It is hard to over-state how much the Palin pick has taken folk by surprise. The Obama campaign has after an ill-judged initial effort shied away from instantly trying to define her but as the New York Times reports that might be because of a simple lack of information:
Mr. Obama’s advisers said that compared with the mountains of data they had gathered on Mr. Pawlenty and Mr. Romney, they had far less information on Ms. Palin. Their dossier consisted of a thin document based mainly on her run for governor and newspaper clips about an investigation into whether she was involved in pressing a top state law enforcement official to dismiss her sister’s former husband from the state police. And, they said, given her short time in high office, there is relatively little video of her readily available.Aides said the party was sending staff members and allies in Alaska to sort through public documents relating to Ms. Palin’s time in the governor’s mansion, her two terms as mayor of Wasilla, Alaska, and her two terms as a member of the Wasilla City Council.
Democrats were not the only ones doing some fast regrouping.
Republican organizers said the convention aides in charge of reviewing every speech delivered from the lectern are now on the watch for blunt attacks on Mr. Obama’s readiness to lead. They are aware that such criticism in a high-profile setting would provide an opportunity for Democrats to make the same charge against Ms. Palin, who has almost no foreign policy experience and has been governor for just 20 months.
Palin’s presence on the ticket, means that the McCain argument now has to be principally about reform. That is going to require Giuliani, the keynote speaker, and others to give very different speeches from the ones that they were previewing last week in Denver.
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Craig Strachan
August 30th, 2008 8:44pmPalin seems to be on the wrong sie of the grassroots anti-eminent domain movement. Strange positioning for someone who is meant to help the ticket in the West.
TGF UKIP
August 30th, 2008 11:20pmTwo thoughts, James. Firstly if the Democrats didn't do their homework they should have done particularly when Bill Kristol was singing her praises and advocating her as VP pick week in, week out on FNS for the past couple of months. Equally I sincerely hope the McCain campaign has done their homework as well. For some reason the name Ed Muskie has been coursing through my mind ever since SP was announced on Friday afternoon.
Secondly, though, why ever shouldn't the McCain campaign attack Obama on the experience front? Not only can the VP post be portrayed as on the job training but every time the Dems attack SP on experience it will be immediately shot back on Obama whose previous job experience was - Chicago social activist?!
BTW, though, the Republicans are allowing the Democrats to say "inexperienced" too often without replying with interest.
ndm
August 30th, 2008 11:26pmSarah Palin - closet socialist. The Seattle Times reported a few weeks ago:
-- Over the opposition of oil companies, Republican Gov. Sarah Palin and Alaska's Legislature last year approved a major increase in taxes on the oil industry - a step that has generated stunning new wealth for the state as oil prices soared.
-- Alaska collected an estimated $6 billion from the new tax during the fiscal year that ended June 30, according to the Alaska Oil and Gas Association. That helped push the state's total oil revenue - from new and existing taxes, as well as royalties - to more than $10 billion, double the amount received last year.
-- While many other states are confronting big budget deficits because of the troubled economy, Alaska officials are in the enviable position of exploring new ways to spend the state's multibillion-dollar budget surplus.
-- Some of that new cash will end up in the wallets of Alaska's residents.
-- Palin's administration last week gained legislative approval for a special $1,200 payment to every Alaskan to help cope with gas prices, which are among the highest in the country.
-- That check will come on top of the annual dividend of about $2,000 that each resident could receive this year from an oil-wealth savings account.
Joe Camel
August 30th, 2008 11:46pmDo the Republicans really need to scrap their plans to focus their attack on the “readiness to lead” question?
Mark Steyn, a former Spectator columnist, made the point on Friday evening that ‘It can't be in Senator Obama’s interest for the punditocracy to spend its time arguing about whether the Republicans’ vice-presidential pick is “even more” inexperienced than the Democrats’ presidential one.’
We’ll see how it goes this coming week at the Republican convention, but I suspect Steyn has probably got it right. The inexperience argument is still now, as it was before, potentially more damaging to the Obama-Biden campaign than to the Republican side.
Joe Camel
August 31st, 2008 12:04amYet another silly press release from the Democratic Party hacks (ndm at 11:26 p.m., above, and similarly on other talkbacks).
Clearly the Alaskan surprise has got the Obamessiah and his worshippers seriously rattled.
Familiar Clown
August 31st, 2008 12:15pmSeems a great lady Sarah Palin. And if the time should come, no doubt will make a feisty Commander-in-Chief. Just shows, McCain has got better advisers than Obama.
Verity
August 31st, 2008 6:55pmWell, how moronic are Obama's people?
I tipped Sarah Palin three weeks ago, and I am just a little person who follows events.
Verity
August 31st, 2008 7:01pmOf the four candidates in this race, the only one with executive experience is Palin.
As as a governor, she outranks the other three candidates.
Four the past four years, when Obama was sitting in the state senate then the Senate in DC voting "Present", Sarah Palin was being a chief executive.
Hal
August 31st, 2008 8:31pmMcCain's argument had been that the next president needed many years of foreign affairs experience. By choosing Palin, he has tossed that idea overboard; it's a flip-flop. Obama doesn't need to attack her inexperience. He can concentrate on McCain's inconsistency.
If McCain liked the way the campaign was going, he would never have chosen Palin. Her main appeal is to the Christian fundamentalists, and he should have won them over long before now. I suspect Obama is in a stronger position than the polls show, and that McCain's handlers see this. Otherwise, they would have chosen Lieberman, whom McCain actually knows and likes, or Tom Ridge.
Do you Britishers know what a Hail Mary pass is?
THX1138
August 31st, 2008 10:27pmHal-spot on McCain needs the Christian right or why take the risk?
This is the only reason that makes any sense. As I recall Coulter said she would rather vote for Hillary than McCain.
Isn't a hail mary pass a desperate last hoof of the ball in football. Your're football not ours.
Hal
September 1st, 2008 1:56amTHX, yes, a Hail Mary is a very long pass attempt, made when your team is behind and the clock is about to run out. Sometimes it works, but usually not. And it's a play that makes sense only if you're trailing.