Showing posts with label john mccain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label john mccain. Show all posts

Monday, November 29, 2010

Sen. McCain compares Gov. Palin to 'divisive' Ronald Reagan

That "divisiveness" didn't prevent Reagan from being a two- term president
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On "State of the Union," CNN's entry in the gaggle of Sunday morning television talk shows, Candy Crowley asked Sen. John McCain for his comments on his 2008 running mate's recent projects, including the "Sarah Palin's Alaska" series on TLC and current tour of the heartland to promote her second book America By Heart:
"She's keeping her options open, and I think she should," the Republican senator from Arizona said on "She's an incredible force in the American political arena."

When Crowley interrupted to ask if Palin was "divisive," the senator chuckled.
"A guy named Ronald Reagan used to be viewed as divisive," said McCain...

At the left wing Washington Post, Aaron Blake and Felicia Sonmez opine that the comparison is a valid one, as they point out that during his presidency, Reagan's average approval rating was 53 percent:
As for the operative word here -- "divisiveness" -- Reagan had a claim to it. Many more Republicans approved of him than Democrats, and even at his peak, just 68 percent of Americans approved of him, a number lower than everyone but Richard Nixon over the last 65 years.

The reason Reagan couldn't get higher than that was because there was a segment of the population, about one-third, that was dead-set against him. Reagan is often listed in polls of people's favorite presidents, but because of that one-third, he's also among the leaders for people's least favorite presidents. His detractors often feel just as strongly as his supporters about Reagan's legacy.

Recent polling shows Palin is on par with all of that.
What Blake and Sonmez fail to mention, however, is that in his day, the liberal media portrayed Reagan in the worst possible light, making the press a party to driving his poll numbers down. The two also chose not to mention that despite this perceived "divisiveness," Ronald Reagan easily won the 1980 election, beating sitting President Jimmy Carter by 440 electoral college votes and carrying 44 states to Carter's 6 plus the District of Columbia. The Gipper's reelection in 1984 was even more lopsided, as his opponent, liberal Walter Mondale, managed to carry only his home state of Minnesota. Reagan won the rest, as his 525 electoral votes set a record for the highest total ever received by a presidential candidate, and he crushed Mondale in the popular vote by more than 18 percentage points.

Not too shabby for a "divisive" conservative Republican who had the press working against him.

- JP

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

CNN declares McCain the winner in AZ on first returns

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Well, that didn't take long. Based on just 10 percent of the vote in Arizona, CNN has declared incumbent Sen. John McCain the winner of the GOP primary for U.S. Senate:
Veteran lawmaker and former presidential candidate John McCain took the first step Tuesday toward securing a fifth term representing Arizona in the U.S. Senate as he secured the Republican nomination over Tea Party favorite J.D. Hayworth. Shortly after the first results were released in Arizona, McCain was leading Hayworth 59% to 30% and was declared the victor for the nomination by CNN.
McCain had the endorsement of Sarah Palin, his running mate in the 2008 presidential race.

- JP

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Quote of the Day (March 27, 2010)

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Jenn Q. Public:
"Sarah Palin is campaigning for John McCain because she values personal loyalty over political expediency. Sure, that’s a potential political weakness, but it’s also a sign of integrity... Choosing to support John McCain in the face of significant conservative opposition might not win Sarah Palin accolades for Beltway political savvy, but it says quite a bit about her character."
- JP

Gov. Palin pwns a heckler at McCain event in Mesa, AZ

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Sarah Palin to McCain heckler: "Listen to what we're going to say... Maybe you'll learn something."



Video of her full Mesa speech is here.

h/t: HotAirPundit

- JP

Thousands flock to Mesa school to see Sarah (and the old guy)

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The East Valley Tribune reports that thousands of people came to Dobson High School in the Phoenix suburb of Mesa, Arizona Saturday morning for a McCain senatorial campaign rally featuring his former running mate, Gov. Sarah Palin:
As early as 6 .a.m., three hours before the duo was to take the stage, there were about 60 people standing in line outside the gymnasium.

Alison Davis, 20, of Mesa... made no bones about it. She was there to see Sarah Palin. While she hasn’t made up her mind between McCain and Hayworth, she excitedly pointed out what she calls Palin’s common sense conservatism.

“I think she’s a great role model for young women,” said Davis, who is a freshman at Everest College in Mesa majoring in criminal investigations.

“I like her positions on abortion and health care and how she wants to make health care a free market. I like how she believes in bigger state government and smaller federal control.”

[...]

Mark Backman, 19, a senior at Dobson, also was standing close to the front of the line. He donned a T-shirt that read “America is ready for another revolution” and a red button that said “Palin Power”

Backman, who had been at the school since 3 a.m., said he plans to be an attorney and run for the U.S. Senate someday.

“I’m a big fan of Sarah Palin. I like her stance on the issues,” Backman said. “I think she’s a good person who has common sense values on the issues.”

By 7 a.m., the line had grown to roughly 500 people and snaked through the parking lot and onto the sidewalk. The crowd was peaceful and mostly celebratory. Volunteers and about a dozen police officers patrolled the grounds.

[...]

By 7:30 a.m. the line shuffled in and the gym was at its 2,000 capacity. The crowd began doing the wave.
- JP

Friday, March 26, 2010

Gov. Palin and Sen. McCain in Tucson

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Sarah Palin and John McCain both pledged before a Tucson crowd of 5,000 Friday to fight the political agenda being pushed by President Obama, House speaker Pelosi and Senate majority leader Reid:
Focusing on Washington themes rather than his competitor, former U.S. Rep. J.D. Hayworth, Palin exhorted the crowd to "send the maverick back to the U.S. Senate" to fight the newly enacted health-care legislation and keep America safe.

As she has seen in Alaska, she said, "only dead fish go with the flow," which she said McCain would not do.

"I was pretty excited when John McCain asked me to join him on the campaign trail this go-around here in Arizona," she added. "I couldn't wait to get some of the McCain-Palin team back together again … I think this go-around, when all of the votes are tallied, I think he's going to win this one."

For his part, McCain condemned the health-care legislation passed with support of Obama and Democrats in Congress. He called its passage "sleazy Chicago-style sausage-making."

"It's going to be repealed and replaced, and it's going to be done soon," he added.

The appearance was a national political curiosity and a likely boost to McCain's primary prospects.

Many who are ambivalent about McCain's conservative credentials said they came just to see the former Alaska governor, who has remained a luminary in Republican circles.
The full Arizona Republic story is here. The Arizona Star's coverage is here.

H/T for the video goes to The Right Scoop.

- JP

McCain adviser says Sarah Palin will give "meaty" speech in Tuscon

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NBC is reporting that a McCain advisor describes the speech Sarah Palin will deliver in Tucson today as "meaty." Gov. Palin's remarks at the Pima County Fairgrounds will, of course, be mostly about Sen. McCain, as she is in Arizona to help her former running mate in his campaign to retain his seat in the U.S. Senate.

The event, which should start shortly, will be streamed by CNN here. Cindy McCain will introduce Gov. Palin, and the former GOP vice presidential candidate is scheduled to speak for about about 10 to 12 minutes. She will then introduce Sen. McCain, who will speak for about five minutes.

Gov. Palin will also appear at a McCain fundraiser this evening at the Arizona Biltmore in Phoenix, and at a rally tomorrow morning at Dobson High School in Mesa (the McCain campaign will be streaming video of that event here). In addition, Gov. Palin and Sen. McCain are scheduled to be Greta Van Susteren's guests tonight on Fox News' "On The Record."

- JP

Greta: Together again?

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Together again?


Senator John McCain and Former Governor Sarah Palin are together again - today, in Arizona. She is campaigning for and with Senator McCain.

[...]

And guess what?

Both Senator McCain and Governor Palin will be our guests tonight at 10pm [9pm Central] ON THE RECORD.
Read Sarah Palin's Arizona Republic op-ed for Sen. McCain here.

- JP

Andrew Malcolm: Now, it's Sarah Palin's turn to target Democrats

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After having been in the Democrats' cross hairs for the better part of 18 months, now it's Sarah Palin's turn to target them, though they're squealing about the return of the favor like stuck pigs. But Democrats have always been better at dishing trash talk out than taking it.

Saturday in Searchlight, Nevada, Sarah Palin will headline a second major Tea Party event (her keynote speech to the National Tea Party Convention in Nashville earlier this year was the first for the former GOP vice presidential candidate). The target of opportunity will be Senate majority leader Harry Reid and a Democrat Party which is sinking like the sun in the evening desert sky. Searchlight is his home town, but he won't be there. In his absence will be thousands of disaffected voters bent on ending four years of Democrat control of both houses of Congress.

LA Times blogmeister Andrew Malcolm says that although Gov. Palin will not please most Tea Party folks today by campaigning in Arizona for her former Republican ticket mate John McCain, her appearance at Saturday's Showdown in Searchlight may make up for it -- and then some:
Palin will seek to bolster McCain's conservative credentials at a Tucson rally today, a Phoenix fundraiser tonight at the same hotel where they conceded to the Democrat ticket in 2008, and another rally in Phoenix Saturday.

McCain's opponent, former Rep. J.D. Hayworth, paints himself as the true conservative and seeks to dismiss Palin's popular participation as "the very human impulse of gratitude" for plucking her from Alaska's relative political obscurity and dragging her down to a decisive national defeat. Which she's now turned into a bestseller, a newly-confirmed TV documentary series on the Learning Channel, a couple of million dollars and an active SARAHPAC.

Longer term, Palin is doing what any possible presidential candidate should do 32 months out: Hand out her precious personal campaign time and PAC money to potential allies for her own race should she decide to launch one about this time next year.

That's her much vaunted Common sense way.
Though Tea Partiers and McCain supporters may not see eye to eye on many issues, one thing they can most certainly agree upon is that Saturday in Searchlight is not too early to get Harry Reid's retirement party started.

- JP

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Palin advisor and Sen. McCain address hysterical Democrats' claims

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A Sarah Palin spokesperson has answered the former governor's critics, including some prominent Democrats, who claimed that she is encouraging threats of violence against members of Congress who voted in favor of health care reform. As we and several of our colleagues have reported, the charges are bogus and politically motivated:
An adviser to Palin responded by pointing to several instances in which the former Alaska governor has urged supporters to focus their energies on civil debate and action at the ballot box - not extremist activities.

"We are now the keepers of an honorable tradition of conservative values and good works, Palin said at the national Tea Party Convention in Nashville last month. "We must never forget that it is a sacred trust to carry these ideas forward. It demands civility and it requires decent, constructive, issue-oriented debate."

The adviser also noted that Palin spoke out last year after the murder of abortion provider George Tiller in Kansas, writing on her PAC Web site that "violence is never an answer in advancing the pro-life message."

"Its good that she finally agrees with the Democrats on something," the adviser told CNN. "[House Majority Whip] Jim Clyburn said that silence equals consent, and in this matter she agrees, which is why she has been vocal about condemning violence."
Sen. John McCain, Gov. Palin's running mate in the 2008 presidential election, defended the governor's Facebook posting on NBC's "Today Show" this morning:
"I have seen the rhetoric of targeted districts as long as I've been in politics, please," McCain said. "Any threat of violence is terrible but to say there that there is a targeted district or that we reload or go back into the fight again, please, those are fine, they are used all the time."
- JP

Monday, March 15, 2010

More Information on Gov. Palin's Appearances in Arizona

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Senator John McCain's campaign released more details Monday on the two rallies where Sarah Palin will appear with him in Tucson and Phoenix later this month:
The former Alaska Governor and current Arizona Senator will speak to constituents at the Pima County fairgrounds on Friday, March 26.

They'll be holding the rally at the Thurber Hall, 11300 South Houghton, at noon. Doors open at 11 a.m.

The duo will then travel north to Phoenix to appeal to voters on March 27. The rally there will be held at Dobson High School, 1501 West Guadalupe.

Doors open for that event at 7:30 a.m. The rally begins at 9 a.m.
Gov. Palin will also attend a reception & dinner for Sen. McCain at the Arizona Biltmore Friday afternoon at 5 p.m.

h/t: Free Republic


- JP

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Palin-McCain Arizona Weekend Shaping Up

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More details have emerged about Sarah Palin's weekend in Arizona later this month on behalf of Senator John McCain:
McCain and his 2008 running mate will host a campaign rally in Tucson on the afternoon of Friday March 26th, before holding a high dollar fundraiser at the Arizona Biltmore later that evening. On Saturday the 27th they will hold another rally in Phoenix.

For the fundraiser, $2500 gets you into the dinner as well as an hour-long pre-dinner VIP reception, including a photo opportunity with McCain and Palin.

Tickets to the dinner alone run for $500, or $1000 for preferred seating.
McCain's former running mate is just one of several high-profile Republicans the 2008 GOP presidential candidate has tapped to help in his senatorial primary race against former U.S. Representative J.D. Hayworth.

This past weekend McCain campaigned around Arizona with Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA), plus he's secured the endorsements of former Sen. Fred Thompson (R-TN), formner Education Secretary Bill Bennett, former Gov. Mitt Romney (R-MA), former Gov. Jeb Bush (R-FL), Gov. Tim Pawlenty (R-MN) and Gov. Bob McDonnell (R-VA).

- JP

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Rush Limbaugh on Sarah Palin's McCain Endorsement

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Rush Limbaugh was aked by a caller on his show Tuesday for his opinion on Sarah Palin's endorsement and campaigning for John McCain. Here are some excerpts from his reply, via RushLimbaugh.com:
RUSH: Sarah Palin went in there and was mobbed at the Daytona 500 on Sunday. She was in there to speak I think to the Daytona Chamber of Commerce on Monday, and she went into the drivers meeting before the race on Sunday and got standing O's from everybody on every crew. She could not get out of there, signing autographs, and there's one person that made that happen, and that's John McCain. Despite whatever happened during the campaign to belittle her and closed budget and all that stuff, one thing she knows is that nobody would know any more about her than they knew before McCain picked her were it not for the fact that he picked her.

[...]

Her endorsement of McCain doesn't dampen anything I think about her. It has nothing to do with it. This is issues, issues, issues to me and look for consistency on that side.

[...]

Imagine if Sarah Palin had not endorsed McCain. Can you imagine the media field day with the following: "Oh, wait a minute! Governor Palin, he's good enough to be president -- he's good enough for you to be his vice presidential running mate -- but he's not good enough to be Senator from Arizona?" Can you imagine what they'd do? By the way, does anybody who seriously read her book knew that she would do this? She doesn't have one bad thing personally to say about McCain in her book. With all of the record straight that she did vis-a-vis the McCain campaign and some of the staff, every comment she made about McCain in her book was positive. But I shudder to think what woulda happened if she'd endorsed somebody besides McCain and the media gets on this.

"Oh, yeah! He's good enough to be president, but not good enough to be Senator from Arizona." You know, loyalty is loyalty, and sometimes people want ideologue purity over loyalty and not realizing that loyalty is actually part of a party. By the way, Joe the Plumber has backed off, too. At BigGovernment.com, Joe the Plumber says he shouldn't have said what he said about Palin, that he likes her and thinks that she'd make a good president. Hillary Clinton has said that if Palin's elected president she's going to be visiting Canada a lot more, which is where Clinton's girlfriend is. So there could be a double meaning there. But that's not a bad notion, Hillary in Canada a lot.
- JP

Joe the Plumber sets the record straight

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The leftist froth-o-sphere's latest item to get all hysterical about is Joe the Plumber's recent statement questioning whether Sarah Palin should have supported John McCain in his Arizona Senate race. Most moonbat bloggers have the same headlines -- "Joe the Plumber blasts McCain and Palin" and "Joe the Plumber goes rogue (Blasts Palin)" -- which is curious considering how the leftists insisted from the start that neither Joe nor Gov. Palin have any relevance. But leftists are never shy of exposing themselves as the hypocrites they are when they think it may serve their political purposes.

In an op-ed for Andrew Breitbart's Big Government, Joe addressed the screaming liberal media frenzy:
So let me set the record straight: I broke Ronald Reagan’s “11th commandment” not to criticize fellow conservatives in public and the liberal mainstream media has had a field day with it. I regret that. I wish I had said it to his face and privately. I do honestly believe that John McCain’s service to our country as a courageous naval aviator and POW rightfully earned him nothing but respect. He has represented the epitome of honor, duty and unimaginable sacrifice. And for the record, he didn’t ruin my life. He and Barrack Obama sent me down a far different path than the one I was happily on–a new path that made me famous, notorious, sought after and vilified. I have learned that all those good and bad things happen when you are thrust into the public eye. Like almost anyone else, I have loved the good and hated the bad.

Also for the record, I like Sarah Palin because although she has served as an elected official as Governor of Alaska, she still acts and speaks like any real person you meet who is worried about the country, the kids and our future. It has always seemed to me that she has a lot of good things to add to our national discussion and that her value does not have to come down to–as the liberal media has tried–whether she should be our next President. Is that the new test of a person’s worth and whether they can add important views on patriotism, faith and family and the role of the citizen? She might make a very good President but that is not the test of her worth. That false test, the subject of various recent polls, is designed by the elitists who have almost ruined our country to chase people off what they believe is their territory.
You can read Joe the Plumber's full opinion piece here.

- JP

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Quote of the Day (February 11, 2010)

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Sen. John McCain:
"I guess it's OK to use a teleprompter but not OK to write something on your hand."
- JP

Friday, February 5, 2010

Mark Levin defends Sarah Palin's loyalty to McCain

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On the Mark Levin Show Thursday, The Great One rose to Sarah Palin's defense when a caller slammed the 2008 GOP vice presidential candidate for her loyalty to her former running mate John McCain (at about the 31-minute mark):
Caller: What about Sarah Palin's endorsement of McCain? What's the story on that? She's supposed to be rogue, and it seems like a "Scratch my back, I'll scratch your back" thing. I don't know. I'm a little bummed out on her.

Levin: Well, listen. My guess is that McCain chose her to be his running mate, and she feels a level of loyalty to him. Now, that doesn't mean you have to support McCain. I have already announced that I support J.D. Hayworth, but my opinion on Sarah Palin is very high. It has not changed, and if she does it out of loyalty, you know, loyalty is a virtue as well, my friend.

Caller: That's true. I'll buy that. However, it seems to me that it's a routine like she's just another one of the [unintelligible word] or whatever. I don't know...

Levin: I don't think so. Not in any way. She's taken a lot of abuse. If you listen to her in these various interviews as I do, she's very thoughtful, very solid. And I'm guessing she's supporting McCain out of loyalty. I don't have to have any loyalty to McCain. I have loyalty to J.D. in this case because of my view that he's clearly the most conservative. On the other hand, I understand if Sarah Palin wants to back John McCain. I wouldn't vote for John McCain, but I understand her loyalty. And that really doesn't bother me that much.

Caller: All right. Well, I understand she is in a "Scratch my back, I'll scratch your back" kind of thing with him, and...

Levin: No, no, it's not "scratch your..." She's not getting anything out of backing him. In fact, she's getting some conservatives like you who are questioning her. So it's not like she's doing it to get a favor from him. He can't deliver her anything.

Caller: Right.

Levin: So if it's "Scratch your back, scratch my back" you have to assume you're getting something in return, and she's not. But now that you mention it, I could use a good back scratch, to be perfectly honest with you.

Caller: Well, you keep it up, Mark. I appreciate how great a voice you are in this dark world out here, especially in this L.A. area. So, there's a lot of us who listen to you, and I just thank you so much for everything you're doing.

Levin: Well, you're a good man, my brother, and God bless. And I appreciate you.

Caller: God bless you. When we get to heaven, I want to meet you, all right?

Levin: Ah, aren't you sweet, and thank you, my friend. And let's not do that too fast. Okay? We've got a little time left. I'm a big Sarah Palin fan. And by the way, she's a big Rush Limbaugh fan. Don't let the folks at Politico twist what Sarah Palin's spokeswoman said and so forth. Everything's copacetic.
- JP

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Quote of the Day (January 24, 2010)

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James Taranto:
"Have any of the people who are still complaining about John McCain’s choice of Sarah Palin as his running-mate expressed any regret at having supported John Kerry, whose [vp] selection was, by any imaginable standard, much, much worse?"
h/t: Instapundit

- JP

Ed Ross Reminds Us About Loyalty

- by Lisa Graas
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In a Facebook posting today, I shared the link to Cory Di Geronimo's post: Only Fools Doubt Sarah Palin and Her Loyalty to John McCain.

Ed Ross, a very accomplished soul who has, among other things, served two tours of duty in Vietnam and who, I'm proud to say, is a member of the Palin Twibe which I manage, responded with a comment for me that I would like to share with Tx4P readers. Mr. Ross writes:
When someone does for you what John McCain did for Sarah Palin, you don't turn on that person later. Sarah doesn't share all McCain's policy views but she is someone you know won't turn their back on you. I know John McCain and he is the same.
Mr. Ross then shared an article he wrote back in May of 2008 regarding his experience with Senator McCain that I hope you will take the time to read. Loyalty is a quality in one's character that matters and Mr. Ross expresses well how deeply true that is.

May God bless America and all her heroes.

- Lisa

Lisa Graas is editor of the Palin Twibe Blog and several other websites. She is a regular contributor to Texas for Sarah Palin.

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Raising McCain

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After strongly supporting Sarah Palin for well over a year, American Thinker has now turned against her, it seems. The fourth consecutive post either critical of Sarah Palin or negative in tone toward her appeared on AT today. It follows the meme of the latest spin against her, criticizing the former governor for her support of John McCain. There is a lot of resentment against McCain out there among conservatives. We understand that. We don't have much use for him ourselves. But we know why Sarah supports him, and it makes us respect her all the more. 

Meanwhile, Gov. Palin's enemies are going wild on sites like Free Republic in a number of threads they have started, trying to bloody her up using her loyalty to McCain as a club to swing at her. They are also using her choice of which events she chooses to participate in or to skip against her. The Left and some supporters of her potential GOP opponents in a hypothetical presidential primary are always quick to seize upon any issues which divide conservatives, and they play them for all they can in the lamestream media (LSM) and on the nutroots blogs.

But, as we have stated repeatedly, anyone who doesn't understand Sarah Palin's sense of loyalty to the man, doesn't get her at all. Actually, it's about more than loyalty, unless viewed in the light of her loyalty to her own word. It's about honesty. Asked by Glenn Beck in a recent interview about why she still supports John McCain, the governor replied:
"I'm supporting him. I keep my word."
Her answer was succinct, but it speaks volumes about the strength of her character. Sarah Palin is such a good and decent person that her word is her solemn bond. She doesn't turn her back on those she has promised to stand with. Now, in a politician, this is indeed such a rare quality that many of her critics just can't manage to wrap their little minds around it. Sarah Palin is the polar opposite of Barack Obama, who has managed to break nearly every promise he made on his way to the White House.

The know-it-alls who are slamming Sarah for supporting McCain are pronouncing this as her Waterloo, the death of her political career. Heh. We wish we had a dollar for every time some self-styled expert said she was political toast. If we did, we wouldn't need a tip jar on this blog (which, dear reader, you are free to hit whenever you feel like we have earned a modest donation).

Actually, if she makes a couple of cameo appearances for McCain in Phoenix in March, sends the old guy some SarahPAC money and then manages to avoid getting hit by any stray punches thrown between McCain and his primary challenger J.D. Hayworth, we don't think that she will be hurt that much. Surely supporting McCain will be less damaging than deserting his ship like a rat, an act for which she would be eviscerated by her critics. We can see the headlines now -- "Palin Quits McCain" -- atop articles which would mercilessly pound her for betraaaaying the man who pulled her out of the Alaskan wilderness and gave her a national platform to stand on. You don't need to be a visionary to get the picture.

Sarah Palin's greatest political gift may be her uncanny ability to make decisions which at first appear to be very bad career moves, but over time she somehow manages to turn to her advantage. She has a history of defiance of the CW, and even her opponents have admitted that her political instincts nearly always wind up serving her well over the long run.

Frankly, it defies explanation. It's not something one can be taught or just learn from the school of hard knocks. It appears to be something of a sixth sense which not many politicians seem to possess. This God-given gift is made all the more remarkable because though she is really quite politically ambitious, she can go on with a smile on her face even if she never holds public office again. Unlike with other politicians, her ambition is not all-consuming, and she will not break her word bond to feed it. Her priorities are God, family, love of country, love of Alaska, and her various causes (our troops, the sanctity of innocent human life, special needs families, etc.) -- in that order. Everything else just has to go down further on the list below those five. She summed it up best when she paraphrased scripture, saying, "If I die, I die."

We used to think that she was eying a 2012 White House run, and she may well be. But we wouldn't be at all surprised if she is patiently waiting for 2020, when she will be only 56 years old. Why not let Romney, Pawlenty or whoever the GOP establishment candidate turns out to be, fight it out with Huckabee or some unforeseen candidate on the right in '12? She can avoid the bloodletting. Meanwhile, she can prove that she's a good team player and will build up some serious cred with the party establishment and with the key players in this game -- independent voters -- as well. We wouldn't be all that shocked even if she challenges Mark Begich in 2014 for the Senate (a term which would conveniently expire in 2020) or gets appointed Energy Secretary if a Republican wins.

Whatever she chooses to do, it will likely surprise everyone, and she will be severely criticized for it by the chaterati. Eventually, she will come out of it smelling like a rose. How many times has she been pronounced politically dead and rebounded to prove the experts wrong? The Arctic Fox must be part Arctic Cat. She always lands on her feet. 

Related: Doug Brady's take on all this.

- JP

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Palin to Beck: "I decided I wanted to sleep well"

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Sarah Palin was a guest on Glenn Beck's radio show Thursday, and she discussed Scott Brown's victory in Massachusetts, the Tea Party movement and why she's campaigning for John McCain.

A couple of excerpts from the full transcript:
"I think these messages sent via Virginia, New Jersey, Scott Brown's race in Massachusetts [to] politicians in D.C., in the GOP, and those independents are saying, okay, we're not alone in this anyway, look at this rising up of the tea party movement, of activists saying... we want a shrinkage of government, not a growth of government. We want less intrusion in our lives from our government..."

[...]

"In politics you are either eating well or sleeping well. I decided I wanted to sleep well and that's why I've made a lot of the decisions that I have that, yeah, really booted me outside of any kind of machine or any kind of I guess comfort and security that you would have knowing that a political machine has your back and they'll come bail you out and they will come defend you and they will get on the air and they'll tell you, oh, what a great decision. I haven't had that luxury at all. But I sleep well at night because I know that I'm doing what is in my heart, my soul, my gut. I believe that I am connected to a whole lot of Americans who think the way that I think, common sense, conservative ideals and principles. I'm sleeping well and I want Scott Brown and other politicians to be in that same position."
The full webcam and audio of the segment are at The Right Scoop

- JP