Tuesday :: Sep 2, 2008

Where Have We Heard This Before?


by Steve Soto

It appears that Sarah Palin will do whatever it takes to get to the next highest office, even if it means recasting herself as a reformer to help hide extremist beliefs, like the Iraq war and the natural gas pipeline she wanted were God's will.

In fact, Ed Kalnins is Sarah Palin's Jeremiah Wright.


But in the first major race of her career — the 1996 campaign for mayor of her hometown, Wasilla — Palin was a far more conventional politician. In fact, according to some who were involved in that fight, Palin was a highly polarizing political figure who brought partisan politics and hot-button social issues like abortion and gun control into a mayoral race that had traditionally been contested like a friendly intramural contest among neighbors.

[snip]
(Former mayor John) Stein says that as mayor, Palin continued to inject religious beliefs into her policy at times. "She asked the library how she could go about banning books," he says, because some voters thought they had inappropriate language in them. "The librarian was aghast." That woman, Mary Ellen Baker, couldn't be reached for comment, but news reports from the time show that Palin had threatened to fire Baker for not giving "full support" to the mayor.

Yet as George W. Bush showed us in 2000, you can't win at a higher level unless you hide your extremism behind a phony, timely facade:

By the time Sarah Palin was entering state politics, the hottest issue in Alaska wasn't gay marriage or even abortion. It was corruption and cronyism. Andrew Halcro, a noted Palin critic who ran against her as an independent in the governor's race, says she knew instinctively that the issues were changing. Plus, he says, her opponents, such as incumbent governor Frank Murkowski, whom she defeated in the primary, were just as hard-right on abortion and guns as she was.
She needed a new political identity to make it to the next level, so ethics reform became her calling card. "She's a very savvy politician," says Halcro. "So wedge issues were not part of the portfolio."
"If anything," he says, "she got tired of answering questions about them." Halcro recalls one debate in October 2006 in which, after repeated questions about her opposition to abortion even in cases of rape or incest, she looked at the moderator with exasperation and asked if they were going to talk about anything besides abortion. It was detracting from her new message: cleaning up the capitol.

Sarah Palin is Karl Rove's 2008 "compassionate conservative."

Steve Soto :: 12:05 PM :: Comments (8) :: Spotlight :: Digg It!