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Off-Script: Pointing Fingers, Assigning Blame, and Questioning the Palin Pick

My Headline of the Day comes from no less a media behemoth than The New York Times:

Second-Guessing the Vice-Presidential Pick

A few thoughts:

1) Duh.

2) The Times is a bit late getting to this. The second-guessing has been going on for weeks. Some of it started right away. There aren’t any new revelations here, though recent comments from Ridge and Graham, critical of the Palin pick, are right up front.

3) Let the blame game continue. The article’s author, Adam Nagourney, notes, dryly, and almost like he has to, that “McCain may still win the election,” but what’s quite evident is that Republicans are preparing for defeat — and perhaps a massive one at that. Ridge and Graham, and especially the latter, are good friend of McCain, but they seem to be pointing the finger if not at McCain then at least at his campaign.

If only I had been picked, says Ridge. If only Lieberman had been picked, says Graham. Would McCain-Ridge or McCain-Lieberman be in a better position now than McCain-Palin? Maybe. Probably, but perhaps not by much. After all, neither Ridge nor Lieberman would have excited the base the way Palin has, and conservatives mostly would have been turned off altogether. McCain-Ridge/Lieberman would be doing better among independents, and perhaps would not have lost some moderate Republican support, nor the endorsements of high-profile Republicans like Powell, but it would not have the party’s extremist fringe as motivated as it is now.

4) The blame game is already being played inside the McCain campaign. The latest claim is that Palin went off-script by addressing the wardrobe story at an event yesterday in Florida. And of course there has already been talk of Palin “going rogue.”

Right now, with the election just over a week away, fingers are pointing all over the place. Even from McCain’s friends.

(Cross-posted from The Reaction.)

  • jdave
    I really don't understand how "motivating the base" translates into extra votes. Those folks who froth at the Palin rallies would never have voted for Obama. DO we really think they would not have voted at all if it weren't for Palin?
  • kritt11
    One thing is for sure,the polarizing Ms Palin is not a team player. She claims she has nothing to lose--- just Sen McCain's last real chance to ascend to the presidency. That is surely why she's going off-message. Palin appears to be looking ahead to her next opportunity on the national stage.

    In four years Troopergate, Fashiongate, and her uncomfortable interview performances will all be a distant memory in most voters' minds. Who knows, by then the talented Tina Fey may even decline to repeat her performance as Palin's alter ego.

    The conservatives will be pumped up enough after 4 years under socialist rule to keep those support dollars flowing into the governor's campaign coffers.

    It was a risky pick that fell flat, mostly because the rest of the country is tired of the same old, same old. The tried and true reliance on free markets, tax cuts, an aggressive foreign policy and endless oil drilling have not solved the nation's woes-- only added to them. The voters are just not buying what they are selling this time-- which is one reason that Obama has risen to the top so spectacularly and raised a fountain of campaign cash.
  • PWT
    I believe that all of the blame that is being placed on Palin is misdirected; it should all be ascribed to McCain - he chose her afterall. But, more to the point, nobody really cares who the VP is. Biden comes off much worse, in my opinion, than Palin but, the Eagleton talk has subsided.

    McCain is not a good candidate. His shortcomings are his own and his poor performances in the debates and the flailing direction of his campaign are his own responsibility.
  • kritt11
    PWT- I disagree that no one cares who the VP is--- they care very much and for two reasons:

    One is McCain's age and history of cancer.

    The other is our current officeholder who has exceeded the boundaries of the office and often has usurped power that ordinarily goes to Cabinet secretaries. Cheney was/is accountable to no one yet should get a great deal of the blame for the disasterous foreign policy decisions of Bush's first term, and the decision to use torture on enemy combatants, the poor relationship we have with other world powers and the Plame fiasco.
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