NationStates Jolt Archive


Barracuda: The Resentments of Sarah Palin

Daistallia 2104
08-10-2008, 05:33
This was an interesting bit on how Palin got into politics and has used her political power to settle scores.

The New Republic
Barracuda by Noam Scheiber
The resentments of Sarah Palin.

It's unlikely the name Sarah Palin would mean much to anyone if not for a man named Nick Carney. Long before she stood up to Republican cronies and "the good old boys" of Alaska, Palin stood up to Carney, a colleague on Wasilla's city council. As Kaylene Johnson explains in her sympathetic biography, Sarah, Carney had the gall to propose an ordinance giving his own company the city contract for garbage removal. In Johnson's telling, it was the first time Palin bravely spoke truth to power: "'I said no and I voted no,' Sarah said. 'People should have the choice about whether or not to haul their garbage to the dump.'" Johnson writes that Palin's vote made Carney into a "political enemy"--the first of many, it turns out.

The episode might serve as a compelling, if small-bore, example of Palin's reformer instincts. Except that, according to those who were present, Carney wasn't quite the crooked trash magnate Palin makes him out to be. For one thing, Carney couldn't have proposed the ordinance because he'd recused himself from the matter. The council, in fact, had asked him to appear as a kind of expert witness on the relevant rules and regulations. "I looked at it as we actually had an expert on the council sharing the information," recalls Laura Chase, a fellow councilwoman. "Not ... conspiring over a contract. There was no way that was happening."

So if it wasn't a sinister garbage conspiracy that put Carney in Palin's crosshairs, what was it? At first glance, the two would have appeared to be allies--both had spent most of their lives in Wasilla and had attended the same high school. But, beyond that, they were sociological opposites in almost every respect. Whereas Palin had bounced around several no-name colleges before graduating from the University of Idaho, Carney held a degree from Dartmouth. Palin seemed preoccupied with her family and church when she entered politics. Carney was preoccupied with histories of the Civil War and World War II (he later contributed a self-published book to the genre) and savored the New York Times crossword puzzle. By the time he joined the city council, Carney had traveled to Asia, Australia, and Central America. He'd run the Anchorage office of Alaska's economic development agency and had served as the state's agriculture director. "I'd dealt with larger budgets by far than the city of Wasilla," he recently told me.

Carney had a wry sense of humor. He was fond of joking that he'd graduated from Wasilla High School in the "top 20 percent"--by which he meant he was valedictorian of his five-person class. Sometimes Palin was the only colleague who didn't get his jokes. "I don't think he had too much patience for her lack of understanding," says John Stein, then the town's mayor. In internal discussions, Carney would be relentlessly logical while Palin was vague and intuitive. "Nick had a way of being direct and to the point, something that Sarah was uncomfortable with," recalls Chase. Which is to say, when it came to garbage removal, what Palin seemed to have chafed against was less the substance of Carney's position than what she felt was his elitist, Ivy League bearing. And, over the next few years, she found ways to get him back.

These days, Palin is engaged in this same fight against elites, though on a considerably larger stage. "I'm not one of those who maybe came from a background of, you know, kids who perhaps graduate college and their parents give them a passport and give them a backpack and say go off and travel the world," she recently told Katie Couric. "No, I've worked all my life." That hardly makes her the first politician to run on class resentments--nearly every conservative from George W. Bush to Mitt Romney has sought a bond with voters by attacking the over-educated and entitled. But more often than not these conservatives are elites themselves; hence the spectacle of Yale legacies and Harvard millionaires (and most of the Fox News executive suite) railing against wine-swilling sophisticates.

Palin, by contrast, may be the first conservative politician since Nixon to experience resentment so authentically. For her, it's not so much a political tool as a motivating principle. A trip through Palin's past reveals that almost every step of her career can be understood as a reaction to elitist condescension--much of it in her own mind.

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Before he became her enemy, Nick Carney was actually Palin's mentor--though, like John McCain, his reasons for championing her had much to do with his own political agenda. In the early '90s, Carney and a group of local business leaders decided the city needed a sales tax to fund public services--such as a police force--it could no longer live without. To advance this position in an area not exactly teeming with Great Society liberals, they'd formed a group called "Watch on Wasilla" and persuaded John Stein, then the mayor, to embrace their cause. Carney won his seat on the city council in 1992 on the back of these efforts.

Heading into that election, Carney and Stein realized their program would go nowhere if they couldn't connect with what you might call Wal-Mart moms--that great mass of voters too busy earning a living and raising their families to follow local politics. "We were lacking lines of communication between the council as it existed and the younger bloc of voters in town," recalls Carney. "We didn't have anyone on there who worked [as a laborer] for a living or who was a housewife."

Carney's daughter had gone to high school with Palin; Stein and his wife knew her from an aerobics class they attended. She seemed bright and energetic and had a winning way about her--the same qualities McCain would notice 15 years later. They invited her to attend a "Watch on Wasilla" meeting and, after a brief interview, asked her to run on their moderate plank. Carney introduced her to local business leaders and campaigned alongside her. "I took her around . .. and said, 'This is a person who supports our points of view. She'll do what she can to make the police force run.' And she did it." It was a bit like Palin's convention rollout in miniature, and the initial effect was similar. Palin breezed into office with Carney that October.
http://www.tnr.com/politics/story.html?id=8c130fe3-adab-4cb3-8443-c363f085cf13
(continues for 4 more pages)

After Bush, we certainly don't need another president with a pack of scores to settle against people smarter than they are, right. (Yes, she's on the VP ticket, but at McCain's age and w/ his medical history, she may as well be the presidential candidate.)
Frisbeeteria
08-10-2008, 05:37
This couldn't go in one of the myriad Palin threads we already have?
Daistallia 2104
08-10-2008, 05:50
This couldn't go in one of the myriad Palin threads we already have?

No, because there doesn't seem to be a myriad of them.
Daistallia 2104
08-10-2008, 17:45
This couldn't go in one of the myriad Palin threads we already have?

And where's your snarky comment re this (http://forums.jolt.co.uk/showthread.php?p=14080997&posted=1#post14080997)?

If one thread about Palin is OK and another's not, can you at least give us reason...
Augmark
08-10-2008, 22:15
Palin, our lord and savior, will bring peace to the world! All will unite under Palin, the Almighty!..............or not.
Knights of Liberty
08-10-2008, 23:36
Im now waiting for the apologists of St. Palin to come on here and freak out.
Verdigroth
09-10-2008, 01:43
I used to like Palin, when she was just the governor of alaska. Now not so sure, bordering on negative. I would have liked it if she stayed a straight shooter instead of hiding behind McCains flunky's. By God she is the governor of my state!
Knights of Liberty
09-10-2008, 01:58
I used to like Palin, when she was just the governor of alaska. Now not so sure, bordering on negative. I would have liked it if she stayed a straight shooter instead of hiding behind McCains flunky's. By God she is the governor of my state!

Yeah, recent evidence shows she was never a "straight shooter".

Just because shes the governor of your state puts you under no obligation to like her. The Gov. of my state is Blagojevich, and he just might be the most incompetent and unintellegent person Ive ever seen hold high office.
New Limacon
09-10-2008, 03:10
Yeah, recent evidence shows she was never a "straight shooter".

Just because shes the governor of your state puts you under no obligation to like her. The Gov. of my state is Blagojevich, and he just might be the most incompetent and unintellegent person Ive ever seen hold high office.

Perhaps, but his name is Blagojevich. That has to count for something.
The Brevious
09-10-2008, 06:53
a pack of scores to settle against people smarter than they are
Boy howdy.
Oh, and ....

Old Gourd? Or Old Guard?
The Cat-Tribe
09-10-2008, 19:06
Interesting article, although some of it is information I was already familiar with and some of it actually down-plays how vicious a politico Palin can be.

This part (which I think is accurate) sends chills down my spine:

Palin, by contrast, may be the first conservative politician since Nixon to experience resentment so authentically. For her, it's not so much a political tool as a motivating principle. A trip through Palin's past reveals that almost every step of her career can be understood as a reaction to elitist condescension--much of it in her own mind.

We all know how well Nixon's career turned out for the country. :eek: