By Thomas Cheplick on 2.26.08 @ 12:08AM
Why John McCain should have an Alaskan in his vice presidential
pipeline.
As John McCain inches closer to the 1,191 delegates he needs to
secure the Republican nomination, attention has turned to the vice
presidential sweepstakes. Who should McCain pick as his running
mate? The answer will be especially important if the aging
four-term senator's general election foe is a youthful freshman
agitating for change.
Sarah Palin, the beautiful conservative Republican governor of
Alaska, would be an ideal choice to help McCain slay this unholy
ObamaOprah beast which is set to rake in nearly $50 million a month
in campaign donations alone, and has intense auxiliary support
coming from the unions, George Soros's billions-infused Democracy
Alliance organization, and other rich Democratic networks.
Mrs. Palin is one of conservatism's own, and would be the first
female vice president. She's young being only 44 (two years behind
Senator Obama), she is wildly known to despise government
corruption. She defeated a horribly entrenched and corrupt
Republican political machine in Alaska. She has a son in the U.S.
military. She's strongly pro-life, belonging, in fact, to Feminists
for Life.
Gov. Palin could become the Republican Party's Segolene Royal,
the French Socialist Party's glamorous leader known for her heels
and political bite. She is the perfect antidote to Sen. Obama's
cheap thrills, and would help rejuvenate conservatism.
If Camille Paglia or the huffers on Huffington Post are anything
to go by, the standard line that will be repeated often against
John McCain will be that he's an "old coot"; a vintage George C.
Scott-style warmonger; old; hypocritical; and just plain odd.
As McCain's advisers most surely know, the best way to combat
that line of attack is to choose a running mate who in no way can
be seen as old or as a "coot."
MRS. PALIN IS most certainly not an "old coot." She has enchanting,
fresh charisma and the credentials, too, to win back and motivate a
lot of conservatives, disaffected Republicans, and independents
tired of government corruption and Republican degeneracy and sheer
idiocy.
McCain needs someone who like Sen. Obama physically represents a
departure from the past, who also oozes vibrancy and intelligence,
will motivate die-hard conservatives, but what's more, who will
also let the Arizonan take advantage of his age and enable him to
be the playful and charming Reagan-esque grandfather figure that
Americans always fall in love with. In other words, Sen. McCain,
like President Nixon in the 1968 election, needs an opposite number
-- that's Sarah Palin in the flesh.
President Nixon's opposite number was Spiro Agnew, then the
Governor of Maryland. It worked fantastically. Gov. Agnew was the
gregarious and boastful conservative Greek who contrasted very well
with the inherently shy and calculating Nixon. Choosing Agnew not
only reassured and motivated conservative Republicans but also
added a nice touch of Greek pizzazz that competed well against
Hubert Humphrey's Midwestern sparkle.
Barack Obama is the raffish 46-year-old, witty, and charming who
is magnificently skilled in making himself appear inclusive,
open-minded, and not at all prone to socialist-thinking. What's
more, Sen. Obama is the George W. Bush of this election. Like
President Bush in 2000, Sen. Obama is the candidate with less
experience but tons of charm. If history is anything to go by,
Americans always pick the charmer.
Under the "anti-coot" rubric Senator McCain has few available
options -- and that's perhaps being too extravagant. The beautiful
young conservative female governor from Alaska really is it. What's
more, Mrs. Palin is in Washington, D.C. this week. She is "hoping,"
according to the news reports, "to meet with the presidential
front-runners while in Washington to discuss Alaska's role in the
new administration."
Doubtless, many patriotic Americans want to know: What time will
she and Sen. McCain be meeting for dinner?
topics:
John McCain, Barack Obama, Sarah Palin, Military, NATO, Conservatism, Alaska, Unions