Palin Delusion at the Weekly Standard

| Thu Dec. 11, 2008 7:47 AM PST

The conservative magazine The Weekly Standard let the founder of a Sarah Palin advocacy group called "Team Sarah" write an article about the state of Palin's image in America, which is an awful lot like commissioning the head of GM to write an unbiased evaluation of the auto industry bailout. And in a real shock, the Standard writer concludes Palin's "popularity is undimmed." In fact, she compares Palin to Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton.

Despite the best efforts of the media, left-of-center feminists, and a brigade of political elites, including more than a few Beltway Republicans, to write obituaries for Palin's national political career, she continues to be the second biggest phenomenon of the 2008 election cycle, behind only the president-elect....
Some of the most eloquent [Palin supporters] are women ecstatic over the new brand of feminism Palin represents: populist and pro-life. There is no other woman on the national political stage like her--and hasn't been in recent times. To whom could she be compared--Geraldine Ferraro, Hillary Clinton, Barbara Boxer, Dianne Feinstein? She doesn't begin to fit this cookie-cutter model of pro-choice, pro-gender-quota woman in politics that left-feminism has served up.
But Palin has forebears in American politics. She looks a lot more like the early suffragists than anyone on the national stage now, especially in her pro-life stance. Susan B. Anthony, for whom my organization is named, for instance, called abortion "child murder." Elizabeth Cady Stanton called it a sickening symptom of women's mistreatment: "When we consider that women are treated as property, it is degrading to women to treat our children as property to be disposed of as we see fit."

(The writer also notes that part of Palin's appeal is that "she likes being a woman." This is an important point because, as you know, all female feminists on the left hate themselves.)

Of course, this is the sort of article you would get from an admitted Palin supporter whose only reporting appears to have been talking to or observing other Palin supporters. It gets the state of Palin's national popularity exactly wrong. It is not "undimmed." A new NBC/Wall Street Journal poll shows that while Palin is popular among this country's diminishing set of self-identifying Republicans (73%-13% approval vs. disapproval rating), Palin's overall popularity rating is a net negative, 35%-45%. You know what that means? Palin's popularity is in fact very, very dimmed among Democrats and independents.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Get Mother Jones by Email - Free. Like what you're reading? Get the best of MoJo three times a week.

Comments

The strongest similarity between Palin and Susan B. Anthony is that Palin is about as smart as a silver dollar.

That's an insult to silver dollars.

"especially in her pro-life stance"

This is all that really matters at all. And it's no pro-life, it is only anti-abortion. That's it. It is as if people who are pro-choice think abortion is great or something. What swill. I am schocked at the degree to which so many conservatives are trying to redact the record on her and Bush's equality of ineptitude. They are both cut from the same anti-intellectual evangelical cloth and it is pathetic how so many are trying to spruce up the shattered image of that cohort of conservatives in the face of abject failure. Call it ideological socialism if you will.

I think Mark Twain said "There are three kinds of falsehoods; Lies. Damned lies. And statistics."
(Well, that's the gist of it anyway.) Certainly polls prove that over and over again. I agree that LaPalin's ideologies are damned dangerous, Drew...however "cute" the packaging!

Palin was the last straw for me as a Republican. To put the election in perspective, if you'll let me print it, kind of.....

The repubs ran

McBush and McB...h

To hell with them, esp palin's ridiculous church of hate, greed, and guilt and victimization in God's name. Whose views appear to be str8 out of medieval superstition.

Post new comment

Alternately, you may login to or register an account
The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <ul> <ol> <li> <blockquote>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

MoJo Comments: Send Us Your Feedback

We changed our spam software to better filter comments. Should you encounter any issues, please let us know.

Photo Essays

The chaos and humanity of war.
The craftspeople and musicians of Appalachia.
A selection of '70s ads depicting African-Americans.
As climate change melts the permafrost, native villages slip into the sea, taking a way of life with them.