Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Ride The Moose

Nate Silver believes Sarah Palin will run in 2012, and has 3-1 odds of pulling off the nomination. Why?  Nothing to lose at this point.
Another motivator for Palin to run is that her opportunity cost is not very high. Having quit her governorship and apparently declining to challenge Lisa Murkowski for her Senate seat, Palin's next opportunity to run for some sort of high-stature elected office wouldn't come until 2014, when Mark Begich's seat is up in the Senate. Is Palin, who already has a reputation as a quitter, likely to run for that seat, only to have to quit again if she wants to run for the Presidency in 2016? Not hardly.

Until she runs for office again, rather, Palin's role is basically that of a celebrity on her own behalf, and a rabble-rouser on behalf of the GOP. Although each of those things can occupy a goodly amount of one’s time, the media is likely to tire of Palin if she’s not actually making news, and Palin herself may grow tired of not being the center of attention. Moreover, there’s not any evidence that laying low seems to help Palin’s standing with the public; on the contrary, her numbers seemed to have have declined a lot during the past several months, a period during which (until recently) she was not making much news.

The reason I suspect this may be the case is because Palin’s popularity seems to stem not from any particular attributes that she possesses as a candidate, but rather from the reactions that she seems to induce from other people. Only by being in the spotlight can Palin induce liberal pundits to say rude things about her, fellow candidates to behave awkwardly around her, etc. Only in this way can she be the martyr and the underdog, qualities that conceal some of her potential inadequacies. Oddly, the more attention Palin gets, the more of a Rorschach blot she becomes -- which is good for a candidate who most people don't think is qualified to be President on her own merits.
So she can snipe from Facebook all she wants to, doesn't have to defend budget cuts from the governor's office, and can pretty much say whatever she wants to keep gaining the spotlight.  In a very real sense, she's the perfect candidate for the 2012 race.  Sarah Palin's not running for president, the perception of Sarah Palin is running for president.

Besides, it's not like the GOP has anyone better right now.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

president palin.

you betcha.

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