If favorable liberal reactions to Sarah Palin’s speech last
night are any indication, the Democratic ticket may never recover.
To start our sampling, consider Tom Shales, the Washington
Post’s aging TV critic. (I use “aging” advisedly: how can
anyone with any memory argue that “Reagan’s time in the White House
was a virtual love affair with the press, whom he charmed as
infectiously as he charmed the whole country”?) In his review today, he takes Palin very seriously,
concluding:
She proved herself in the great arena; that’s what
counts politically. Nobody could watch that speech and still
consider her a joke, no matter how flimsy her credentials and
qualifications may seem on paper. The joke, it seems, is on those
who’d been laughing at her. Last night the laughing ended — and
the cheering began.
Then there’s Mother Jones’s David Corn, an upstanding
lefty with no reason whatsoever to defend Palin, which makes his
assessment, as the friend who drew my attention to the MJ
link noted, one of the “most credible” out
there:
Decrying the Democrats as tax-hikers and national
security weaklings, while blasting Washington, is the usual fare
for Republicans. But Palin read her lines with flair and
confidence. And—can we be frank?—she looked darn good doing so.
She was with the program: this election is not as much about
change, hope, or issues as it is about the measure of one man….
It’s some ticket: a made-in-small-town-America working mom and the
man who goes off to war to protect her way of life.
Finally, how could one resist a story headlined on
Slate’s home page this way: “O’Rourke: The political eros
of Sarah Palin” — particularly if you assumed the author in
question is P.J. O’Rourke. Turns out it’s not, but Megan O’Rourke is plenty sharp-minded
herself:
What made Palin appealing wasn’t that she was pretty in
a beauty-contest kind of way, but that she possessed a real charge
as she spoke, a charge that derived from her palpable sense of
enjoyment at finding her voice and being loved for it….What
Hillary Clinton pretended to be at the end of her campaign, Sarah
Palin is: a red-blooded Middle American populist.
What do the Democrats do now?