Please Hit

Folks, This is a Free Site and will ALWAYS stay that way. But the only way I offset my expenses is through the donations of my readers. PLEASE Consider Making a Donation to Keep This Site Going. SO HIT THE TIP JAR (it's on the left-hand column).

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

REFORM: Obama "Talks the Talk" Palin "Walks the Walk"

Senator Obama talks about the "New Politics" all the time. He brags about how he is a reformer and anti-lobbyist. Two years ago, in February 2006 Senator Obama promised Senator McCain support on a bi-partisan lobbying reform bill. As it turned out Obama when back on his word. In a letter to Senator Obama at the time, Senator McCain wrote sarcastically:

I would like to apologize to you for assuming that your private assurances to me regarding your desire to cooperate in our efforts to negotiate bipartisan lobbying reform legislation were sincere. When you approached me and insisted that despite your leadership’s preference to use the issue to gain a political advantage in the 2006 elections, you were personally committed to achieving a result that would reflect credit on the entire Senate and offer the country a better example of political leadership, I concluded your professed concern for the institution and the public interest was genuine and admirable. Thank you for disabusing me of such notions with your letter to me dated February 2, 2006, which explained your decision to withdraw from our bipartisan discussions. I’m embarrassed to admit that after all these years in politics I failed to interpret your previous assurances as typical rhetorical gloss routinely used in politics to make self-interested partisan posturing appear more noble. Again, sorry for the confusion, but please be assured I won’t make the same mistake again. Read the entire letter here

So while Senator Obama has talked a good game it is ALL talk. Senator McCain's VP Pick Governor Sarah Palin not only Talks the game but has taken ACTION in her quest to reform Alaska:

Gamblin’ Man By W. James Antle III

Over the past few weeks, conservatives contemplated John McCain's vice presidential choice with a growing sense of foreboding. The names that were being floated included pro-choice Rudy Giuliani, all-around moderate Tom Ridge, and independent Democrat Joe Lieberman. Even Mitt Romney had his detractors and Tim Pawlenty could at best do no harm.

Goodbye to all that. Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin has rallied the conservative base like McCain himself never could.

Rush Limbaugh was ecstatic, crying, "Babies, guns, Jesus. Hot damn!" A caller paraphrased Michelle Obama: "For the first time in years, I am proud to be a Republican." James Dobson called her an "outstanding" running mate who would secure his vote this fall. Notoriously hard-to-please conservative activist Richard Viguerie pronounced Palin "perfect......

......Palin is high-risk but also potentially high-reward. As a relatively young (44) first-term governor of a small state, Palin undercuts the experience argument against Barack Obama as much as Joe Biden undermines Obama's message of foreign-policy prescience and change. If the pick is seen as unserious or as tokenism, if she stumbles once in the national spotlight, or if she falls victim to her own version of trooper gate, it could be one mistake too many for a Republican ticket that has little margin for error.

But the 2006 elections left the Republican bench in tatters and McCain, facing a Democratic opponent who would make history if elected, may not have had the luxury of a safe choice. If Palin succeeds, she can bring in women voters, including disgruntled Hillary supporters, without alienating pro-life social conservatives. She has already excited anti-McCain conservatives going into the Republican National Convention in St. Paul.

Republicans cannot be silent when Democrats claim there isn't a dime's worth of difference between Palin and Obama when it comes to their resumes. That doesn't mean they should inflate her qualifications, by talking about her "foreign policy" dealings with Canada or status as head of Alaska's National Guard. Instead the argument must be that where Obama talks about reform, Palin delivers.

When a sitting Republican governor proposed an unpopular petroleum profits tax at a rate favored by a company that illegally funded money to his reelection campaign, Palin took him on. When he bought himself a plane at taxpayer expense over the legislature's objections, she committed to sell it if elected. Palin beat that governor by 32 points in the GOP primary.

Palin kept her promise to sell her predecessor's plane. She locked swords with Sen. Ted Stevens over the Bridge to Nowhere, which she dismantled. She endorsed her Lt. Gov. Sean Parnell in a tight Republican primary against Congressman Don Young.

For all Obama's talk about taking unpopular reformist stands, he has generally favored bipartisan ethics bills that pass by lopsided margins. He has seldom picked a fight with powerful members of his own party -- unless they were running against him for public office -- or any interest group in the Democratic coalition. And he lacks her track record of truly seeking to eliminate wasteful spending, a new commitment he adopted in his Denver acceptance speech.

To this writer, the biggest concern about Sarah Palin is not that she will hurt McCain but the opposite. A defeat would cause Palin to lose some of her luster. A McCain-Palin victory will deprive Alaska of an effective reformist governor and the conservative movement of a much-needed governing success story at the state level.

This is not to say the Palin pick can't backfire. Neutralize the experience advantage and it makes it easier for the Democrats to turn this election into a referendum on George W. Bush. Republicans will not like the result of such a referendum. In politics, there are also always good reasons to fear the unknown. Palin may yet prove a political disaster.

But Palin has already bridged gaps within the GOP coalition that once seemed unbridgeable and deflected media attention away from Obama less than a day after the Invesco speech. There isn't much upside in losing the presidential race narrowly. McCain is taking a big gamble, but in this case it is worth rolling the dice.

2 comments:

Keepin It Real said...

Very insightful! Must say, I'm thrilled at a Palin/McCain Maverick ticket.

As a former Clinton supporter, the Maverick ticket is the best news we've had all year.

C. Adkins

Anonymous said...

We 3 Clinton dems now have a trustworthy ticket which trumps empty misogynist empty rhetoric!