It appears that
Team Obama was pushing its surrogates to compare Sarah Palin to
George McGovern's doomed 1972 running mate, Thomas Eagleton, but
the analogies are invalid:
Jeralyn
Merritt at TalkLeft seems to have been the first to invoke the
Eagleton comparison, within hours of John McCain's announcement of
his running mate, but she had plenty of company after Monday's
news that Palin's teenage daughter is pregnant. Richard Gizbert
of Huffington Post flatly
pronounced Palin "the new Thomas Eagleton" and predicted that
she would withdraw "within the next week or so." By Tuesday, Joshua
Green of the Atlantic Monthly had an
article online examining the comparison in detail.
Yet nothing in the attacks that Democrats or the media have made
against Palin compares to the scandal that brought down Eagleton --
a hidden history of severe mental illness he hadn't disclosed to
McGovern before his selection as running mate. And judging from the
way Republicans have rallied to Palin's defense, it seems highly
unlikely she will be bumped from the ticket.
Indeed, the spectacle of a media feeding frenzy over a working
mother and her pregnant teenager seems to have produced a backlash
that could have an effect quite the opposite of what Palin's
enemies originally imagined. She may yet turn out to be the
anti-Eagleton -- that rare choice of a running mate who makes a
positive difference in a presidential election.
You can
read the whole thing here, and as to Republicans rallying in
support of Palin, she's already
helping draw record crowds for McCain -- who's closed the gap
with Obama to 2 points in the latest
Gallup daily tracking poll. (In the
Rasmussen daily poll, it's Obama 49%, McCain 46%, with
"leaners" included.)
topics:
John McCain, Sarah Palin