I'll leave it to others to fret over Sarah Palin's
unpreparedness, and instead point out how unprepared Democrats were
for Palin. The most revealing fact is that, when Team Obama listed
nine GOP vice-presidential possibilities as "The Next Cheney," Palin's name
wasn't on the list. The reason Democrats' initial attacks were so
wildly off-target was that the Obama campaign hadn't prepared a
full oppo-research file on Palin.
Michael Barone discusses the Palin
impact in terms of "the OODA loop," aerial strategist John
Boyd's acronym for Observe, Orient, Decide, Act:
The Palin selection -- and her performance at the
convention and on the stump -- seems to be having that effect.
Obama chief strategist David Axelrod admitted of the Palin pick: "I
can honestly say we weren't prepared for that. I mean, her name
wasn't on anybody's list."
The choice of Palin threw Team Obama off-balance for two weeks,
at a key point in the campaign cycle. It deprived them of their
accustomed place in the media spotlight and, by putting them
behind in the polls, contradicted
their narrative of the inevitable triumph of Hope. Instead of the
front-runner soaring to new heights of popularity, Obama now looks
like a fading star -- and perhaps even a victim of what a friend of
mine calls a "Mondalean-Dukakoid meltdown."
How bad is it for Obama? There is now talk that
he's out of the running in Florida.
UPDATE:
Jennifer Rubin surveys the brightened GOP prospects and
cautions:
Republicans should be under no illusion that this is in
the bag. Democrats made that mistake and look where it got
them.
Exactly.
topics:
Sarah Palin