[identity profile] telemann.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] talkpolitics



In an Op-Ed piece for Politico, Joe Scarborough thinks the GOP should "man-up" and take Sarah Palin down a peg. "Republicans have a problem," Scarborough writes at Politico. "The most-talked-about figure in the GOP is a reality show star who cannot be elected." To make matters worse, Scarborough prods, Palin does all of this while demeaning the legacy of GOP standard-bearers that many hold dear, people such as former presidents Reagan, whom she casually downplayed as "an actor," as well as George H.W. and Barbara Bush, whom she deemed "blue bloods." In a particularly caustic passage, Scarborough seeks to draw a comparison between the legacies of H.W. Bush and Palin:

"I suppose Palin's harsh dismissal of this great man is more understandable after one reads her biography and realizes that, like Bush, she accomplished a great deal in her early 20s. Who wouldn't agree that finishing third in the Miss Alaska beauty contest is every bit as treacherous as risking your life in military combat? Maybe the beauty contestant who would one day be a reality star and former governor didn't win the Distinguished Flying Cross, but the half-termer was selected as Miss Congeniality by her fellow contestants." Source.


Ouch. Sarah Palin's seriousness was questioned as recently in October by none other than Karl Rove, who suggested that a presidential candidate who appeared in a reality television show wouldn't have much gravitas. Peggy Noonan, Ronald Reagan's speechwriter fired off a few choice words to Palin, calling her a "nincompoop." While many defend St. Palin, suggesting it's the mean ole poopy-pant liberal media that has it "out" for her, there are plenty within the Republican party that also think Sarah is a lot of hot air.

Joe Scarborough's editorial.

(no subject)

Date: 1/12/10 10:16 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thedinglestarry.livejournal.com
Well yes, but the question is whether Frum / Scarborough etc are actually moving towards the left, or whether the GOP is moving further to the right. I mean how is Scarborough actually moving away from the right by criticising Palin?

(no subject)

Date: 1/12/10 12:31 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] badlydrawnjeff.livejournal.com
The GOP itself spent significant time moving to the left over the last 10 years prior to Obama's election, to the point where they elected a center-right President twice and then put someone even further left than him on the nomination stage in 2008. Even with that leftward movement, it still wasn't enough for the Frums and Scarboroughs of the world.

The party moves right again, we see the biggest victories in history in the House.

This isn't a coincedence.

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