By W. James Antle, III on 9.4.08 @ 3:36AM
In St. Paul, hockey mom Sarah Palin bodychecks her critics.
ST. PAUL -- The long knives are out for Sarah Palin. Ever since
John McCain announced that the 44-year-old governor of Alaska was
to be his running mate, her qualifications, record, ideology, and
even her family life have been under the media microscope and
liberal assault.
Palin's critics had but one objective: to discredit a
politically talented woman who could energize the conservative base
-- evangelicals and others animated by taxes, guns, and babies --
while also potentially appealing to disgruntled Hillary voters who
wish to leave no glass ceiling unshattered. An unknown outside of
Alaska, the Democrats and their media accomplices hoped to reduce
Palin to a cross between Dan Quayle and Peg Bundy of Married
with Children. Because of this, her remarks to the Republican
National Convention were more important than any talk by a vice
presidential nominee since Richard Nixon's Checkers speech 56 years
ago.
The lady shined. Palin brilliantly defended her record as a
reformer who stood up against the ossified establishment of her own
party, in stark contrast with the man atop the Democratic ticket
who has seldom mustered the courage to say no to the Daley
political machine or the race hustlers of Chicago's South Side.
"Before I became governor of the great state of Alaska, I was
mayor of my hometown," Palin said. "And since our opponents in this
presidential election seem to look down on that experience, let me
explain to them what the job involves. I guess a small-town mayor
is sort of like a 'community organizer,' except that you have
actual responsibilities."
Palin recounted the highlights of her record as governor: an
ethics reform law, a budget surplus, tax relief for Alaskans, and
an effort to curtail wasteful spending by big-government
Republicans in Juneau. "While I was at it, I got rid of a few
things in the governor's office that I didn't believe our citizens
should have to pay for," she said. "That luxury jet was over the
top. I put it on eBay."
Without directly criticizing President Bush and the Grand Old
Spending Party that rang down the curtain on a dozen years of
Republican rule on Capitol Hill, Palin talked about her "nearly
half a billion dollars in vetoes." "I suspended the state fuel tax,
and championed reform to end the abuses of earmark spending by
Congress," she continued. "I told the Congress 'thanks, but no
thanks,' for that Bridge to Nowhere."
That last bit may seem politically convenient now, but it in
fact put her in direct conflict with the senior Republicans in
Alaska, Ted Stevens and Don Young, the senator and congressman of
VECO Corporation.
Palin also mounted a low-key but effective defense of her family
and biography. "Our family has the same ups and downs as any other
-- the same challenges and the same joys," she said, sidestepping
daughter Bristol's pregnancy but acknowledging Trig's Down
syndrome. "Sometimes even the greatest joys bring challenge. And
children with special needs inspire a special love." To the
families of such children, Palin offered to be "a friend and
advocate in the White House."
And in attack mode, Palin showed Barack Obama that lipstick is
indeed the only difference between a hockey mom and a pit bull.
Listening to Obama speak, she said, "it's easy to forget that this
is a man who has authored two memoirs but not a single major law or
reform -- not even in the state Senate."
"This is a man who can give an entire speech about the wars
America is fighting," she continued, "and never use the word
'victory' except when he's talking about his own campaign." Palin
mocked Obama's "Styrofoam Greek columns," his big-government
liberalism, and his emphasis in words rather than deeds without
sounding like a harsh, red-meat partisan. She is no Rudy Giuliani,
but good luck to those liberals who hope she'll turn out to be
another Harriet Miers.
Finally, the feisty Palin proved an able defender of the man at
the top of the ticket. "There is only one man in this election who
has ever really fought for you," she argued. "In places where
winning means survival and defeat means death... and that man is
John McCain." She made the case for McCain's journey from Hanoi
Hilton to the White House.
To be sure, Palin is not without her faults. Her rollout by the
McCain campaign was sloppy. Her foreign-policy resume is thin,
undermining a key Republican argument against Obama. Her
association with this ticket could undercut her tendency toward a
more independent conservatism and deprive Alaska of a successful
reform-minded governor. It isn't clear that even her performance at
the convention will move her beyond a base-pleaser to a running
mate attractive to swing voters.
But last night Palin drove home the message that she his the
kind of maverick the GOP's conservative grassroots could love. And
love her they did. "Hockey mom! Hockey mom!" the crowd in
the arena chanted as she spoke. "We love you Sarah!" a man shouted
as her speech began. "We love you!"
Once she finished, the response from delegates and others at the
convention was near-euphoric. As one beaming Republican activist
from Ohio put it, "That's our girl!"
topics:
Taxes, John McCain, Barack Obama, Sarah Palin, Law, NATO, Conservatism, Alaska