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TOPIC: "Karl Rove Raises Questions About Sarah Palin" (Joe Gandelman, Editor-in-Chief, TheModerateVoice.com 10/27/10)


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"Karl Rove Raises Questions About Sarah Palin" (Joe Gandelman, Editor-in-Chief, TheModerateVoice.com 10/27/10)
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Read @ TheModerateVoice.com

Karl Rove Raises Questions About Sarah Palin
by Joe Gandelman, Editor-in-Chief, 10/27/10

If you had any doubts that Tea Party spiritual leader Sarah Palin is not GOP establishment political maven Karl Rove’s favorite candidate — and that jockeying for the 2012 Republican Presidential nomination has begun even before Tuesday’s votes have been cast — get rid of them now. Karl Rove has raised questions about Palin’s qualifications to sit in the Oval Office — and he does not mince words:

Karl Rove, the former senior adviser to George W Bush, has cast doubt on Sarah Palin’s viability as a White House candidate, questioning if the American people thought she had the “gravitas” for the “most demanding job in the world”.

Expressing the strongest public reservations about the conservative star made by any senior Republican figure, Mr Rove said it was unlikely that voters would regard someone starring in a reality show as presidential material.

In two weeks, the former governor of Alaska launches a cable television series exploring her home state’s wilderness.

“With all due candour, appearing on your own reality show on the Discovery Channel, I am not certain how that fits in the American calculus of ‘that helps me see you in the Oval Office’,” Mr Rove told The Daily Telegraph in an interview.

He added that the promotional clip for Sarah Palin’s Alaska could be especially detrimental to any political campaign. It features the mother of five in the great outdoors saying: “I would rather be doing this than in some stuffy old political office.

And he gets even more blunt as the interview published in England’s Telegraph progresses:

Mr Rove was asked if the 46-year-old Mrs Palin, who is among the front-runners for the next Republican nomination, would be a wise choice if the party wanted to seize the White House from President Barack Obama. He replied: “You can make a plausible case for any of them on paper, but it is not going to be paper in 2011. It’s going to be blood, it’s going to be sweat and tears and it’s going to be hard effort.”

He said Mrs Palin had done a “terrific job” in 2008 when Senator John McCain took her from near obscurity to the vice-presidential nomination, but added: “Being the vice-presidential nominee on the ticket is different from saying ‘I want to be the person at the top of the ticket’.

“There are high standards that the American people have for it [the presidency] and they require a certain level of gravitas, and they want to look at the candidate and say ‘that candidate is doing things that gives me confidence that they are up to the most demanding jobs in the world’.”

Palin and Rove have been at loggerheads before. Rove backed some of the candidates that Sarah Palin and the Tea Party Movement put out to political pasture in the tempestuous GOP primaries where many Republican establishment candidates took it on the chin. Rove has become a potent behind the scenes strategist and bank roller (via the independent political groups he runs) in campaign 2010 — once again greatly dominating the American political scene and thwarting Democrats’ political dreams.

There has also been considerable speculation that Rove will pick an establishment-type Republican candidate to back in 2012 and that his candidate will be battling Palin tooth and nail for the nomination. Some speculation has centered on his perhaps backing former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney for the top spot should she — as many expect she will — decide to go for it.

But it’s clear he symbolizes a part of the Republican party — the part of the party that Palin often talks about with considerable snark and outright disdain. Rove seemed particularly miffed that Palin-backed Tea Party movement candidate Christine O’Donnell pulled off an upset and got the nomination for GOP Senate candidate in Delaware.

Continues
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Just as we were discussing Tea Party and Palin... but this deserves its own thread that can be later filed under SP.

I am no fan of Karl Rove.  I do think he is very smart and strategic -- he knows when and how to speak... and for what purpose!  He also knows the full spectrum of the Right quite well.

Yes, as Rove says, I think there is a question about gravitas... and I think she would not hold a candle to someone like Hillary on that front.

To me, the greater question is the increasing extremism she has portrayed so visibly to the entire country... that it would be near impossible to pull herself to the center, at this stage.  Moreover, she had a real opportunity to remain Governor of Alaska and talk as a governor against the POTUS's policy positions. Despite news cycle challenges, they would have accomodated her voice -- it would not have been just FOX News either... Then again, I am assuming that she would have done ok with other media interviewers... and I have some significant doubts on that.

SP has clearly not shown the type of maturity that the nation looks for in their presidential candidate. 

U.S. electorate is very smart, for the most part, when they do not get overcome by emotions (of hope and anger). 

Even George W. Bush was not a bad choice -- he had executive experience; so even though I did not vote for him, I read a lot about him and said, this guy has the leadership qualities and the ability to delegate..  Unfortunately, what did not come through is that he delegates a bit too much and as a result does not always have his facts correct... and makes BIG decisions based on those incorrect facts.

Hillary has shown us that experience matters... and experience is needed.  She has shown to the world the level of maturity that is requisite in a REAL LEADER at the national level...

Title, typo corrected

-- Edited by Sanders on Thursday 28th of October 2010 02:51:53 AM

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RE: "Karl Rove Raises Quetions About Sarah Palin" (Joe Gandelman, Editor-in-Chief, TheModerateVoice.com 10/27/10)
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Karl Rove vs. Sarah Palin? That's like asking someone to chose between two REALLY bad options. Not a fan of either, but I'd have to go with Sarah Palin, at least in terms of character. Sarah Palin, for all her bravura, I think is harmless, while Karl Rove just seems slimy.

Also, let's face it.....Karl Rove is no Hillary Clinton.

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