Palin resigning as Alaska governor

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WASILLA, Alaska — Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin says she is resigning from office.

She didn’t say why she decided to step down, but the surprise announcement stirred speculation that she would focus on a bid for the 2012 Republican nomination for president.

The former Republican vice presidential candidate made the announcement from her home in suburban Wasilla on Friday morning. She said she would step down July 26.

Spokesman Dave Murrow says Lt. Gov. Sean Parnell will be inaugurated at the governor’s picnic in Fairbanks at the end of the month.

Palin was first elected in 2006 on a populist platform. But her popularity has waned as she waged in partisan politics following her return from the presidential campaign.

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Flag Comment Posted by Rockit on July 10, 2009 at 12:15 pm

Palin resigning makes sense if she feels she needs this extra time to rehabilitate her image.  The problem for the Republican Party is two fold.  1) There’s no other Republican out there, other than Palin, who is even trying to garner support from the traditional base of the Republican Party - fiscal and social conservatives.
2) What none of my conservative friends seem to want to admit is that when it comes to publicity, Governor Palin is her own worst enemy.  The mainstream media was tougher on her last year than Obama, but, for the most part she did bring it on herself.

As to this article by Ben Voth, I’m not so sure I’d compare Douglas McArthur’s legacy with Sarah Palin.  Remember, once all the facts came out, the Congress and the country generally supported Truman’s decision to fire him.  In fact, he’s lucky he wasn’t court martialled and some of us believe he should have been.  Does Voth really want Palin in this historic company?

Flag Comment Posted by samsacres on July 10, 2009 at 10:35 am

eeltee - what’s your point?  Voth is from a conservative faction.  should i look up one from a leftist website and post that for you?  it doesn’t prove anything.  she is reading and falling into the “poor sarah palin is a victim” way.  sp put herself and family into the spotlight, paraded them as part of her campaign of “look at me…vote for me”.  brought the “mainstream” media into her house.  your sexist comment that obama wouldn’t look half as good in a skirt is clearly the way people feel about palin.  i don’t feel sorry for her, she wasn’t up to keeping her promise to the alaskans that voted for her…and she is definitely NOT up to running this country.  what happens if one day she decides running this country to too much for her?  she put these questions into people’s minds by her actions…then has to “play the victim” for people to feel sorry for her.

Flag Comment Posted by Eeltee on July 10, 2009 at 10:20 am

From The Bob & Tom Show . . . . . . “OBAMA MAN”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zhhkF3dqXR0&feature=player_embedded

Flag Comment Posted by Eeltee on July 10, 2009 at 10:18 am

Hating Palin
By Ben Voth


As a communication professional I have largely been at a loss to explain the judgments being drawn about Governor Palin by allegedly expert pundits.  The general meme from pundits is that Palin is a quitter who cannot take the heat.

It seems like the ‘heat’ has been more like hate—maybe we are dealing with a simple spelling error?  Journalism has gotten rather weak of late.

A public figure openly called for Palin to be raped during the campaign.  Months after the losing campaign was over, a major comedian joked about the fictitious rape of one of her daughters.  Immediately after the election, her church was burned.  It’s fairly difficult to reconcile this ‘heat’ as something conventional in politics.  In fact, there might be some good reason to collectively indict Palin critics for their silent complicity.

This would go a long way to explain why many in the public seem more drawn to Palin after the resignation and the absurd media reactions to it.  Keep in mind that these incidents remain unrepented public attacks.  The media refused to offer much comment on the burning of Palin’s church—a silence which conveyed an implied endorsement of that attack.  Imagine if Obama had lost the election and Jeremiah Wright’s church had been burned.  Where would the punditry be?

Given the peculiar failure of pundits to “understand” her July 3 statement, it is useful to return to the actual text of her statement.  With such attention we can discover some of the possible confusion of pundits and reveal the largely ignored messages contained in Governor Palin’s statement.  Most interesting is the discussion about her children:

“In fact, this decision comes after much consideration, and finally polling the most important people in my life—my children (where the count was unanimous… well, in response to asking: ‘Want me to make a positive difference and fight for ALL our children’s future from OUTSIDE the Governor’s office?‘ It was four “yes’s” and one “he11 yeah!“ The “he11 yeah” sealed it - and someday I’ll talk about the details of that… I think much of it had to do with the kids seeing their baby brother Trig mocked by some pretty mean-spirited adults recently.) Um, by the way, sure wish folks could ever, ever understand that we ALL could learn so much from someone like Trig—I know he needs me, but I need him even more… what a child can offer to set priorities RIGHT—that time is precious… the world needs more ‘Trigs’, not fewer.“

The mocking of a disabled child, Trig Palin, must stand out as one of the most uniquely cruel and despicable contemporary trends of American politics.  Could this be what Bill Clinton envisioned when he asked the nation to bring to an end the politics of personal destruction in the 1990s?  It is clear that the entire Palin family would like to broaden their advocacy beyond the borders of Alaska.  What is also clear is that pulsing at the center of Media contempt toward Palin is not simply stated positions on abortion but real life actions that are so striking and meaningful that they enrage a pretentious political community feigning interest in “women’s rights.“

Palin was one of the rare political figures recently courageous enough to defend Carrie Prejean—another conservative woman who “needed” to lose her job for speaking her mind on gay marriage.  While Republicans stood around and stared at their political feet, and Democrats cheered from the sideline, Prejean was treated to a vicious rhetorical stoning in the national media.  Palin stepped into the fray and in defense of another strong conservative woman.  It is rather easy to see how Palin envisions trading her provincial limits of Alaska for a national pedestal on such transparent political problems confounding our culture.

Palin’s conclusion utilized a quotation from Douglas MacArthur—an American general famously dismissed by Democrat President Harry Truman.  Truman’s dismissal of MacArthur and the ensuing public controversy did great damage to Truman’s public credibility. Despite his rogue disposition, MacArthur continued through his rebuttals to secure a place in history as a tough fighter on the military battlefield as well as the political battlefield.  Here again pundits seem to miss the rhetorical boat about the larger fight Palin will bring in the next campaign after an apparent “defeat in the Philippines” of 2008.

Consider further the unique context of current events.  Michael Jackson is revered at his funeral as someone who really knew how to love children—unlike Sarah Palin who the Huffington Post reported would be running on the “more retardation platform” in 2012. Governor Sanford gets a slap on the wrist from his Republican colleagues and pundits agree—he should not expect to resign.  Could life be more absurd?

Punditry confusion over Palin’s decision and statement is a strategy to absolve critics of their low moral stature in observing the despicable cultural conduct toward Governor Palin and her family.  After all, America’s political punditry does have an informal role as referee.  Some partisans were not unafraid to suggest that Palin had crossed the line when she accused Obama of “palling around with terrorists.“  It was in their view inappropriate and excessive.  The failure to fairly call the playing field of American politics has rightly left the American public observing an obscene scene of political mayhem.  The scene clearly disgusts and offends the public across the political spectrum.  According to the current commentators, all of the events since August 2008 are some sort of confused nightmare from which we in the electorate can now awaken and come to our senses.  Nothing really happened since there was not a “real” candidate in Governor Palin.  For some in the politically elite class, such absurd rationalizations will work, but for a sizable component of the public who saw in Palin their own cultural and political fortunes, these comments will serve as further fuel for their partisan fires.

I suspect that many journalists watching their market shares evaporate and their shareholders sell, are aware that the American public is not sad to witness their collective demise.  The stony silence among the media class about the hateful vitriol dispensed upon Governor Palin and her family has not gone unnoticed in the public.  Whatever the future of Governor Palin, it’s a safe bet that her political career will last longer than a great many pundits who make themselves complicit in this disgraceful conduct of American politics and culture.

Ben Voth is Associate professor of Communication, Southern Methodist University


Page Printed from: http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/07/hating_palin.html at July 09, 2009 - 06:47:45 AM EDT

Flag Comment Posted by Eeltee on July 10, 2009 at 10:02 am

Wade, maybe the problem was on the end of narrow minded, guilty concience filled people reading what they want into the posts here

Flag Comment Posted by whatishappening on July 10, 2009 at 8:09 am

Wow. What a hot topic. We have a whole gambit of individualistic opinions here. Shocking.

Why don’t we all take a good hard look at our own actions and inactions instead of placing blame? Last time I checked, this “...new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal” was supposed to be based on principles that “government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth”.

I don’t think that it mentioned a predominance of color or intelligence.

The problem is not about color or intelligence. The problem is complete personal interpretation by individuals of the issues at hand who fail to be unbiased.

Our society today is bored and has nothing more to do than argue and compete with one another. What we should be doing is coming together and creating solutions.

See: Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, November 19, 1863.

Flag Comment Posted by Rockit on July 09, 2009 at 10:30 am

I agree 1000% with love2read about the racial thing.  When I moved back to this area in the late 90’s, the first thing I noticed was how racist this town is.  Every issue around here eventually gets to a black and white controversy.  I’m not saying other cities don’t have racial incidents.  But, far and away, Danville is the worst I’ve ever seen - not even a close call.

Flag Comment Posted by wadesco1 on July 09, 2009 at 9:46 am

love2read You’ve made some very good points.

Flag Comment Posted by love2read on July 08, 2009 at 10:32 pm

With 51 percent of white America voting for Obama I will not listen to the redneck nonsense comments on here—I will try and keep in mind the area in which I live—I have lived in other areas of the country and it is so amazing how different things are—no comments were made when a black person was with a white person—I was shocked—now I see I was a product of upbringing—and so many around Danville will criticize what our President does but I truly believe HE COULD DO NO RIGHT as far as they are concerned—cure Cancer, bring world peace, NOT GOOD enough!!
and as for this Palin—she embarasses me as a white woman that is married to a white man that has voted Replubican and Democrat in the past—She seems like an airhead that was used by
John McCain to try and get Clinton Votes—backfired for sure—agree or not this is my opinion—

Flag Comment Posted by wadesco1 on July 08, 2009 at 6:25 am

Eeltee.  “Get your facts straight, if that is possible” and ...“sounds like a guilty conscience”.  If “Lady” and I misunderstood you maybe the problem was on your end. There is a widely held notion that if there is miscommunication,the person doing the talking is responsible for making the point clear and concise.  Maybe you should have taken a bit more time to make it plain. I made a mistake then, I believed that since you responded directly after me,  and ref the preacher you were talking to me.

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