Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Sarah Palin & the Right-Wing Industrial Complex

Sarah Palin shocked the political world last week when she announced that she would step down as governor of Alaska at the end of July.

Speculation remains about Why. But one very real possibility is that Palin simply couldn't reconcile the two wings of the conservative movement.

I don't mean the Right and Center of the party.

I mean the policy wing -- the group of Republicans who actually engage in the business of government -- and the Right-Wing Industrial Complex.

The RWIC is made up of conservatives who feed (very well) at the trough of book contracts, think-tanks, non-profits, political action committees, speaking tours, syndicated talk shows, etc.

Republicans can't get elected to save their souls, but their books, their radio shows, and their TV news networks top the charts, raking in big bucks from millions of alienated traditionalists.

The problem for the GOP is that the RWIC and its lucrative network of funders, donors and consumers is available only to the most ideologically pure.

If you've ever raised taxes, accepted stimulus money, signed environmental legislation into law, or partnered with Democrats on significant legislation, you need not apply.

If you are pro-choice, it's no dice. If you flirted with immigration reform, you're off the dance ticket.

Which makes it very hard indeed for conservative lawmakers trying to navigate a new America, one where most young people are comfortable with gay people, where more and more Americans are people of color.

There was a time, in the pre-Reagan era, when Republicans faced a huge disincentive to be conservative.

The GOP "establishment" offered huge benefits to moderates who didn't rock the boat.

Newt Gingrich, Tom DeLay and Rush Limbaugh ended that tradition, battling fiercely against "country club" Republicans.

But now they've installed a new disincentive.

These days, there's a disincentive to navigate the hard choices, the compromises, the awkward gray zones of governance.

There is a disincentive to choose policy and practicality over ideology.

After Palin quit, Ann Coulter described the culture war between the Republican policy wing and the RWIC this way:
People are acting like leaving a governorship is a step down. Who is bigger and more important? Rush Limbaugh, Matt Drudge and Bill O'Reilly vs. Mark Sanford (before the fall), Bobby Jindal, and Tim Pawlenty?
Put simply, this conflict is destroying the GOP.

In the modern era, accomplished centrists such as George Pataki, Arnold Schwarzenegger and Charlie Crist are sneered at by "the base."

A moderate like Arlen Specter is literally driven out of the party.

When John McCain went looking for a VP candidate to run at his side, he wanted a Joe Lieberman or a Tom Ridge.

But the RWIC demanded that he take on a character like Sarah Palin.

And now Palin is elevated to the status of saint and martyr, even as she quits the fight to improve the lives of Alaska's citizens.

Make no mistake: By following in the footsteps of Ann Coulter and Phyliss Schlafly, Palin now stands to make far more money with a far bigger national profile among the conservative faithful.

There will be book deals, speaking tours, perhaps her own talk show. Among the faithful, her image will remain unsullied by encounters with the real world.

But will Palin's decision help lead her brand of conservatism back to power? Even most Republicans can hardly wish that on the country.

11 Comments:

At July 7, 2009 7:59 AM , Blogger Mike said...

Sarah and the RWIC are in it for themselves, not the good of the country.
Even some former Bush supporters may now be realizing this.
Mike, Lyons Falls

 
At July 7, 2009 9:54 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

last week you said alaska was a bananna republic- now you're claiming she's selfish for not making Alaska a wonderful place. Can't have it both ways.

who can blame her for getting out of a position where her family and her finances have been belittled, scorned, and dredged? I am no Sarah Palin fan- but, from the time at the convention where the pundit said "Sarah Palin trailed her dysfunctional train-wreck of a family across a national stage", I've realized the divide in our country is much deeper than culture- it's a tribal way of living that has become entrenched, and neither side understands the other, or wants to. Free speech is great if it agrees with us, choice is wonderful if it's our choice, and lives can be celbrated if they fit the approved parameters.

 
At July 7, 2009 10:05 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Actually, anonymous, I can blame the Governor of a state for not working to bring it back from the banana-republic brink.

That's what good leaders do.

Also, I'm totally unconvinced by the portrayal of Palin as Victim-of-the-Liberal-Media.

Her fiercest critics at the moment are Republicans, who quite correctly see her decision to quit as a deal-breaker.

American politics is a rough business. Always has been.

Families have been dragged into the mess from the start.

If she can't suffer the slings and arrows, she should quit the field, not play martyr.

-Brian in Westport

 
At July 7, 2009 11:38 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

George Pataki for NYS Senate 2010!!!!!!We need him back in NYS.

 
At July 7, 2009 12:04 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Some say that the movement led by Lech Welasa succeeded because, for years before it actually achieved power over the old guard, it built a shadow, parallel government that actually accomplished something for the people of Poland--much as analysts have said Hamas did before actually achieving some elected political base among Palestinians.

Ideology is not the point here, but the technique bears consideration: how can people in communities across this country accomplish what state and federal governments have failed to accomplish? For example, a community-based health care system, linking the numbers of individual communities together to provide affordable care for everyone. The latest shenanigans in Albany only underscore my point. Republicans on the national stage have lately become another example--totally self-absorbed, failing to address the real needs of the vast majority of people who inhabit this country. Democrats are only marginally better at the moment.

Ellen Rocco

 
At July 7, 2009 3:25 PM , Blogger Pete Klein said...

Whenever you or anyone talks about the base, be it Democratic or Republican, just remember you are talking about the basest of the base people in this country.
As it is in religion, so it is in politics. There are those who believe ideology is more important than living, born humans.

 
At July 7, 2009 3:45 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Lech Walesa operated in a society without free elections. Gov. Palin won a free election and has decided not to honor the trust of the people who voted for her.

Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, a Republican, put out a statement saying she was “deeply disappointed” in Palin for choosing to “abandon the state and her constituents.”

It's really not any more complicated than that.

-Brian, Westport

 
At July 7, 2009 4:08 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

I don't think it is complicated. But I think you got it wrong! Sarah Palin is seeking to capitalize on her current fame. BIG $ await her right now. in 2012, anybody's guess. It is about her, her family and financial security. And I guess that's the way the game is played(What's in it for me?)

 
At July 8, 2009 10:57 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Sarah will land on her feet and do just fine. The best way to combat this stuff is to quit talking about it. Someone said once, "Any publicity is good publicity."

Just ignore it the same way you would when any of these entertainers make some dumb comment to get into the news cycle. Whether it's Rush, Clooney, Hannity, Streisand, Savage or O'Donnell, the best way to get them to go away is to take away what they love, ....the publicity.

Doc in Gouverneur

 
At July 8, 2009 12:38 PM , Blogger Mike said...

Given her on-camera attractiveness, her chief asset,
I give you better then even odds that Sarah winds up hosting her own television show.

Mike, Lyons Falls

 
At July 8, 2009 11:45 PM , Blogger BRFvolpe said...

Since Alaska refused federal stimulus monies for education, that means less for preschool programs for children with disabilities. Trig will need his mother to spend a lot more time with him since he won't be able to get what Down Syndrome kids need. Maybe she stepped aside because her family values supercede big government mandates.

Or maybe it's just plain old passive aggression.

 

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