Yesterday, one of the Democratic Party's self-appointed
commissars in the media, E.J. Dionne, was mightily
dismissive of Sarah Palin based on what he found in a New
York Times story:
"Aides traveling with Ms. Palin have reported back to
associates that she is a fast study -- asking few questions of her
policy briefers but quickly repeating back their main points -- who
already has considerable ease and experience before cameras.
"A former aide in Alaska who had helped prepare Ms. Palin for
her campaign debates there said she had a talent for distilling
information into digestible sound bites. The aide said she
generally prefers light preparatory materials to heavy briefing
books, and prefers walking through potential questions and answers
with aides to holding mock sessions."
So it doesn't look like Palin will be joining E.J. soon as a
distinguished fellow at the Brookings Institution. But apart from
reminding one of the frequent ridiculing of Ronald Reagan for his
fondness for information distilled onto an index card, one can also
see in her "talent for distilling information into digestible sound
bites" a political skill -- requirement -- that she is obviously
only beginning to hone on a national scale. Had she been a
candidate for president and thus a participant in countless
debates, she'd have the routine down cold.
topics:
Sarah Palin, Books, Alaska