I
resisted writing anything about Sarah Palin in much the same way
that I resisted accepting that Palin is charismatic. On the evening
of her debut at the Republican National Convention I was repulsed
by her arrogance and mean-spiritedness. This temporarily blinded
me to the fact that Palin is, in fact, a charismatic political leader,
and a dangerous one at that.
I
resisted admitting that Palin is charismatic in part because she
actually has nothing to say. Clearly she runs her mouth, and just
as clearly she has found words to offer that touch on a particular
sort of anger that exists among many white people. Yet when you
listen to her, there is no there, there. There is little substance.
One does not pay attention to Palin to uncover the point of view
of the political Right on Darfur, trade, or
most matters of substance. That is not Palin�s role. She will address
certain issues of the day, e.g., healthcare, but with nothing approaching
a substantive analysis. Rather her approach can be found in sound-bites;
actually demagogic sound-bites.
I
resisted admitting that Palin is charismatic in part because she
is something of a female Ronald Reagan. The Nicaraguan Sandinistas
put it well, in the 1980s, when they were describing Reagan: they
said that he was the political analogy to Colonel Sanders, an image
behind which exist other players who were pulling the strings. The
difference with Palin is that it is not entirely clear that there
are others pulling the strings, though there is a powerful image.
She seems to relish the lime-light and the articulation of right-wing
platitudes. The other difference is that there is a mean-spiritedness
in Palin that did not come across in the grandfatherly Reagan, despite
his policies. In Palin one can see, just on the other side of her
photogenic smile, the look of vengeance.
Yet
Palin is quite charismatic. And the irony is that in many ways she
represents much of what the political Right claims not to value.
Take, for instance, the fact that she resigned from the governorship
of Alaska allegedly because
she was being criticized by the press. Can you imagine what the
reaction would be if President Obama were to step down due to the
criticisms that he has received, not to mention the implied threats
on his life from the political Right? He would be laughed and booed
to another country. It would be inconceivable. The Right would lambaste
him as a �quitter,� and a weakling.
Palin was able to resign. She had not even completed one term and
she was able to step down allegedly due to harsh and unfair criticism.
She then went on to write a book, and start stomping for 2012. All
this, and not a word from the Right, and not too much from liberals
either. Would you want a political leader who stepped down due to
harsh criticism?
Palin,
probably more than any recent woman politician, tactically uses
flirtation with her audiences and in her approach to the public.
I was stunned, for
instance, during her Republican National Convention speech, by her
�cutesy� approach to the enthralled delegates. I sat there thinking
that if Hillary Clinton had taken even a quarter of Palin�s approach,
the political Right would have been on the warpath, suggesting that
she was inappropriate and manipulative.
None
of this matters, however, to Palin�s base. That is what has finally
struck me. It does not matter that she is a quitter; it does not
matter that she integrates sex appeal and her political appeal;
it does not matter that she has little of substance to say. None
of this matters because Palin is the Col. Sanders for an important
segment of the political Right. She is an image, and with that image
the political Right associates important and potent messages.
Palin is youthful and attractive, and was not born with a silver
spoon in her mouth. She has a child born with disabilities. She
seems to have led a life much like many white suburban women.
She
is also shameless in her ignorance and has elevated that to nearly
a principle. She does not feel that she has to articulate anything
significant because her base wants her to make them feel good. They
want her to make them feel good while their world is falling apart.
They want to hear Palin target the media, who few people trust,
but also to offer coded attacks on Obama that suggest that he is
not truly �American� (interpret that any way that you might want
to, is the subtext) and that �America� must be rescued from him.
Her claim of affinity with Hillary Clinton is not only a not-so-subtle
attempt at divide and conquer, but is more a message about what
she thinks - or wants people to think - that WHITE women have in
common, in contrast to what divides the so-called Real USA from
the USA represented by President Obama.
Progressives
do not have to be impressed with Palin, but she must be taken seriously
in much the same way that Reagan could not be laughed off. The image
for the political Right is just as important as is the reality.
They are prepared to rally behind an image that gives vent to their
anger, whether the anger of the unemployed white worker; the white
small businessperson suffering as sales drop; the homophobic political
activist; the paranoid xenophobe. The anger is not one unified anger,
and much of it is the result of the decay in a US capitalism that can no longer promote the so-called
�American Dream� to white people.
None
of that matters: Palin is able to personify it all�while she also
finds time to pose for a picture in a sports magazine that just
so happened to end up on the cover of Newsweek.
BlackCommentator.com
Executive Editor, Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar with the
Institute for Policy Studies,
the immediate past president of
TransAfrica Forum
and co-author of, Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path
toward Social Justice (University of California Press),
which examines the crisis of organized labor in the USA. Click here
to contact Mr. Fletcher. |