanic cohort in the U.S. – 40 million people who are here legally.  On Townhall Thursday, a woman was quoted as saying the Republican base’s stand on immigration would not “effect” the Hispanic vote.  I would have been more convinced of her argument if she’d known the difference between “effect” (the wrong word) and “affect” (the right one). 

Doing the right thing is even harder than choosing the right word. 

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Cleansing the "Base," Reconstituting the GOP

RED STATE BULLETIN:  LINDA CHAVEZ CONDEMNS FAR-RIGHT NATIVISTS, HISPANIC HATERS 


The following are comments by Linda Chavez, conservative activist, government official, and former Senatorial candidate:   "Some people just don't like Mexicans - or anyone else from south of the border. They think Latinos are dirty, diseased, indolent and more prone to criminal behavior. They think Latinos are just too different from us ever to become real Americans."

She adds: "Where once the xenophobes could advocate forced sterilization and eugenics coupled with virtually shutting off legal immigration from undesirable' countries, now they must be content with building walls, putting troops on the border, rounding up illegal aliens on the job and deporting them, passing local ordinances to signal their distaste for immigrants' multifamily living arrangements, and doing whatever else they can to drive these people back where they came from."

Lest there be any doubt, I agree completely with Linda's comments.  My conservative friends, if we lose the Linda Chavezes of our Movement, we've lost more than something of value.  In fact, we will have lost everything.
Please add Linda's name to the distinguished conservatives mentioned below who believe we must cleanse our Party of racism and nativism.  As conservative Rep. Bobby Inglis of SC said recently, we must do everything possible to avoid becoming some sort of South African-type White People's Party. 
__________________

This morning on TH, Dean Barnet posted an apology to Matt Lewis for saying Matt was a "McCain supporter," which he's not.  I wrote the following comment to Dean, which I did with something of a heavy heart.  I believe the endless Romney cheerleading is unseemly to say the least and it's destroying Hewitt's credibility as any sort of honest broker of information.   Here are my comments:

"Dean, as you know, I think you do exceptional work. But there's a widespread view that the major figures at TH have gone into the tank for Romney, a profoundly flawed candidate. I think Hugh's adoration -- the right word -- of Romney's candidacy has severely damaged his credibility. I have endorsed Rudy Giuliani, but I've been critical of his stands on a number of issues, which is a proper journalistic response. The constant focusing on what "Team Romney" (yikes!) is saying about the monumental "Ames Straw Vote" is nothing short of manipulation. It's irresponsible. Straw votes are right up there with what Ann Romney wore to the latest soiree. I have never heard a coherent, credible (key words) argument for why you or Hugh support Romney. I've never heard any reservations you may have about his candidacy, and that makes me wonder exactly what's going on. Other than that, well . . ."

I've written on Romney several times, although I'm mainly avoiding him lately.  To me, the man reeks of hubris, dishonesty, and cynicism.  When he indicated to South Carolina evangelicals that he was a born-again Christian -- a concept that has no relevance in Mormonism -- that soured (to say the least) my enthusiasm for one "Mitt" Romney.  On the debate the other night, it was embarrassing to see this English-as-the-official language adherent squirm around trying to explain his heavy advertising in Spanish.  "Have you no shame?"  Guess not. 

In Massachusetts, he ran as a social liberal.  Now he's running as a "Townhall" social conservative.  I believe people who call themselves conservatives have a moral and intellectual obligation to oppose him.

_________

On the right, in the comments sections, I have a good comment from SteveL and two responses.  We agree that we need to get more people voting Republican, basically bringing back some of the people we've lost and adding some first-timers.  However, the way to do that is NOT to say, "This is our philosophy.  Take it or leave it."  If we do it, they will "leave it" with enthusiasm.  We have to improve our listening skills -- in English and, when necessary, in Spanish.


Today's column follows:

I'd like to write mainly about immigration over the next week or so, but I’d first like to see what happens on the cloture vote that apparently will take place this week.  I'll also be writing on Fred Thompson, who is one of the least impressive candidates I've ever seen. 

 

Over the past two-plus months that I’ve been on TH, I’ve received hundreds of comments on this blog, many of them excellent and some of them (like comments from Bruce Sherman, Sanity 102, Sheila, Wil Keepers, and others) that are truly distinguished.  On the other hand, I’ve gotten comments – mainly on immigration, but also on Second Amendment issues – that have been appalling.  Some were racist and nativist.  Others lacked even a minimum of thoughtfulness, as people recited their single-issue slogans as if they were making some sort of definitive statement, which they were not. 

 

I’ve been hearing a lot lately about the supposed “conservative base.”  More and more, I think of that “base” as a noisy, obnoxious rabble.  If they have any ideas, they’re certainly having trouble expressing them in anything like coherent terms.  Fearing or hating Mexicans is not an immigration policy. 

 

Some important Republican politicians have taken a hard look at the motley “base” and have basically thrown up their hands.  The most notable case of this is Republican governor Arnold Schwarzenegger in California, an extremely popular leader in his state, but not exactly a “conservative” Republican. 

 

A somewhat similar person is Rudy Giuliani, elected and re-elected in heavily Democratic New York City.  We’ve been hearing for years that Giuliani will turn off the Republican “base” and thus cannot win the nomination.  At the same time, Giuliani has been the leader among Republican candidates in national polls, so the reports of his political demise seem to have been exaggerated.

 

The extremist members of the base, the single-issue politics people, look at Rudy with contempt, and he returns the favor.   He seems to regard the hard-core base, people who are very visible on TH, as making up about 5% of the electorate. 

 

It consists almost exclusively of white males, many of them concentrated in the South or the small Western states.  This group includes basically none of the 100 million minorities in America.  It has very few, if any women professionals (doctors, lawyers, teachers, MBAs, or the like).   Of the 40 million legal U.S. residents of Hispanic descent, the “base” includes only a handful.  As a rough guess, I’d say very few Asian-Americans regard themselves as members of the “base.”

 

As I suggested, someone like Giuliani looks at this “base” – a small, noisy, obnoxious group of angry white males – and regards it as a menace to what he regards as the Republican Party.  He sees it as a small group that’s getting smaller all the time.  With its stridency and hostility-driven politics, the “base” turns off independents and conservative Democrats.  It’s a major reason why the number of people who calls themselves Republicans has been in free fall.

 

One person who wrote to me said that, since he didn’t like Hillary, he was prepared “to hold [my] noise and vote for Rudy.”  I said to him, “Don’t bother.  I doubt he wants your vote.”   I suggested perhaps a write-in vote for Tancredo or Paul. 

 

My point was that people like Rudy and Arnold (and Rep. Bobby Inglis of South Carolina, as well as Senators Jon Kyl, John McCain, Saxby Chambliss, and Jonny Isaacson) are trying to reconstitute the Republican Party.  The want a bigger base with more recognizable Americans of all varieties in it.  They don't want a "base" that drives away smart, tolerant people, male and female, and attracts stupid, intolerant ones.   "Stupid doesn't have a great future."

 

Frankly, they don’t want the GOP to become “The White Males” Party.  They realize that such a Party would be heading quickly down the road to extinction.  That’s where they see the “base” taking the GOP, and they are appalled.   They look at the Tom Tancredos and Ron Pauls, and they see the specter of a Party with no prospects.  They see the development of a permanent minority, a Party that "just says 'No!'" to everything.


They know that Black Americans, for example, regard the Republican Party as racist and irrelevant.  They don't want the rest of the country, including the large and growing Hispanic minority, thinking along the same lines. 
 

In essence, they see the “base,” with its overheated rhetoric, driving people away – rather than bringing them in.  So, they’re taking an approach that mystifies the pundits and the MSW, which is easily mystified.

 

Giuliani (and much the same is true of McCain) are pursuing a national strategy.  They're competing for votes in states – New York, California, New Jersey, and others – that “base” Republicans long ago wrote off. 

Instead, Rudy and others like him are committed to reconstituting Republicanism as something with a broad appeal across America.

 

They’ll hold their own noses -- and take votes from anyone, including the “base.”  However, don’t expect them to express their gratitude to people that they don't like or respect.  

 

 

More on this subject of “Republican Reconstitution” will come in the weeks and months ahead . . .

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