> Hatin' Palin
>
> She's not the reason Americans can't stand their politicians.
>
> By DANIEL HENNINGER
>
>
> The abuse being heaped on Sarah Palin is such a cheap shot.
> The complaint against the Alaska governor, at its most basic, is  
> that she doesn't qualify for admission to the national political  
> fraternity. Boy, that's rich. Behold the shabby frat house that says  
> it's above her pay grade.
>
>  NBC
> Sarah Palin appears with Lorne Michaels on Saturday Night Live.
>
> Congress has the lowest approval rating ever registered in the  
> history of polling (12%!). She isn't the reason polls are showing  
> people want the entire Congress fired, with many telling pollsters  
> they themselves could do a better job.
>
> Sarah Palin didn't design a system of presidential primaries whose  
> length and cost ensures that only the most obsessional personalities  
> will run the gauntlet, while a long list of effective governors  
> don't run.
>
> These rules have wasted the electorate's time the past three  
> presidential elections, by filling the debates with such zero- 
> support candidates as Dennis Kucinich, Mike Gravel, Al Sharpton,  
> Duncan Hunter, Chris Dodd, Joe Biden (8,000 total votes), Wesley  
> Clark and Alan Keyes.
>
> Daniel Henninger discusses the "cheap shots" taken at Sarah Palin  
> and highlights some problems with the political system. (Oct. 23)
> Out of this process has fallen a Democratic nominee who entered the  
> U.S. Senate in 2005 fresh off a stint in the Illinois state  
> legislature, with next to no record of political accomplishment. He  
> may be elected mainly because, in Colin Powell's word, he is thought  
> to be "transformational." One may hope so.
>
> By not bothering to look very deeply at the details beneath either  
> candidate's governing proposals, the media have created a lot of  
> downtime to take free kicks at Gov. Palin. My former colleague,  
> Tunku Varadarajan, has compiled a glossary of Palin invective, and  
> I've added a few: "Republican blow-up doll," "idiot," "Christian  
> Stepford wife," "Jesus freak," "Caribou Barbie," "a dope," "a fatal  
> cancer to the Republican Party," "liar," "a national disgrace" and  
> "her pretense that she is a woman."
>
> If American politics is at low ebb, it is because so many of its  
> observers enjoy working in its fetid backwash.
>
> The primary discomfort with Gov. Palin is the notion that she  
> doesn't have sufficient experience to be president, that Sen. McCain  
> should have picked a Washington hand seasoned in the ways of the  
> world. Such as? Here's an opinion poll question:
>
> If as Joe Biden suggests the U.S. is likely to be tested by a  
> foreign enemy next year, who of the following would you rather have  
> dealing with it in the Oval Office: Nancy (of Damascus) Pelosi,  
> Harry Reid, John Edwards, Joe (the U.S. drove Hezbollah out of  
> Lebanon) Biden, Mike Huckabee, Geraldine Ferraro, Tom DeLay, Jimmy  
> Carter or Sarah Palin?
>
> My pick? Gov. Palin, surely the most grounded, common-sense person  
> on that list of prime-time politicians.
>
> The established political pros let the selection process come to  
> this. Presidential candidates such as John McCain and Barack Obama  
> have become untethered from the discipline of party institutions,  
> largely because the parties have lost coherence. So we get celebrity  
> candidates made famous, fundable and electable by dint of their  
> access to the Beltway media. For voters, this election is a national  
> Hail Mary.
>
> For nearly two years, all the major candidates have rotated through  
> our lives as solitary personalities attended by careerist campaign  
> professionals. Barack, Hillary, Rudy, Mitt, Mike, McCain. When the  
> moment arrived to pick a running mate, input from the parties was  
> minimal. That famous party boss, Caroline Kennedy, advised Barack  
> Obama. They picked a three-decade denizen of the Senate. John  
> McCain's obligation was himself and his endless slog to this big  
> chance.
>
> The quick surge of party-wide excitement and campaign contributions  
> after his selection of Sarah Palin made clear that the McCain  
> candidacy was moribund and headed for a low-turnout debacle. If he  
> had picked any of the plain-vanilla men on his veep short list --  
> Pawlenty, Sanford, Romney or Lieberman -- they'd have won approval  
> from the media's college of cardinals, and killed his campaign.
>
> The stoning of Sarah Palin has exposed enough cultural fissures in  
> American politics to occupy strategists full-time until 2012. We now  
> see there is a left-to-right elite centered in New York, Washington,  
> Hollywood and Silicon Valley who hand down judgments of the nation's  
> mortals from their perch atop the Bell Curve.
>
> It seems only yesterday that the most critical skill in presidential  
> politics was being able to connect to people in places like Bronko's  
> bar or Saddleback Church. When Gov. Palin showed she excelled at  
> that, the goal posts suddenly moved and the new game was being able  
> to talk the talk in London, Paris, Tehran or Moscow. She looks about  
> a half-step behind Sen. Obama on that learning  curve.
>
> Lorne Michaels, the executive producer of "Saturday Night Live,"  
> lives on the forward wave of American life. This week he gave his  
> view of Sarah Palin to EW.com: "I think Palin will continue to be  
> underestimated for a while. I watched the way she connected with  
> people, and she's powerful. Her politics aren't my politics. But you  
> can see that she's a very powerful, very disciplined, incredibly  
> gracious woman. This was her first time out and she's had a huge  
> impact. People connect to her."
>
> Uh-oh. Sounds like the cancer could be in remission.
>
> Write to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Please add your comments to the Opinion Journal forum.
>
>
>
>
>

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