By J.T. Young on 10.6.08 @ 12:07AM
Does anyone still remember how unqualified Harry Truman was once thought to be?
Five weeks and one vice-presidential debate after joining the
Republican ticket, Sarah Palin is not going away. As she proved
Thursday night in St. Louis, for those who hoped to make her Dan
Quayle, she is not obliging. Already she is rewriting the
conventional wisdom that says running mates can only hurt, not help
a ticket. Her appeal recalls that of Harry Truman, another
vice-presidential selection whom opponents discounted at their
peril.
Not long to politics, Palin's story is relatively short. She was
a two-term city council member and then two-term mayor of small
town Wasilla, Alaska. In 2006, she was elected Alaska's first
female governor. A reform thread runs through her political career.
But until John McCain chose her as his running mate this August,
she captured little national attention
Her quick rise has left the Left aghast. By various contrived
measures they claim she is unqualified. In doing so, Palin's
critics conveniently forget Harry Truman, another vice president
whose qualifications were heavily discounted, yet is now remembered
as a popular president and claimed as a liberal icon.
Truman did not attend college. During early adulthood he ran his
family's small farm and was his town's postmaster. After serving as
a captain of an artillery company in WWI, he owned a small clothing
store that failed -- taking 15 years to pay off.
His political career began when he was elected county overseer
of roads. He lost reelection. For the next two years, he held a
series of jobs, including being a partner in a bank that also
failed. Elected county public works supervisor, the local Democrat
machine picked him to run at age 50 for the U.S. Senate. He
improbably won and later won reelection. Again, he was fortuitously
picked, this time to be vice president, by FDR for his
unprecedented fourth term.
Nothing in Truman's past particularly qualified him to be vice
president. In fact, nothing in any of Truman's previous
incarnations ever seemed to particularly qualify him for anything
that followed. All this caused opponents to continually
underestimate him. Yet he became one of the vice presidency's
greatest success stories -- a story culminating in his 1948
presidential election, perhaps the most storied comeback in
presidential politics.
THERE IS A STRIKING similarity between Palin and Truman. Both have
been underestimated politically. Both struck a chord running
against Washington. To shouts of "Give 'em Hell, Harry!" Truman
famously ran against a "do nothing" Congress in 1948. Palin has
scored points running against a Congress with historically low
approval ratings -- precisely because she is removed from
Washington (the only such person on either ticket).
More important than their political comparison however, is their
personal connection. Few people today could tell you what Truman
did or stood for. He is memorable for who he was. He had an
"everyman" quality, Midwestern and middle class, a life story that
most could relate to far more easily than to the aristocratic FDR.
He did not just seem to support the common man, he was the common
man.
Palin too stands for, and with, a large segment of the
electorate that is much discussed, often courted, but rarely
represented. Her life story, both victories and challenges, have
elements middle class America knows directly. She embodies the
"Reagan Democrat" -- even more so than Reagan himself, who was
long-removed from his Midwestern roots by the time he was elected
president.
In all these qualities, but particularly her personal ones, she
confounds the Left. They are not simply uncomfortable with Palin,
they are offended by her. It should not be surprising. Palin
vividly reveals how little rapport the Left has with middle class
America. In it, the Left sees a group only to be led, not one to be
followed.
It is fitting that the vice presidential debate took place in
Truman's home state of Missouri. The parallels of his and Palin's
popular appeal are as clear as they are understandable. If the
Republican ticket wins in November, she will certainly be seen as
the most politically potent VP pick since Lyndon Johnson in 1960.
She has already succeeded beyond all expectations in drawing
attention and energy to McCain's message and campaign. Who would
ever have thought that the Republican VP speech would be only
slightly less watched than, and that McCain's would actually
exceed, Obama's?
At the heart of Palin's appeal is her mainstream and main street
quality. While the Left is extremely uncomfortable with who she is
and what she represents, she is extremely comfortable with
both...and so is a very large section of the electorate. Her
non-resident status in any elite group antagonizes them all, but it
endears her to far more. Implicit in their support is a "Give'em
Hell, Sarah!" quality. Harry would know exactly what, and who, they
mean.
topics:
John McCain, Sarah Palin, Energy, Alaska