Sarah Palin is the Gift That Keeps on Giving

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Sarah Palin is the gift that keeps on giving -- to both Democrats and Republican party leaders. Judging from many of the GOP's visceral attacks in response to the Alaska governor's rambling pre-Fourth of July resignation speech, she has become as toxic as the H141 virus.

No matter how many sweet tweets she chirps to her fan base, high-level Republican poobahs want nothing more to do with the former beauty queen and McCain's short-term sidekick. The nastiness has been intense and unrelenting, the kind usually reserved for Democrats like Pelosi and Reid. One top Republican strategist snarled, "She's a stone-cold loser in a general election." Another voiced that "she's a train wreck."

Palin is feeling the same kind of disproportionate response by her conservative kinfolk that Alaskan wolves experience when exposed to rifle-toting airborne craft -- a hunting policy she enthusiastically endorsed.

Is the GOP simply culling its own herd? Has it belatedly realized that Palin is hardly the alpha female that she and her rabid supporters claim she is?

The intense study of Palin and her mysterious intentions -- palinotology -- will remain a media cottage industry. Moving beyond tabloid fodder, she's a story that literally and figuratively has legs. Vanity Fair served her a mighty comeuppance. Not that she reads the magazine. Peggy Noonan in the Wall Street Journal delivered the coup de grace.

But Palin is like a character in Lost whose personal narrative and story line defies reasoning and empirical evidence. She's part Smoke Monster, part Ben Linus whose peculiar fidelity to truth is always suspect.

There's an inherent fascination with what makes her tick. She's her own boss, that's for sure. But what works in Wasilla does not necessarily work in Washington.

Any Palin news item will continue to be hungrily devoured and scrutinized. By comparison, Iran's fraudulent election and protests already seem so yesterday. We can't wait to hear Levi Johnston's latest dish about his non-future mother-in-law. Palin news will be with us during the rest of the summer -- and beyond. Remember way back in August 2001 when the big news story was shark attacks. Now it's all about the "barracuda."

Yet it's foolish and premature to categorically dismiss Palin's future presidential prospects; her popularity and poll numbers among the Republican grassroots faithful are surprisingly high, not unlike those summer days in Fairbanks when the mercury pushes past 70.

She can easily resurrect a charm offensive amid handpicked media sympathizers. Her Joe Six-Pack constituency remains dazzled by her looks, cliched rhetoric, and red-meat populism. These voters look far beyond her tortured logic and half-baked utterances. She's the Red States' Red Queen, their very own Arctic Huey Long who now has more time to hang out in the Lower Forty-Eight.

Will no longer being governor hurt her future political credibility? Or is this Beltway navel-gazing that represents conventional opinion among the chattering class? Yet who really knows? What pundit can predict with any certainty these days where or how the political winds might blow. What happens when the national unemployment rate keeps edging upward to 10, 11, and maybe 15 percent by next year?

Who will then be made the scapegoats? Will Capitol Hill Democrats lose big time in the 2010 mid-term elections, which can then serve as a catalyst for a Palin presidential push in 2012? Will it be too late for another Obama reset if the economy continues tanking?

What's interesting, however, is that in the current, divisive, and polarizing political climate, it has taken the "polar princess" to unite Democrat and Republican leaders in a common dialogue. They might disagree on health care, climate change, Judge Sonia Sotomayor, and stimulus funding, but when it comes to Ms. Palin, there is widespread bipartisan agreement.

Ironic, she has become the bridge to somewhere.

Sarah Palin is the gift that keeps on giving -- to both Democrats and Republican party leaders. Judging from many of the GOP's visceral attacks in response to the Alaska governor's rambling pre-Fourt...
Sarah Palin is the gift that keeps on giving -- to both Democrats and Republican party leaders. Judging from many of the GOP's visceral attacks in response to the Alaska governor's rambling pre-Fourt...
 
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This is so far the best analysis of Saara Palin I read in a while. It is not meant to be an another mean and nasty piece on Sarah Palins bad and worse sides and deeds but just a factual account of happenings in her political and family life and a good account of those who adore her.Yes, she is not going away and someplace right next to her is her adviser Todd, the power behind her thinking and writing. Yes, there may be a bridge somewhere. I still cannot take her seriously but follow her life like it was a cartoon right now.
Thank you Bill Katovsky.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:17 PM on 07/15/2009
- JKPHILLY I'm a Fan of JKPHILLY 4 fans permalink

Great blog. I am somewhat disappointed in your comparison of Ben to Palin...but reading your reply makes me understand why.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:29 AM on 07/15/2009

(get it) Not really.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:28 PM on 07/14/2009
- mychagal I'm a Fan of mychagal 17 fans permalink

Bill,

Outstanding blog. I just loved it! Thanks.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:20 PM on 07/14/2009
- wwew I'm a Fan of wwew permalink

that should be "barracuddn't."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:56 PM on 07/14/2009
- queotic I'm a Fan of queotic 5 fans permalink
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Zing!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:55 PM on 07/14/2009
- robiform I'm a Fan of robiform 19 fans permalink
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Please! Comparing Sarah Palin to the character Ben Linus in "Lost" is highly insulting--to the character Ben Linus! As portrayed by the wonderful actor Michael Emerson, Linus is a highly intelligent person who, OK has some character flaws, but is someone who is utterly fascinating. Sarah Palin is neither intelligent nor fascinating!

Otherwise, that was an excellent post!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:26 PM on 07/14/2009
- Bill Katovsky - Huffpost Blogger I'm a Fan of Bill Katovsky 9 fans permalink

i was referring to ben's self-admitted elusive hold with telling the truth. p

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:25 PM on 07/14/2009
- dynwitch I'm a Fan of dynwitch 30 fans permalink
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I think it's pretty clear that Sarah is striking off on her own. She'll be the driving force behind a new party that hopefully will attract all the fringe loonies. That's great news for our side. Now if only the Dems can manage to hold themselves together, we might be able to stay in power long enough to really do some good.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:05 PM on 07/14/2009
- Stefano I'm a Fan of Stefano 9 fans permalink

I disagree, if she starts a party and pulls all the crazy righties along with her, over time, its possible that the Republicans left behind this rapture (get it) could actually seem reasonable, and the blue dogs could join them in a coalition of moderates. Its in our best interests to have the Palin's speak for the moderates in the GOP (hard to believe, but they do exist, they've just been marginalized)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:22 PM on 07/14/2009

Stefano; This is an interesting take on sarah palin's effect on the republican party. You may be right that she will take the extremes out of the republican party and leave it better (more moderate) for her efforts. My only fear is that she may take enough of them to overpower rational politicians of either party. She may end up leading the new "Mc Carthyesque" conservative party.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:23 PM on 07/16/2009
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