

Sarah Palin Is Not The New Nixon
July 3, 2009 by Jonathan Movroydis | Filed Under Nixon in the News, Richard Nixon, Sarah Palin
So Alaska Governor Sarah Palin has decided to step down before the end of her first term freeing her from the constraints of local politics. This is a possible signal she will use her free time to travel the country, effectively running for president 3 years early. TNN’s own John Taylor wrote an article shortly after the election and suggested some advice on her longterm campaign strategy for 2016. Rev. Taylor advised her to go back to work and take some time off the national stage in order to gain experience and gain “a little scarce and mysterious” credibility.
But Rev. Taylor also said that Gov. Palin should take the time to read up on international issues, meet with world leaders, and like RN become a loyal campaigner for GOP candidates in the midterm elections. Perhaps this is the route she’s going, but maybe just a tad too early for RN’s tastes:
RN would begin with the assumption that Obama will probably not fail. An incumbent is likely to be reelected, and Obama will probably not make Carter’s mistakes. Because circumstances may nonetheless hobble him, however, Mr. Nixon would advise Palin to keep her ‘12 options open, but he’d urge her to fix her attention on ‘16.
As for the present Palin, he would have enormous respect for the potential she embodies. She has an astonishing reservoir of political capital. But he would have some significant concerns. And so he would almost certainly write her a “Dear Governor Palin” letter beginning, “I am sure you are receiving a great deal of free advice from well-meaning fans and self-appointed advisers around the country. While you are of course under no obligation to give it any consideration whatsoever, I have taken the liberty of enclosing a memorandum containing just a few…” In such circumstances, his insights were usually based in the reliability of his own experience. He would make points such as this:
Take some time off the national stage. The temptation will be to accept too many of the invitations that are flowing in and to go out and challenge her critics. We’ve probably seen too much of her already just this week. Better to be a little scarce and mysterious. As RN liked to say, it never hurts to leave them wanting more.
Get back to work. Her critics say she’s a lightweight fashion plate. Confound them by being an effective governor (or senator).
See the world and meet leaders. RN would consider this crucial — first, because she’s justifiably seen as weak in foreign policy, and second, because it would help her prepare to be in power.
Do favors. Some of RN’s most important political work was done in 1964, when he campaigned loyally for the hopeless Goldwater candidacy, and in the midterm elections of 1966, doing favors that were repaid in 1968. In 2012, assuming she doesn’t run, Palin should be the most loyal and committed advocate of whomever does. Purely in terms of her own political interests, the worst than could happen is that he would win and she’d have her pick of jobs.
Don’t let your enemies define you. Palin provoked panic among abortion rights advocates. The weekend after she was named to the ticket, Andrew Sullivan republished a lie about her son Trig’s parentage on his Atlantic Monthly-owned web site that obviously still rankles. Yet Palin would close herself off from growth as a leader by taking it personally. If some people despise her because of her pro-life views, what might she learn from their passion? Some women experience the possibility of restrictions on abortion as an existential challenge. She is comfortable seeing the issue almost solely in terms of the rights of the unborn. What about the rights of the half of the population that wasn’t permitted to vote until 1920? Hillary Clinton did herself a tremendous favor three years ago with a speech in which she spoke respectfully of those who hate abortion. Palin should consider making an analogous gesture, both on the abortion and the gay rights front.
Read and think. At least from afar, Palin doesn’t seem curious or self-critical. Confidence is good in a leader; smugness is not. Mr. Nixon read hungrily all his life and spent long hours in Socratic dialogs with experts, advisers, and aides. While his core principles didn’t waiver, his approach to great issues changed with the times. The anti-communist of the 1940s became the internationalist of the 1950s, the course-changing peacemaker of the 1960s and ’70s, and the elder statesman of the ’80s, respected by all his Democratic and Republican successors in spite of the circumstances of his administration’s end.
As Palin matures as a potential national leader, her views will, one hopes, become more moderate and nuanced. Her New Reagan advisers will caution her against permitting this to happen. Lost in the fantasy that Reagan’s conservative bona fides (rather than the “R” after his name) won him the ‘80 election, they’ll urge her not to tamper with the time-tested Palin brand. But if she thinks she’s fully formed and ready to be President, she’ll never make it. She’ll fade away prematurely or, at best, squander her potential on a quixotic ‘12 bid that would probably relegate her to oblivion and her party to another generation in the wilderness. If she uses the next eight years wisely, focused more on substance than on politics, she could truly be the new Nixon, and a winner.
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I am sure that walking out on her supporters in Alaska will win her no style points. In fact, it will turn into a perhaps fatal political liability. She will never live this down. Palin in effect quit before the job was done. It is a challenging time for all America. This leader ran.
I thought that her comment about being a lame duck was well…interesting. Arnie is a lame duck in California. Did he quit and say: well it’s time to do another movie. People elect their Governors and other elected officials to complete their terms..
What an interesting time to quit…when the latest edition of Vanity Fair is out. More bad press for Sarah. I guess she couldn’t take the heat… Well, at least she will have plenty of time for her runs and her prayer.
May the journey to political oblivion be as beautiful and as scenic as the great state of Alaska.
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Our the website is in danger of crashing due to the flood of readers and supporters signing up to show their interest in a Palin Candidacy. The GOP establishment had better watch out, Sarah Palin and Ron Paul combined with the power of the internet will remove the stranglehold of GOP special interests and the elites who have brought the party to its knees in defeat in the 2008 elections.
Interesting MacArthur quote. But as usual, Sarah missed it. One of MacArthur’s generals in Korea said it: Major General Oliver Prince Smith. Of course, Sarah probably thinks it’s close enough.