Will the Woman's "touch" help defeat the "novelty
candidate"???
Palin may be an obscure 44-year-old first-term governor and
mother of five from tiny Wasilla, Alaska, but in many ways she
reinforces John McCain's narrative of a maverick conservative
crusader. She's risen to power by battling corruption in her own
state's Republican establishment, exposing misconduct by the state
GOP chairman and challenging the incumbent GOP governor. She's a
committed Christian who's pro-life in practice as well as in
theory; she recently gave birth to a son that she knew would have
Down Syndrome.
But Palin can help McCain through biography as well as resume.
She'll be the first woman on a Republican ticket, which the
campaign is surely hoping will appeal to Hillary Clinton voters and
help reduce Barack Obama's advantage among women. She's a fresh
face to counteract Obama's message of change, and she's about as
far outside the Beltway as you can get. A child of the middle class
with a friendly face and big hair, she is so affable that she once
won Miss Congeniality in a beauty pageant. Her son is about to
deploy to Iraq. She's an ice fisherman, a moose hunter, a small
business owner and a lifetime NRA member. And she shelved her
state's pork-laden Bridge to Nowhere that McCain has ridiculed on
the trail.
One more point in her favor: In the topsy-turvy election of
2008, the Last Frontier is actually a battleground state - and
Palin is Alaska's most popular politician.
There are certainly risks to the choice. Palin's presence will
make it awkward for McCain to harp on Obama's inexperience, much
less play that attack-dog role herself. She's only served as
governor one month longer than Obama's been running for president,
and she's argued that her youth helped her clean out corruption in
Juneau, echoing an Obama talking point. "The age issue, I think,
was more significant in my career than the gender issue; your
resume isn't as fat as your opponent's, that kind of thing," Palin
told TIME last month. "I don't have 30 years of political
experience under my belt but that's a good thing. I've never been
part of a good-ol'-boys club."
A journalism major from the University of Idaho, Palin
started her political career in 1992 as a Wasilla city councilor.
She was elected to the first of her two terms as mayor in 1996, and
earned a reputation as "Sarah Barracuda" -- also her nickname as a
feisty point guard on her high school basketball team -- for taking
on entrenched bureaucrats. After running a strong race for
lieutenant governor as an unknown in 2002, she made her mark on
Alaska politics as a commissioner of a state oil and gas
commission, when she tried to expose GOP officials with improper
ties to the industry, and eventually resigned in 2004 after her
complaints were ignored.
Palin challenged Governor Frank Murkowski in the Republican
primary, and crushed the incumbent on a platform of change and
reform. She then defeated the formidable former governor Tony
Knowles in the general. But it's a long leap from Juneau to the
White House. It's not clear what Palin thinks about foreign policy
or many other national issues, though she has criticized the lack
of a long-term plan for Iraq. And the top consideration for any
candidate for the number-two job is readiness for the number-one
job, an issue that may weigh more on voters' minds when the
potential number one has just turned 72 years old.
Meanwhile, Palin's strong support for drilling in the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge will contrast with McCain's muted
opposition; she's said she expects McCain to change his mind on the
issue, which will create an awkward dynamic no matter what he does.
She also surprised Alaska's conservatives by vetoing a bill that
would have denied state benefits to same-sex couples (though that
might help her appeal to less socially conservative independents).
Her profile as a good government crusader may not be such an easy
sell, either. She was endorsed in an ad by Senator Ted Stevens, who
is now under indictment in a Republican corruption scandal. And
she's already embroiled in a mini-scandal that's under
investigation by the state senate; Palin's former public safety
director has claimed he was fired because he refused to fire a
state trooper who was involved in a custody dispute with her
sister.
Still, Palin boasts an 80% approval rating. She lived the first
three months of her life in Idaho, but Alaskans clearly see this
self-described "hockey mom" as one of them, a former Miss Wasilla
who worked as a TV sports announcer and helping to run a commercial
fishing business before entering politics. Her husband, Todd Palin,
is part native Eskimo who works in the oil fields in addition to
his fishing business, and is also a champion snowmobiler known in
Alaska as the First Dude. In a state where Big Oil is king, Palin
has been a staunch drilling supporter while maintaining her
independence from the industry. And she impressed a lot of
conservative Christians when she carried her son Trig to term
despite his genetic tests indicating Down Syndrome. "I'm looking at
him right now, and I see perfection," she said after returning to
work.
Politically, in a year where the Republican brand is so
tarnished, Palin will help McCain make the case that he's a
different kind of Republican. It might be his best shot to be
America's First Dude.
MCCAIN/PALIN, POLITICS OF REAL CHANGE WITH CANDIDATES WHO ARE
PROUD OF AMERICA!
http://www.time.com/time/politics/article/0,8599,1837510,00.html
In response to assignment:
Campaign 2008