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Joan Ganz Cooney | 08/29/2008 2:19 pm

Joan Ganz Cooney: The Choice of Palin Is Simply Irresponsible Updated 8/30, 2:06 PM

Joan Ganz Cooney

Update:

Just to set the record straight, I’d like answer those who favorably compare Sarah Palin’s experience to Barack Obama’s. 

First, by contrast to Ms. Palin, he, in his childhood and adolesence grew up in the most racially diverse state in the union, Hawaii, and in one of the poorest foreign countries on the planet, Indonesia, both of which experieces gave him a world view very few American children are priviledged to gain.  After graduating from Columbia, he went to Harvard Law School and was elected President of the Law Review, an honor that goes only to those at the very top. Subsenquently he moved to Chicago, one of the nation’s largest cities, as a community organizer and as a teacher of constitutional law at the University of Chicago. For years, he was exposed to the multitude of  problems faced by urban America.  After serving in the State Senate for 7 years, he was elected to the  U.S. Senate  4 year ago  where he has served on the Foreign Relations  committee.

Yes he has been running for the office of president for the past 18 months but his performance as the executive in charge of a huge, hard-fought, successful national campaign during which he beat one of the most formidable families in politics today is no small thing and speaks very well of his ability to manage large, complex national efforts. 

As one blogger asked, can anyone imagine Sarah Palin at this time running a prolonged  Republican primary campaign and banishing say, the Bush family?  I have no doubt she is a competent governor of Alaska but that is simply too small a playing field to be a springboard to the vice presidency and a heartbeat away from the Oval Office.

*********

The choice of Palin is simply irresponsible. McCain has a 50 percent chance of being president and he puts a heartbeat away from the presidency a 44-year-old who has been governor of the least populated state in the union for less than two years. And that’s the extent of her experience. What on earth does she know about anything to do with governing a huge country or about foreign policy? Her debate with Biden should be very interesting.

To think, as I’m sure they do, that former Hillary supporters can be wooed to their ticket by adding a pro-life, lifetime NRA member surely ranks as one of the dumbest political moves in many years. I will be very surprised if Obama doesn’t get a significant bump in the polls just from this news.

But then when it comes to politics, nobody knows anything.

Read more about: mccain, New, Politics, Sarah Palin

170 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

MaryPage Drake
Senators do not punch time clocks. They do not have working hours. They go out into the country here and world wide and find out for themselves what is going on. Obama has been doing that. A Senator of the United States is hired for the entire 6 years of his time in office. His staff is able, at all times, to give his constituents a calendar of where he has been and what he has been doing. Where did you get the information that his term was only 4 years?
By MaryPage Drake on 08/30/2008 3:16 pm
Star Lawrence
Senate terms are 6 yrs.
By Star Lawrence on 08/30/2008 3:33 pm
Marjorie C.
I consistently tangle up the senate terms. Six years. Maybe it’ll stick this time.
By Marjorie C. on 08/31/2008 4:04 pm
Mugsy Peabody
Sigh. Palin is proud of being a life-long member of the NRA. End of story for me. Her experience? Marjorie, I think you need to think issues here, rather than “personalities.” The Democrats are a team, and there are a great many intelligent people on that team. What are the issues in this election, let’s talk about those. And not the “hot button” crap the GOP keeps playing the shell game with us over, but the real issues.
By Mugsy Peabody on 09/01/2008 2:17 am
A N
Majorie, you make some very fine points and if you don’t mind, I’d like to add a few that I read from the Denver Post. (I, too, am an independent, now.) Executive experience: Obama: Makes executive decisions every day that affect the lives of his campaign staff and a vast crowd of traveling journalists (Joan’s point.) Palin:Makes executive decisions every day that affect the lives of 500,000 people in her state, and that impact crucial issues of national economic interest such as the supply and cost of energy to the United States. She vetoed 300 pork projects in Alaska in her first year in office. Record of bipartisan achievement Obama: Speaks movingly of the bipartisanship needed to end the destructive politics of “Red America” and “Blue America”, but votes in the Senate as a down-the-line Democrat, with one of the most liberal voting records in congress. Palin: Ridiculed by liberals such as John Kerry as a crazed, barely human, Dick Cheney-type conservative but worked with Democrats in the state legislature to secure landmark anti-corruption legislation. Former state Rep. Ethan Berkowitz - a Democrat - said. “Gov. Palin has made her name fighting corruption within her own party, and I was honored when she stepped across party lines and asked me to co-author her ethics white paper.” When someone applies for a job, you want to see their credentials, their accomplishments, along with their hopes and dreams.
By A N on 09/02/2008 7:20 am
Star Lawrence
Two yrs—he has served 2 of 6 yrs.
By Star Lawrence on 08/30/2008 3:37 pm
Mary Lou From Maine
Marjorie, it’s okay to simply say you aren’t voting for Obama. that’s your right. but this refusal on your part to acknowledge the man’s obvious accomplishments and experience suggests that you are either trying to justify your Republicanism (which you don’t have to do) or cover up the fact that you’re bothered by his blackness. there is much being written these days about the “code language” being used by voters to cover up their discomfort with his race … one such code is to take the Republican line “he has no experience” Is it time for some serious self-reflection, perhaps?
By Mary Lou From Maine on 08/31/2008 12:06 am
Marjorie C.
Mary Lou, I acknowledge all that Joan has stated. I believe what she says to be true, I also think it’s kind of a thin resumé for a man who wants to be president. Please don’t be confused, I am not a Republican, I’m an Independent. I don’t follow any party line lock-step. Mary Lou, I am not a racist, are you?
By Marjorie C. on 08/31/2008 4:14 pm
Diana T
And, people keep wondering why we all talk about melanoma. Because, it’s reality, and that’s a real issue. One of several. http://open.salon.com/content.php?cid=13431
By Diana T on 08/31/2008 2:27 pm
Dan H.
What is your view of Abraham Lincoln’s stewardship of the presidency given his similar lack of experience? Was James Madison ready on “Day One to be commander in chief?”
By Dan H. on 08/31/2008 2:35 pm
Dan H.
What did you think of Abraham Lincoln’s stewardship of the presidency given his similar lack of experience? And do you, in reviewing history, believe James Madison was ready “on Day One to be commander in chief?”
By Dan H. on 08/31/2008 2:40 pm
iris odonata
Let’s see? Old white dude picks younger, inexperienced woman. Just more of McSame.
By iris odonata on 08/29/2008 3:40 pm
Star Lawrence
On style points, could we lose McSame and McLame, which were never particularly clever, and go with “old white dude”? I am sure he knows he has white hair and is north of 40.
By Star Lawrence on 08/30/2008 3:35 pm
mary lou s
agreed, star. but i speak only for myself. if i got to using the name i prefer for our pResident, there is no telling how low the public discourse would sink. obama spoke for improving our national discourse, and i agree with him.
By mary lou s on 08/30/2008 8:10 pm
Elizabeth Bennett
I tend to think of W. as the Liar in Chief, and while it may be accurate, it is probably not polite. And some days it seems like Cheney is pulling ahead.
By Elizabeth Bennett on 09/01/2008 11:49 am