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Why Sarah Palin Shouldn’t Run — Or Why She Should
Written By : Donald Douglas

Mona Charen spoke at the Jewish Policy Forum panel in Los Angeles, along with David Horowitz. Michael Medved began the talk with a discussion of electoral politics, and at some point the panelists got to talkin’ about their favorites for the 2012 presidential race. Ms. Charen endorsed Mitchell Daniels (not my favorite, for reasons some might recall). And that’s interesting, since we find that Ms. Charen’s not hip to a Sarah Palin presidential bid. See, “Why Sarah Palin Shouldn’t Run” (at Memeorandum). And this passage is worth consideration:

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She is wildly popular with a swath of the Republican electorate, it’s true. And, as a conservative woman politician told me, the consultants (who get paid the big bucks win or lose) will doubtless descend upon her with game plans showing how she can win in Iowa and then cruise to the nomination. Maybe. But the general election would be a problem, since 53 percent of independent voters view Palin unfavorably, according to a recent Gallup poll, along with 81 percent of Democrats.

RTWT.

Fair enough. But my sense, beyond this, is that Ms. Charen is looking at presidential politics a bit clinically. Extreme emotionalism devolved to a form of secular worship in 2008 and the election of “The One.” Ms Charen’s right to note the dangers of it forming on the right heading into 2012. But skimming over this a bit more, Ms. Charen yearns for a conservative politics almost entirely divorced from popular culture. I doubt we’re ever going back to a time of Reagan, much less Goldwater. But check the comments at the post (Townhall has a well organized comments section). If the sentiment there gives any indication, the GOP nomination is Palin’s for the taking. And why not? Sarah Palin is a force of nature. She embodies all the best of the American spirit, and her family emobodies all the best of the American citizen. We don’t know if she’ll be a good president. Leftists had no clue if Barack Obama would be a good president. Democrats picked Obama on faith. There’s danger there, sure. My sense is that Palin’s attuned to popular sensibilities in a way the Barack Obama has never been. She’s anti-elitist. She stands against the elite-arugula entitlement that is the essence of the Democrat-Socialist hegemonic power agenda. And Sarah Palin learns. She’s open to ideas and feedback. If President Obama had even an ounce of those qualities he’d have a much better chance of avoiding early retirement in 2012 — quite possible at the hands of Sarah Palin herself.

RELATED: “Sarah Palin Rallies GOP at ‘Victory 2010′ in Anaheim.”

Cross-posted from American Power.

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  • Kwest34

    “And Sarah Palin learns. She’s open to ideas and feedbook” Are you kidding me? She even deletes remotely questioning posters on facebook! LOL

    • Rose

      So! It’s her page. Wonder how many insulters you allow on your home page.

      We see what DIMS want to do with those who disagree.
      Stuff you – go to Mars, soon.

    • Anonymous

      Yes, because removing harassers and stalkers from your facebook page is totally indicative of one’s willingness to listen to advice and feedback in other contexts.

      Moron.

  • Jerkface McGee

    “elite-arugula entitlement”? Seriously?

  • http://twitter.com/DaMav DaMav

    Amen — good column and an antidote to Charen’s uncharacteristically shallow and silly one on TownHall.

  • Billy Shears

    Sorry, I’m going to have to agree with Charen on this one. I don’t think Palin is electable. She’s too polarizing, and the fact that she quit the governor’s job in Alaska is not going to inspire independents that this is a woman with what it takes to handle an even more demanding job with even greater responsibilities.

    Sure she appeals to hardcore conservatives. So did Christine O’Donnell, Jim Miller, and Sharon Angle. And they all lost. They didn’t appeal to enough voters who aren’t hardcore conservatives. Palin just doesn’t have a broad enough appeal. She’s positively hated by the left, and moderates/independents aren’t enthusiastic about her at all. Conservatives alone won’t get a candidate elected. Reagan was conservative, but had appeal with those moderates and independents that Palin simply doesn’t, and I don’t think ever will.

    • percivalcreek

      Sure she appeals to hardcore conservatives. So did Marco Rubio, Rand Paul and Pat Toomey. And they all won.

      I’ve grown very weary of this ‘argument’ since the election. You simply cannot link campaigns and candidates to conservatives and Palin based upon wins and losses.

      Personally, I like Palin where she is and it’d be a long-shot for POTUS, at best. Now of course, I could be wrong. But just stop with this blaming of conservatives for losses if you’re not willing to give credit for the wins.

      • Billy Shears

        But they, in the cases of Rubio and Toomey, also appealed to moderates and independents, Palin DOESN’T. At all. No matter how much you and other hardcore conservatives like her, that does not make her appealing to moderates. And Rand Paul ran in Kentucky, which is a whole lot more red in its political makeup than the US in general. In a more blue state, no candidate who began his campaign by questioning the wisdom of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 could have hoped to get elected.

        I’m not blaming conservatives for losses. I’m simply following Buckley’s rule: support the most conservative candidate electable. Palin is not electable. O’Donnell was a bad candidate, period. Angle and Miller might have been electable in other, redder states, but they proved not to be in the states in which they actually ran. This is what happens when you insist too strongly on ideological purity. Support the most conservative candidate electable. Palin is not electable. Run her in 2012, and you’ll have Obama or another democrat in office another four years. I don’t want to see that.

        • Rose

          McCain, Dole, Gerald Ford also appealed to the moderates – so what?

          Ronald Reagan did NOT!

        • Captsvmalolo

          It Seams that you dislike Ms. Palin, (And thats fair) but I doubt that ANY RINO, has a chance of winning ! If any one is foolish enough to beleve that some ” entitlement RINO ” is going to receve support from the conservative base, they are living in LA-LA land ! If one follows Mr. Buckley’s rule, whoever ends up being the Republican candidate, had better be a conservative ! ( And to be honest about it, Ms. Palin is about the only true conservative, interested in it, so far 1 )

          • Billy Shears

            I don’t dislike Palin, I just think she’s not a strong candidate; here appeal is limited to too small a segment of the population, and she’s too polarizing. And who says it has to be a RINO? There is a difference between a RINO and a moderate. I certainly hope that all moderates are not RINOs as far as you’re concerned. That would show that destructive insistence on ideological purity at all costs, and as we’ve seen, that loses more elections than it wins.

            And even a RINO, should that be the only option, would be better than four more years of Barack Obama and his goal of remaking America. We’ve still a couple of years to go before the next presidential election. Let’s see who materializes in that time before we declare Palin the only candidate conservatives will support.

          • Tennwriter

            A lot of the problem that Miller had was to do with Establishment GOP types knifing him in the back.

            And no, I think I’d prefer Obama. RINOs would then, one hopes, get the message. Its surgery. Surgery stinks. It hurts. But it hopefully paves the way to a greater health.

    • percivalcreek

      Sure she appeals to hardcore conservatives. So did Marco Rubio, Rand Paul and Pat Toomey. And they all won.

      I’ve grown very weary of this ‘argument’ since the election. You simply cannot link campaigns and candidates to conservatives and Palin based upon wins and losses.

      Personally, I like Palin where she is and it’d be a long-shot for POTUS, at best. Now of course, I could be wrong. But just stop with this blaming of conservatives for losses if you’re not willing to give credit for the wins.

    • Rose

      That tells us everything we need to know about you – you can take the flight with huckupchuck, thanks a lot.

  • Serfer62

    There are no DC commentators I trust anymore…oh I read the occassional but they flipflop constantly & mona is just another one.
    So far there is no contender against her. Unfavorable ratings? Lets see, they have not stopped attacking her or her family since mcnasty picked her. Same with W and now look at W’s score.
    All the others listed have not been seriously vetted, she has and survived. She is also the TP choice and that means a lot.
    So until someone comes up better then her…she’s the runner.

    • Anonymous

      Chris Christie, but he’s not runnin…

    • Anonymous

      Chris Christie, but he’s not runnin…

  • Anonymous

    her family emobodies all the best of the American citizen.I have to laugh at that one. Maybe what her family embodies is none of anyone’s business, but if you’re going to make her family a model for the rest of us citizens to emulate, then you have to demand that we take a look at her family from a critical perspective. And what I know of her family, ranging from an “unwed teen mother” daughter whose “baby daddy” cohabited with this teen daughter in the family house for a while, to a second foulmouthed and bullying young teen daughter, to a slimy on-again-off-again potential son-in-law and “baby daddy” to the first grandkid, etc., I wouldn’t hold that up as an embodiment of what is best for anyone. Believe me, I can envision much, much better.

    • aegean

      unwed teen mother — better than teen who had an abortion. she made a mistake, but chose not to punish her child for that mistake.

      baby daddy cohabitation — uh, so? the guy was the father, shouldn’t she try to make that relationship work for the child’s sake? pity the guy was a jerk.

      foulmouthed daughter — really? kids are stupid. if you don’t believe me, go talk to one. they do stupid crap all the time. i did stupid stuff, i’m sure you did too. get over it.

      • Rose

        We saw your choices – take them to another planet with you, leave us alone, we don”t want you or your stupid choices. Your people are gathering a Mars Expedition, please be on it.

        • Rose

          Oh, please don’t take it the wrong way – just take it out of here and leave – permanently.

      • Anonymous

        Unwed teen mother, baby daddy cohabitation, foulmouthed and bullying daughter … no matter how you rationalize it away, it’s still a far cry from the claim that her family embodies all the best of an American citizen. Call me elitist, but this sure isn’t what I would like my family to emulate. Nor would I want any other American citizen to take this up as a role model for what is best for their family. Would you?

  • Dave

    I’m almost certainly Palin will win the nomination if she seeks it, barring a major gaffe in the eyes of Republican primary voters or an absolutely amazing campaign by someone else (the only person who I think might be capable of this — Chris Christie — has emphatically denied that he is running, and would be running as the moderate in a Republican primary, which ain’t a good thing). Whether she won the general would have a lot more to do with how Obama handles the next two years than anything Palin does.

  • Anonymous

    She’s anti-elitist.

    Wrong. She’s anti-intellectual. Big difference.

    • Redriverted

      Anyone who has to screech about how intellectual they are, probably isn’t.

    • Anonymous

      huck,

      I keep hearing liberals make that claim. Yet, for some reason, I never seem to hear or be provided with evidence backing up that claim. It would seem a relatively straightforward expectation that would only enhance this argument against her. So, how about it. Care to step up to the plate?

      • Redriverted

        C’mon Bill. You don’t really expect any of the liberal trolls to back up any of their claims with, like, proof, do ya? It’s much easier to make a demonstrably false claim and then run away like a mini-skirted Schoolgirl. My apologies to Schoolgirls everywhere.

    • Anonymous

      Yeah, that’s what elitists always say about people who question them.

  • http://profiles.yahoo.com/u/ELCWV5ANDUEJ5D5PB35FL2LZ6Y Bildo

    Palin probably lost me with her new TV show. It’s not the show, it was her whining while rock climbing. I hate whiners, especially one’s who want to be President (or sitting Presidents like our current one.) Either climb the rock or don’t, but don’t moan and complain about it all the way up the f’ing hill.

  • Anikitos

    Palin should definitely run for the sheer comedic value. The Daily Show will be interesting to watch again.

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