By Charlotte Allen
Writing for the NY Times.
She also writes for the Manhattan
Institute and the Weekly Standard.
November 18, 2012
The Republican Party has been doing a lot of
hand-wringing and finger-pointing since the presidential election. Half the
conservative columnists and bloggers say the GOP lost because it overemphasized
social issues such as abortion and gay marriage. The other half says the party
didn't emphasize them enough. And everyone denounces Project ORCA, the
campaign's attempt to turn out voters via technology.
But I've got a suggestion for cutting short the GOP angst:Sarah Palin for president in 2016.
You think I'm joking? Think again.
In 2008, Palin, running as my party's vice presidential
candidate, was widely supposed to have cost John McCain the election. But that wasn't so. A
national exit poll conducted by CNN asked voters whether Palin was a factor in
their voting. Of those who said yes, 56% voted for McCain versus 43% for Barack Obama. . . . . . . .
Palin can more than keep up with the Democrats in appealing
to voters' emotions. Hardly anyone could be more blue collar than Palin, out on
the fishing boat with her hunky blue-collar husband, Todd. Palin is
"View"-ready, she's "Ellen"-ready, she's
Kelly-and-Michael-ready.
A Palin "war against women"? Hah! Not only is she
a woman, she's got a single-mom daughter, Bristol, to help with the swelling
single-mom demographic. On social issues, Palin, unlike Romney, has been
absolutely consistent. And let's remember that most Americans, whatever their
view of choice, disapprove of most abortions.
Gay marriage? Palin opposes it. But she is also a strong
advocate of states' rights, and I'm betting she'd be fine with letting states
and their voters grapple with the issue on their own. Remember that all of
America didn't swing toward approval of gay marriage on Nov. 6. Three reliably
blue states and their voters did. If she were smart, Palin would recruit a
member of her impressive gay fanboy base — yes, she has one — to help run her
campaign. I nominate Kevin DuJan of the widely read gay conservative blog
HillBuzz, a Palin stalwart since 2008.
Palin's son Track is an Iraq war veteran, so she can be proudly
patriotic without being labeled another George W. Bush, looking to do
aggressive nation-building. She seems aware there is only one nation in need of
building right now: America.
Furthermore, looks count in politics, and Palin at age 48,
has it all over her possible competition, including Hillary Rodham Clinton, who will be 69 by election
day 2016 and who let someone talk her into adopting the flowing blond locks of
a college student, making her look like Brunnhilde in a small-town Wagner
production. Men love Sarah Palin, and she loves men.
She's tough as nails too. After Election 2008, she was
supposed to have been through. This year eight of the 14 GOP candidates Palin
endorsed for Congress won election or reelection, including tea party favorite Ted Cruz for a Senate
seat in Texas.
Sure, there is going to be never-ending nastiness from the
left, but she's already lived through that once. Katie Couric? A has-been. Tina Fey? Her shtick was already wearing thin in 2008.
There are also the snooty East Coast Republican intellectual
types, such as Peggy Noonan, who look down their noses at a woman who doesn't
shop at Neiman Marcus and didn't attend an Ivy League
university. But Peggy made a fool of herself calling the election for Romney on
Nov. 5. Who's going to care what she and her ilk have to say next time?
Some Republicans will say Palin has too much baggage from
2008, and we need to look for a new Sarah Palin. But I don't see what's wrong
with the one we've got. Ever since the 1990s, Republicans have been looking for
the next Ronald Reagan. Reagan is now revered in bipartisan
circles, but during his presidency he was, like Palin, ridiculed by liberals.
They cited "Bedtime for Bonzo" and sneered at his no-name college
degree.
Sarah Palin is the new Ronald Reagan: charming and affable
and unwilling to back down if she's right. I can't see what's wrong with that.
Charlotte Allen writes frequently about feminism, politics
and religion.
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