Mutual Loathing Society

· Thursday, February 18, 2010

WASHINGTON -- The Republican presidential nominee, an Arizona senator, was a maverick, which was part of his charm. He spoke and acted impulsively, which was part of his problem. Voters thought his entertaining dimensions might be incompatible with presidential responsibilities. For example, he selected a running mate most Americans had never heard of and who had negligible experience pertinent to the presidency. This was 1964.

Barry Goldwater, whose seat John McCain occupies, chose to run with Bill Miller, a congressman from Lockport, N.Y., near Buffalo. Miller, Goldwater cheerfully explained, annoyed Lyndon Johnson. After the Goldwater-Miller ticket lost 44 states, Miller retired to Lockport where he practiced law and lived in dignified anonymity until his death in 1983. Although he had served as an assistant prosecutor of Nazi war criminals at Nuremberg, and seven terms in Congress, no one suggested he should be considered for the 1968 Republican presidential nomination.

Yet Sarah Palin, who with 17 months remaining in her single term as Alaska's governor quit the only serious office she has ever held, is obsessively discussed as a possible candidate in 2012. Why? She is not going to be president and will not be the Republican nominee unless the party wants to lose at least 44 states.

Conservatives, who rightly respect markets as generally reliable gauges of consumer preferences, should notice that the political market is speaking clearly: The more attention Palin receives, the fewer Americans consider her presidential timber. The latest Washington Post/ABC News poll shows that 71 percent of Americans -- including 52 percent of Republicans -- think she is not qualified to be president.

This is not her fault. She is what she is, and what she is merits no disdain. She is feisty and public-spirited, and millions of people vibrate like tuning forks to her rhetoric. When she was suddenly forced to take a walk on the highest wire in America's political circus, she showed grit.

She also showed that grit is no substitute for seasoning. She has been subjected to such irrational vituperation -- loathing largely born of snobbery -- she can be forgiven for seeking the balm of adulation from friendly audiences.

America, its luck exhausted, at last has a president from the academic culture, that grating blend of knowingness and unrealism. But the reaction against this must somewhat please him. That reaction is populism, a celebration of intellectual ordinariness. This is not a stance that will strengthen the Republican Party, which recently has become ruinously weak among highly educated whites. Besides, full-throated populism has not won a national election in 178 years, since Andrew Jackson was re-elected in 1832.

After William Jennings Bryan's defeat in 1908, his third as the Democrats' presidential nominee, this prototypical populist said he felt like the man who, thrown out of a bar for a third time, dusted himself off and said, "I'm beginning to think those fellows don't want me in there." In 1992, Ross Perot, an only-in-America phenomenon -- a billionaire populist -- won 19 percent of the popular vote. But because of the winner-take-all allocation of electoral votes, he won none of those. In 1976, Jimmy Carter -- peanut farmer; carried his own suitcase, imagine that -- somewhat tapped America's durable but shallow reservoir of populism. By 1980, ordinariness in high office had lost its allure.

In 1968, George Wallace, promising to toss the briefcases of pointy-headed intellectuals into the Potomac, won 46 electoral votes with 13.5 percent of the popular vote. He had the populist's trifecta -- a vivid personality, a regional base and a burning issue. Actually, he had three such issues -- backlash against the civil rights revolution, social disintegration (urban riots, rising crime) and resentment of the progressive projects of Great Society social engineers (e.g., forced busing of other people's children).

Populism has had as many incarnations as it has had provocations, but its constant ingredient has been resentment, and hence whininess. Populism does not wax in tranquil times; it is a cathartic response to serious problems. But it always wanes because it never seems serious as a solution.

Political nature abhors a vacuum, which is what often exists for a year or two in a party after it loses a presidential election. But today's saturation journalism, mesmerized by presidential politics and ravenous for material, requires a steady stream of political novelties. In that role, Palin is united with the media in a relationship of mutual loathing. This is not her fault. But neither is it her validation.

(c) 2010, Washington Post Writers Group


Third-party content does not necessarily reflect the opinions of The Patriot Post.


Comments

g.wegmann

You conviently forgot that a Community organizer with a silver tongue and less than one term in the Senate won the Presidency. Do not count out Sara yet!

Posted February 18, 2010 at 8:58:22 AM


David S.

At least she has executive experience. Our current president had none, but (somehow) he still got elected.

Posted February 18, 2010 at 10:51:59 AM


Ed T.

Yep, that community organizer got elected...and what has the past year shown about his governing ability?

It's one thing to get elected. It's quite another to govern. She bailed on the last governing job she had, and I can't help but believe that she got enthralled with the thought of making it to the top.

Palin definitely connects to people...but I'm unsure about her when it comes to presidential material.

Posted February 18, 2010 at 12:42:40 PM


Hershey

I am disappointed in a writer that I have read, enjoyed and agreed with for years. In this particular column it would appear that you, like so many of our congressman, have been in Washington too long. The description that you use for Palin closely matches tactics used by the Main stream media to drive Newt Gingrich, a seasoned legislaturer out as speaker of the house. They are doing the same thing to Sarah Palin and it disappoints me that you are buying it.

Posted February 18, 2010 at 2:17:51 PM


MichaelSSEC

I've enjoyed Mr Will's excellent analyses for decades, and will continue to do so. But I believe he's off his game on this one.

Barack Obama had infinitely less experience than Sarah Palin had when she was elected mayor of Wasilla. She at least had run a business. He had zero real accomplishments in the US Senate, and ran for president on a populist wave (with the media openly campaigning for him) that swept him into office despite the voters knowing virtually nothing about him. Palin successfully fought corruption in the Alaskan GOP, in the governor's office, in the state legislature, and in the oil industry. She brought a natural gas pipeline to AK, something that had been the victim of corruption for a decade. She brought fiscal responsibility to the state budget and implemented free market policies.

I'm not sure why some Republicans hold so much venom for Mrs Palin. Perhaps it's the fact that she beat the state GOP at its own game and flushed out RINOs who were doing wrong. I challenge every Republican voter, pundit and leader to think long and hard about Sarah Palin.

I sure don't remember the Left attacking Mitt Romney every single night a whole year after the election was over. They spend half their monologues on the late night shows attacking one and only one potential candidate. The Liberals are telling us which Republican scares them. They're showing us which one they are desperate to keep out of the race in 2012. They're tipping their hand as to which Conservative they do not want to run against. We would do well to listen.

Posted February 18, 2010 at 9:09:58 PM


Shawn Cox

George Will is, as usual, right again. Mrs. Palin will not even get nominated by the GOP, much less elected. She should have finished her job as govenor before heading to the book circuit. Make all the excuses you want about how the governorship was taking such a toll on her family and her bank account. Real leaders stay the course, period.

Posted February 22, 2010 at 6:44:43 PM


Post a Comment

Please keep comments civil and brief. Obscene, profane, abusive and off-topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked.

(required, displayed)
(required, not displayed)
Facebook Twitter YouTube RSS Connect with The Patriot Post






Our Mission

To Support and Defend -- Read The Patriot Post -- It's Right. It's Free. -- www.patriotpost.us

"The Patriot's mission is to advocate for Essential Liberty, the restoration of constitutional limits on government and the judiciary, and to promote free enterprise, national defense and traditional American values. Our objective is to provide Patriots across our nation with a touchstone of First Principles through brief, informative and entertaining analyses of relevant news, policy and opinion from reputable research, advocacy and media organizations, so they may better support and defend those Principles, and enlist others to join our ranks." —Mark Alexander, Publisher


The Patriot Post is not sustained by any political, special interest or parent organization, and we accept no advertising. Our mission and operations are funded entirely by the voluntary financial support of Patriots like you!

Support The 2012 Patriot Fund