Monday, September 08, 2008

Frank Rich on McCain and Palin

. . . in a terrific op-ed piece in the New York Times here. An excerpt:

"[. . .] As is nakedly evident, the speech’s central argument, that the 72-year-old McCain will magically morph into a powerful change agent as president, is a non sequitur. In his 26 years in Washington, most of it with a Republican in the White House and roughly half of it with Republicans in charge of Congress, he was better at lecturing his party about reform than leading a reform movement. G.O.P. corruption and governmental dysfunction only grew. So did his cynical flip-flops on the most destructive policies of the president who remained nameless Thursday night [. . .]

Even more fraudulent, if that’s possible, is the contrast between McCain’s platonic presentation of his personal code of honor and the man he has become. He always puts his country first, he told us: “I’ve been called a maverick.” If there was any doubt that that McCain has fled, confirmation arrived with his last-minute embrace of Sarah Palin.

We still don’t know a lot about Palin except that she’s better at delivering a speech than McCain and that she defends her own pregnant daughter’s right to privacy even as she would have the government intrude to police the reproductive choices of all other women. Most of the rest of the biography supplied by her and the McCain camp is fiction.

She didn’t say “no thanks” to the “Bridge to Nowhere” until after Congress had already abandoned it but given Alaska a blank check for $223 million in taxpayers’ money anyway. Far from rejecting federal pork, she hired lobbyists to secure her town a disproportionate share of earmarks ($1,000 per resident in 2002, 20 times the per capita average in other states). Though McCain claimed “she has had national security as one of her primary responsibilities,” she has never issued a single command as head of the Alaska National Guard. As for her “executive experience” as mayor, she told her hometown paper in Wasilla, Alaska, in 1996, the year of her election: “It’s not rocket science. It’s $6 million and 53 employees.” Her much-advertised crusade against officials abusing their office is now compromised by a bipartisan ethics investigation into charges that she did the same.

How long before we learn she never shot a moose? [. . .]

The McCain campaign’s claims of a “full vetting process” for Palin were as much a lie as the biographical details they’ve invented for her. There was no F.B.I. background check. The Times found no evidence that a McCain representative spoke to anyone in the State Legislature or business community. Nor did anyone talk to the fired state public safety commissioner at the center of the Palin ethics investigation. No McCain researcher even bothered to consult the relevant back issues of the Wasilla paper. Apparently when McCain said in June that his vice presidential vetting process was basically “a Google,” he wasn’t joking.

This is a roll of the dice beyond even Bill Clinton’s imagination. “Often my haste is a mistake,” McCain conceded in his 2002 memoir, “but I live with the consequences without complaint.” Well, maybe it’s fine if he wants to live with the consequences, but what about his country? Should the unexamined Palin prove unfit to serve at the pinnacle of American power, it will be too late for the rest of us to complain.

We’ve already seen where such visceral decision-making by McCain can lead. In October 2001, he speculated that Saddam Hussein might have been behind the anthrax attacks in America. That same month he out-Cheneyed Cheney in his repeated public insistence that Iraq had a role in 9/11 — even after both American and foreign intelligence services found that unlikely. He was similarly rash in his reading of the supposed evidence of Saddam’s W.M.D. and in his estimate of the number of troops needed to occupy Iraq. (McCain told MSNBC in late 2001 that we could do with fewer than 100,000.) It wasn’t until months after “Mission Accomplished” that he called for more American forces to be tossed into the bloodbath. The whole fiasco might have been prevented had he listened to those like Gen. Eric Shinseki who faulted the Rumsfeld war plan from the start.

In other words, McCain’s hasty vetting of Palin was all too reminiscent of his grave dereliction of due diligence on the war. He has been no less hasty in implying that we might somehow ride to the military rescue of Georgia (“Today, we are all Georgians”) or in reaffirming as late as December 2007 that the crumbling anti-democratic regime of Pervez Musharraf deserved “the benefit of the doubt” even as it was enabling the resurgence of the Taliban and Al Qaeda. McCain’s blanket endorsement of Bush administration policy in Pakistan could have consequences for years to come [. . .]"

6 comments:

meditations71 said...

Most of the points in this Rich's article seem very well put, and undoubtedly McCain has taken a big risk with Palin (although there are also some undoubted benefits from a strategic point of view).

What I don't buy, however, is the argument about the daughter's pregnancy and Palin's stance on abortion.

Rich writes: "We still don’t know a lot about Palin except that she’s better at delivering a speech than McCain and that she defends her own pregnant daughter’s right to privacy even as she would have the government intrude to police the reproductive choices of all other women."

That seems to me a very questionable argument. What does suggesting that the media respects a basic level of decency in terms of how they pry into family matters, such as a teenager coping with a pregnancy, have to do with the much more serious and complex debate about the rights of unborn children (that is, after all, what they at some point are during pregnancy whether people disagree on whether life beings at the point of conception or not)?

It seems to me a cheap shot to take the one issue (having some decent respect for the private lives even of public figures and candidates for public office) to slight the other (maintaining that it is right to protect unborn children from being killed - which, for those who do not "fancy" that way of putting it, is what an abortion actually does).

It reminds me of the commonly voiced objection to a politician being pro-life (to use the American term for an anti-abortionist stance) and pro-death penalty. How can a person advocate sanctity of life in one case but not the other? The difference, of course, is one of the responsibility of the adult for a crime committed and the innocence of the (unborn) child.

Now I don't hold this particular comination of views myself (i.e., pro-life AND pro-death penalty) but I don't see how it must be somehow "illogical" or "inconsistent".

The Brooks Blog said...

Perhaps "inconsistency" is too strong a word and "curious" is better. It is at least curious that Palin argues so strongly in favour of personal privacy while actively trying to undermine and overturn abortion rights, which are grounded on "privacy" in US law. The suggestion is that, if one upholds privacy, then the Courts have ruled it includes a right to terminate pregnancies as a private, personal issue.

In terms of inconsistency, I much prefer the view that at one and the same time McCain/Palin speak of "small government" and citizens being more free of regulation, while planning to continue troop surges and increase military spending...all the while encroaching on civil liberties. In fact, the more they rail against Big Brother, the more they actually seem to support it...

meditations71 said...

Ok. I won't disagree with you on most of these points - that Palin's overall political stance is one that can be characterised by "inconsistency" (and probably worse) seems entiriely reasonable.

However - and I will freely admit to having no real insight into US abortion law and the political debates surrounding it, but will add my two cents' anyhow - the understanding of "privacy" as in a call for respecting people's private lives and difficult circumstances seems very different from the use of "privacy" in the question of ending the lives of unborn babies. Those do not to me seem like issues on the "same scale".

I would think, again speaking from a decidedly non-expert point of view in terms of the legal issues involved, that the "privacy" of the mother is a very weak basis on which to base decisions of life or death of unborn children.

It would therefore not be very strange, it seems to me, if a controversial decision like Roe v Wade was overturned on the basis of that reference to "privacy".

The Brooks Blog said...

Rights to advice on the use and use of contraception became national with the 1965 US Supreme Court ruling in Griswold v. Connecticut (in essence). The justification was that the use of contraception -- illegal under the then CT state constitution -- violated the right of individuals to make private decisions based upon their own moral or religious beliefs. As the Constitution forbids state intrusions into 'the privacies of life', so it should not weigh in on a personal decision whether or not to use contraception. This decision then set the stage -- on the grounds of privacy -- for the justification of Roe v. Wade and this view of privacy has been law for, well, 43 years...so there is a clear precedent.

Yes, there are many critics of Roe v. Wade regarding privacy. While I believe the right decision was reached, I would have preferred different argument --- although including privacy.

I do hope that you do not think the best way to address abortion is "To execute vengeance upon the heathen, and punishments upon the people; To bind their kings with chains, and their nobles with fetters of iron; To execute upon them the judgment written: this honour have all his saints. Praise ye the LORD" from your Sunday blog post....!

On Palin, the inconsistency is asking the media to leave her family alone (and private) while noting to reporters (and the party base) that her daughter will not be having an abortion: (a) she asks for us to leave her family alone, but (b) she makes her family part of her campaigning. You can't have it both ways...

meditations71 said...

Thanks for this info Thom, that is ABOUT how I figured "privacy" had snuck into the legal decision on abortion.

It's just a simple layman's view, I know, but to counterpose a decision on the life of a child with the "right to privacy" of the family just seems a weak basis for what was bound to be a controversial decision. And what the alternative basis would be, I of course have no idea.

As for my humble quote from the Book of Psalms (not anything to do with this discussion of Palin and abortion of course), I hope you don't worry too much. I usually post a little "tidbit" from the weekly collect and reading on Sundays. I'd say our Anglican Sunday gathering is a fairly meek bunch, far from the moose hunting Palin Pentecostals in both distance and (dare I say?) spirit I'd have thought!

The Brooks Blog said...

If only Peter was involved in these posts, then things would move to a new level...!