>As I said in another thread, this nomination speaks again to the GOP's
>lack of respect for women. They are assuming that Hillary's supporters
>will cut and run to *anyone* as long as there's a woman to vote for.
>Positions on issues apparently have nothing to do with it.
>
>So they put up an Evangelical Xtian, who is anti-choice, anti-gay
>marriage, pro-ANWAR drilling. And that somehow is supposed to be an
>alternative to Hillary?
>
>larf.

http://hotair.com/archives/2008/08/29/what-palin-does-for-mccain-and-to-obama/

First, though, let’s assess the risk.  Palin has served less than two years 
as Governor of Alaska, which tends to eat into the experience message on which 
McCain has relied thus far.  At 44, she’s younger than Barack Obama by three 
years.  She has served as a mayor and as the Ethics Commissioner on the state 
board regulating oil and natural gas, for a total of eight years political 
experience before her election as governor.  That’s also less than Obama has, 
with seven years in the Illinois legislature and three in the US Senate.
However, the nature of the experience couldn’t be more different.  Palin 
spent her entire political career crusading against the political machine that 
rules Alaska — which exists in her own Republican party.  She blew the 
whistle on the state GOP chair, who had abused his power on the same commission 
to conduct party business.  Obama, in contrast, talked a great deal about 
reform in Chicago but never challenged the party machine, preferring to take an 
easy ride as a protegé of Richard Daley instead.
Palin has no formal foreign-policy experience, which puts her at a disadvantage 
to Joe Biden.  However, in nineteen months as governor, she certainly has had 
more practical experience in diplomacy than Biden or Obama have ever seen.  She 
runs the only American state bordered only by two foreign countries, one of 
which has increasingly grown hostile to the US again, Russia.
And let’s face it — Team Obama can hardly attack Palin for a lack of 
foreign-policy experience.  Obama has none at all, and neither Obama or Biden 
have any executive experience.  Palin has almost over seven years of executive 
experience.
Politically, this puts Obama in a very tough position.  The Democrats had 
prepared to launch a full assault on McCain’s running mate, but having Palin 
as a target creates one large headache.  If they go after her like they went 
after Hillary Clinton, Obama risks alienating women all over again.  If they 
don’t go after her like they went after Hillary, he risks alienating Hillary 
supporters, who will see this as a sign of disrespect for Hillary.
For McCain, this gives him a boost like no other in several different ways.  
First, the media will eat this up.  That effectively buries Obama’s 
acceptance speech and steals the oxygen he needs for a long-term convention 
bump.  A Romney or Pawlenty pick would not have accomplished that.
Second, Palin will re-energize the base.  She’s not just a pro-life advocate, 
she’s lived the issue herself.  That will attract the elements of the GOP 
that had held McCain at a distance since the primaries and provide positive 
motivation for Republicans, rather than just rely on anti-Democrat sentiment to 
get them to the polls.
Third, and I think maybe most importantly, Palin addresses the energy issue 
better and more attuned to the American electorate than maybe any of the other 
three principals in this election.  Even beyond her efforts to reform the Oil 
and Natural Gas Commission, she has demonstrated her independence from 
so-called “Big Oil” while promoting domestic production.  She brings 
instant credibility to the ticket on energy policy, and reminds independents 
and centrists that the Obama-Biden ticket offers nothing but the same excuses 
we’ve heard for 30 years.
Finally, based on all of the above, McCain can remind voters who has the real 
record of reform.  Obama talks a lot about it but has no actual record of 
reform, and for a running mate, he chose a 35-year Washington insider with all 
sorts of connections to lobbyists and pork.  McCain has fought pork, taken real 
political risks to fight undue influence of lobbyists, and he picked an 
outsider who took on her own party — and won.
This is change you can believe in, and not change that amounts to all talk.  
McCain changed the trajectory of the race today by stealing Obama’s strength 
and turning it against him.  Obama provided that opening by picking Biden as 
his running mate, and McCain was smart enough to take advantage of the opening.




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