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Who is Sarah Palin?

After we heard that AK governor Sarah Palin had been chosen as McCain’s running mate, I wrote that I am “anxious to see how Palin handles the klieg lights of the national media circus.” Well, it seems that the McCain campaign may simply see to it that she doesn’t have to face the national media anytime soon.

Marc Ambinder reports that a “senior McCain campaign official” told him “Gov. Sarah Palin won’t submit to a formal interview anytime soon. She may take some questions from local news entities in Alaska, but until she’s ready — and until she’s comfortable — which might not be for a long while — the media will have to wait. The campaign believes it can effectively deal with the media’s complaints, and their on-the-record response to all this will be: ‘Sarah Palin needs to spend time with the voters.’”

Well that’s one strategy. And given the way Palin and other speakers at this week’s Republican convention went after the media, it’s not a surprising one. But I don’t think it serves the country well. A big glitzy roll-out followed by sixty days of campaign events and one nationally-televised debate are simply an insufficient introduction to a modern vice-presidential candidate, a person who could be called upon, at a moment’s notice, to take up the duties of the presidency. The American people don’t know Sarah Palin: we don’t know her positions on very many issues; we don’t know her management style; we don’t know how she’d react in a crisis.

We’ve learned a little bit about her biography in the last week, and it is a compelling life story. We’ve learned that she’s managed to become a very popular governor in Alaska in the last eighteen months. We’ve learned way too much about her family and their personal business. We’ve learned that she can deliver a few mean-spirited attack lines and land a partisan punch without breaking her smile.

We’ve learned that she can tell blatant untruths without a moment’s pause, such as when she claimed to have “told Congress thanks but no thanks” for that now-infamous Bridge to Nowhere earmark project. Here’s the full analysis of that comment from the non-partisan factcheck.org. I guess she was for it before she was against it. We’ve learned that she’s against earmarks, except for when she’s hiring lobbyists to push for them or personally traveling to Washington to beg for them. You’d think it would have been a little embarrassing for the campaign to admit that some of Palin’s Wasilla earmarks (which amounted to some $27 million during her tenure as mayor) had even made it onto McCain’s annual lists of outrageous pork-barrel projects, but they simply ignored that particular revelation.

What little we’ve learned about her positions on the major issues facing our country today is, quite frankly, rather unnerving. She does not believe global warming has been caused by humans, saying in an interview just last week “A changing environment will affect Alaska more than any other state, because of our location. I’m not one though who would attribute it to being man-made.” She does not believe that women should be permitted the right to choose an abortion, even in cases of rape or incest. She believes (in fact, she “fiercely advocates“) that we should drill for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, and as governor has filed a lawsuit against the EPA for listing the polar bear as a threatened species (that’s the EPA under George W. Bush, mind you). These are hardly mainstream positions.

We’ve learned that Palin was a founding director of indicted-Senator Ted Stevens’ 527 fund-raising group from 2003 through 2005 and that she delighted in his endorsement during her gubernatorial campaign in 2006. We’ve learned that she at least considered in the abstract the question of banning books from the Wasilla Public Library while she was mayor, and we’ve learned there there’s a very serious investigation going on in Alaska now to determine whether Palin acted improperly in (apparently) trying to get her ex-brother-in-law fired from his job as a state trooper. We’ve learned that she’s a little confused about the Pledge of Allegiance. In a survey filled out during her 2006 gubernatorial campaign, Palin was asked if she was “offended” by the phrase ‘under God’ in the Pledge. She responded: “Not on your life. If it was good enough for the founding fathers, it’s good enough for me and I’ll fight in defense of our Pledge of Allegiance.” The Pledge of Allegiance, of course, dates only to 1892, and the phrase “under God” wasn’t added until 1954. At least a few of the founding fathers would probably have been rather uncomfortable with the whole idea, actually, but they’re not around anymore.

These last four paragraphs are provided simply as a way of pointing out what we can say that we know about Sarah Palin after the last week of coverage. And, so far as I can tell, that’s about all we know of her. We cannot say that about the other three principal nominees. John McCain and Joe Biden have been in political life longer than I’ve been alive, and I have no doubt whatever of their qualifications, their views, their reputations, and their personalities. Barack Obama has been in the national spotlight for more than four years now, and has been through the wringer of a national campaign for just about the last two. He, McCain, and Biden have done countless interviews, allowing their views on the issues to be heard, dissected and parsed by the media, the bloggers, and the American people. They have debated repeatedly over the course of this - seemingly endless - campaign, allowing their political opponents to jab and punch back at their stances on the issues, teaching the skeletons in their closets to dance, making their case to the American public.

Sarah Palin hasn’t done any of this, and it is utterly laughable for the McCain campaign to blame reporters for daring to think it appropriate to ask the same questions of her that they have asked of the other candidates over the course of their national political careers. Roger Simon said it in a wonderfully-satirical Politico column yesterday: ” We have asked pathetic questions like: Who is Sarah Palin? What is her record? Where does she stand on the issues? And is she is qualified to be a heartbeat away from the presidency? … Bad, bad media.” We’re heard some pretty outrageous arguments about Palin’s foreign policy experience, including the one that being the governor of the state closest in proximity to Russia confers some sort of osmosis-based qualification. But when reporters have asked McCain campaign spokesmen to explain Palin’s foreign policy decisions, they can’t do it. They keep trying to twist the question around to what Obama hasn’t done, or what McCain has done. Well I’ve heard Barack Obama talk about foreign policy, and I know he can do so intelligently, extemporaneously, and at length (here’s a transcript of a long interview with Fareed Zakaria from this summer, for example). I’ve never heard Sarah Palin do this and, from the sounds of it, I’d better not expect to anytime soon.

It is true that Palin is the vice-presidential nominee, as McCain surrogates like to remind us. But as John McCain said earlier this year, “we all know that the highest priority [in a VP choice] is someone who can take your place.” Does John McCain truly believe that Sarah Palin is ready, today, to be president of the United States?

I don’t.

Do you?

Barack Obama chose as his running mate a man whose presidential qualifications are unassailable. John McCain chose someone who seems to have gotten the Republican base excited but whom the country knows next-to-nothing about. If the American people are to have the option of making an informed judgment about Sarah Palin before Election Day, the McCain campaign must allow her to speak, to answer questions about her record and her views and her temperament. At this time, with these stakes so high, we simply cannot have an enigma a heartbeat away from the presidency.

[UPDATE: David Frum has a comment that I think says just what I was trying to say, in many fewer words: "Again let me stress: I am not denying that Sarah Palin may have great skills. She may well. I am insisting that neither you, nor I, nor John McCain has any valid reason to believe that she does. This is not an argument about the attributes she lacks. It's an argument about the information we lack. I am pleading with my fellow conservatives: Please demand more and better knowledge before you commit yourselves to a political leader. That's all." I don't call myself a conservative, since I'm not one, but you get the drift.]

Posted originally at Charging RINO.

  • It's baffling that anyone - beyond Palin's fellow religious nuts - supports McCain's pick.

    The media blackout is a tacit admission that she is inexperienced, and will be unable to defuse the scandals surrounding her in Alaska.

    McCain and her have repeatedly lied about her "maverick" credentials with regards to the Bridge to Nowhere and her support for Ted Stevens and earmarks.

    Palin is stonewalling the bipartisan investigation into the troopergate scandal.

    McCain has often spoken of open government (he even mentioned it in his acceptance speech) and the virtues of so-called "straight talk." What happened to all that Mr. McCain?
  • GeorgeSorwell
    Palin's unwillingness to face questions makes her look like she's got things to hide.
  • D. E.Rodriguez
    Wow:

    “Gov. Sarah Palin won’t submit to a formal interview anytime soon. She may take some questions from local news entities in Alaska, but until she’s ready — and until she’s comfortable — which might not be for a long while — the media will have to wait. "

    If Sarah Palin is not ready/comfortable to even take questions from the American people (through the press), "for a long while," how can we expect her to be ready to step into the shoes of the President--if necessary--come January?

    One can fiirehose facts about domestic and foreign affairs into Sarah's brain (she seems inteligent enough)--we all know that McCain's staff is doing exactly that-- but one can not firehose experience and judgment into her person.

    Interesting how all this will play out.
  • Silhouette
    Wow. Another article about Sarah Palin.

    How many are there now, like a thousand?

    She won't tip the election one way or the other. Focus on something else..before it's too late..
  • Marlowecan
    "...it is utterly laughable for the McCain campaign to blame reporters for daring to think it appropriate to ask the same questions of her that they have asked of the other candidates over the course of their national political careers."

    So McCain and Obama have been asked to provide medical records to prove that their children are actually THEIR children, and not the child of someone else?

    Have McCain, Biden and Obama been asked -- by Sally Quinn in a national publication -- to prove to the American public that they can be both parents and political leaders?

    Jeremy, you have focused on the issues and Palin's lack of qualifications. This is an excellent and appropriate focus.

    But much of the backlash against the media circus over its grilling Palin has to do with the personal (and sexist) nature of much of the questioning.

    I saw yesterday reporters chasing down rumors about a neighbor of Palin sealing his divorce records. Could Palin have been his secret lover? (Nope, he just wanted privacy from the media).

    A lot of Democrats here at TMV defended the media's refusal to investigate rumors of Edwards' affair. It is purely a personal, family matter, they said.

    I wrote here at TMV a while back criticizing conservative attacks on Obama using his children.

    Oddly, there has been little comment or outrage about the media pursuing every single rumor of infidelity or extramarital activity on Palin's part. It is open season on Palin's family.

    Jeremy, again, you focus on the real issue of qualifications, ethics etc. As ChrisWWW and GeorgeSorwell note, these are valid and important questions.

    But the media's focus in its pursuit of Palin has been heavily...and tackily...personal.
  • peartree
    I was watching the Palins on the stage tossing around their poor confused baby as if he was a show dog at the RNC. A good mother knows that her kid should be in bed at a late hour. This kid also has special needs. Sarah Barracuda is using this baby and the rest of the Palins , a Rosanne-like dysfunctional family to show she is just like your neighbors you don't really want to know. Whatever became of the Republican family values buzzword?
  • Marlowecan
    "A good mother knows that her kid should be in bed at a late hour."

    I trust that, should Senator Obama win the Presidency, and he and Michelle and their children are onstage -- usually at a late hour in the evening -- proudly watching their father in one of the most important moments in his life . . . you will write again criticizing the Obamas for their awful parenting.

    It is good that Michelle Obama never had her children onstage in Denver. The criticism from concerned Democrats would have been awful . . . oh, wait . . . .
  • RickMoran
    The list of Biden verbal gaffes that rmake him to appear as dumb as a post would fill the Encyclopedia Britannica and this is the best you can come up with on Palin? He didn't even know the name of the man who chose him as running mate for God's sake!

    http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2008/08/23/politic...

    And I would argue that his "qualifications" to be president are certainly assailable. If you believe longetivity in Washington allows for some kind of osmosis where knowledge of how to be president sort of seeps in through the pores of super annuated senators like Biden, then of course you believe him to be "qualified."

    But being an executive is a helluva lot different than being a legislator. Biden has zero executive experience and thus "assailable" qualifications for president. Only a rank partisan would say otherwise.

    There is only one thing that makes me angrier than unfair attacks on candidates - including the ones you mention on Obama. And that is hypocrites like you pretending to be even handed only to reveal yourself as partisan as any employee of the DNC.
  • But being an executive is a helluva lot different than being a legislator. Biden has zero executive experience and thus "assailable" qualifications for president. Only a rank partisan would say otherwise.

    So, you would argue that Palin was qualified to be president the day after she took office as mayor of Wasilla?

    Is it not true that at that point she had more executive experience than McCain, Obama and Biden have even now?
  • joegandelman
    Rick: I appreciate your link. But calling writers hypocrites because they disagree with you is NOT appreciated on this site at all. People can and WILL vigorously disagree. I disagree with some of the writers on TMV on a lot of issues and with many people who discuss posts in comments.

    Your links and rebuttal are greatly welcome and your writing elsewhere is admired. FYI people who look at something can reach a conclusion. -- and it is an honorable process where they just see things differently. Look at polls and you will see moderates and independents divided. Moderate Republicans may not like the Palin pick. That is what they may conclude based on how they process information. But that doesn't make them biased or hypocrites because they see things differently -- just as you are not a biased hypocrite if you see it differently from them. Everyone's take is welcome and it is respected./
  • GeorgeSorwell
    As I say above, Palin's unwillingness to face questions from the media makes it look like she has things to hide.

    The knuckleheaded focus on things like who gave birth to their youngest baby doesn't make anyone look serious.

    It just gives Republican partisans an excuse to shout down serious questions.
  • RickMoran
    Joe:

    I respect most of the writers who appear on this site. But if someone presents himself as even handed as Mr. Dibbell was attempting to do while assailing one candidate with what I consider unfair criticism and not putting the other under the same microscope, I believe that is the definition of hypocrisy - not the criticism itself but the manner in which the writer attempts to disguise their partisanship.

    Republican digs at the media were not about questions regarding her qualifications but the extraordinary smearing of Palin and her family with demonstrably false accusations and half baked charges of impropriety. Is the media paying half the attention to Biden's family connections with MBNA including the lavish and improper favors given he and his by executives of the credit card giant? The microscopic scrutiny paid to Palin and her record compared to Biden is outrageously unfair and should have been mentioned as the true justification for GOP attacks on the media.

    Trying to hide one's partisanship behind a veil of ostensible fairness is why I referred to Mr. Dibbell as a hypocrite. He raises some good points about Palin and the McCain campaign's reluctance to expose her to probing questions from the media. But that doesn't excuse his penning a hit piece disguised as analysis.
  • George,
    And let's keep in mind this exactly the mentality the Bush administration has exhibited for 8 years. They rarely trotted Bush out unless it was in front of a carefully selected audience.

    We live in a democracy, and the citizens are owed a chance to see the unscripted Palin. Otherwise we should assume the worse.
  • Rick,
    Biden has been in the public eye for more than 30 years and he's run for president before.

    Palin has been in the public eye for less than 2 weeks. By necessity, the media scrambling to find out everything it can about someone who might be the next president of the United States in a few short months. That's the media's job.
  • Marlowecan
    GeorgeSorwell said: "The knuckleheaded focus on things like who gave birth to their youngest baby doesn't make anyone look serious. It just gives Republican partisans an excuse to shout down serious questions."

    Exactly! This has been an amazingly counterproductive attack line.

    It has united the GOP, raised money and Palin's national profile, and driven conservatives who would otherwise balk at Palin into grudgingly defending her.

    When the media's near-obsessive focus on Palin, sex and babies . . . the general public is outraged in sympathy . . . and the McCain team can easily swat away more penetrating criticism.
  • peartree
    Ok. I can see that you too have great parenting skills. We are talking about a baby with Downs Syndrome. The Obama children are much older and as you could see had a clue as to why they were on stage.
  • Ricorun
    A little more than a week ago the McCain campaign was complaining about not getting enough attention. Now they're complaining about getting too much. So now, apparently, they're going into hiding. Boy, they're hard to please.

    Regarding Palin and the coverage of her, I do think some of it has gotten too personal. I very rarely comment on things like that myself, but I wouldn't exactly call it extraordinary. Granted, the "baby switching" rumor was pretty over the top, but it did turn out there actually was a little bit of "there" there (namely, the daughter really was pregnant, just not with Trig).

    As for the other stuff on Palin, what do you expect, Mr. Moran? The McCain campaign hung her out there last Friday with not so much as a single page of biography. The press was working in a vacuum on a very interesting surprise, and in a very compressed time frame. Given the scenario, it's hardly surprising that some of the reporting has been intense, rushed, and sometimes exaggerated. There's been some pretty ridiculous stuff reported about Obama too, but over a longer period of time. And I think we all know there will be more.

    I don't know much about you, Mr. Moran. I've read a couple of your articles and I thought they were okay. I'm not very familiar with Mr. Dibble either. But I found your little tirade here rather out of line. You take Dibble to task for what you "consider unfair criticism and not putting the other under the same microscope." You're entitled to your opinion. But in a relative sense, perhaps even in an objective sense, it's hard to call the criticism unfair. Some of it may not be entirely accurate, but then again some of Palin's claims about herself clearly aren't. And that compounds the problem. And as for your suggestion that Mr. Dibble should have extended his column into a tome by giving Joe Biden equal time is patently ridiculous.
  • peartree
    It worries me that some folks are saying they want Palin because she is just like them.
    Meaning: colloquial local, uninformed about current events or the world. We require leaders who are wise and exceptional regardless of their origins in the hinterland or New York. Being from the heart of the country does not indicate a lack of wisdom. We can look to Abraham Lincoln or Jefferson as examples of vision. McCain certainly made a splash with Palin, but I would have felt better had he chosen a more worldly and better educated Republican such as Olympia Snow or arch conservative Kay Bailey Hutchison. Granted I am no Republican, but I am an American foremost Should McCain be elected, I will feel less than confident about his second in command.
  • pacatrue
    RickMoran, Dibbel believes that both McCain and Biden are qualified to be President because they each have more than two decades of federal legislative experience. You seem to think both men are unqualified for the Presidency because legislative experience is meaningless. That's fine. Don't vote for McCain or Biden; write in Palin's name as your option. But simply because someone else disagrees, it doesn't make them hypocrites.
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