New York, Feb 7 : The “lamestream media,” as Sarah Palin calls it, may have written
her off now that the former vice presidential candidate and tea party favorite
has lost her principal media voice as a well-paid commentator on Fox
News.
But there’s no indication that Ms. Palin will go back to life in
Alaska as the former mayor of a small town and then governor for two years,
fishing and hunting with her family -- the life she had before Sen. John McCain
picked her out of relative political obscurity to be his running mate in
2008.
“I was raised to never retreat and to pick battles wisely, and all
in due season,” she said in the one substantial interview she’s given since Real
Clear Politics first reported that Palin and Fox had parted ways. “When it comes
to defending our republic, we haven’t begun to fight! But we delight in those
who underestimate us.”
The extent to which the conservative-leaning TV
enterprise tried to keep her onboard is still unclear.
Fox reportedly
offered Palin far less than the million-dollar annual contract that had included
a broadcast studio at her home in Wasilla, Alaska. She turned it down, and Fox
had no inclination to up the ante.
“What happened, quite simply, is that
Palin’s star had faded,” Howard Kurtz wrote in Newsweek’s the Daily Beast. “She
was no longer the rock star of 2008, her future presidential ambitions the
subject of constant speculation.”
For Fox News, it seemed to be largely a
business decision. Or as CEO Roger Ailes put it in 2011, “I hired Sarah Palin
because she was hot and got ratings.” But there was more to it than that, it
seems.
“The political climate shifted as well, with Republicans, having
been shellacked in their second straight presidential election, debating a
future involving [Marco] Rubio and [Chris] Christie and [Paul] Ryan but not
Palin,” Kurtz wrote. “And the atmosphere at Fox shifted as well. It was no
longer a network in the throes of a tea party revolt and providing a platform
for Glenn Beck. Fox edged a bit closer to the center, and Palin began to seem
more the [actor] Julianne Moore of [the HBO movie] ‘Game Change’ than a
political force.”
In her interview with Stephen Bannon on Breitbart.com –
the conservative news and opinion website founded by the late Andrew Breitbart –
Palin promised to stay in the fight, pointedly targeting establishment
Republicans as well as President Obama.
“Focus on the 2014 election is …
imperative,” she said. “It’s going to be like 2010 [when Republicans took over
the US House of Representatives], but this time around we need to shake up the
GOP machine that tries to orchestrate away too much of the will of
constitutional conservatives who don’t give a hoot how they do it in
DC.
“We’re not going to be able to advance the cause of limited
constitutional government unless we deal with these big government enablers on
our side,” Palin said. “And this all ties into the problem of crony capitalism
and the permanent political class in the Beltway. We need to consistently take
them on election after election – ever vigilant.”
That pretty much
describes tea party attitudes and philosophy, and Palin urges followers to “jump
out of the comfort zone, and broaden our reach as believers in American
exceptionalism.”
“That means broadening our audience,” she acknowledges.
“I’m taking my own advice here as I free up opportunities to share more broadly
the message of the beauty of freedom and the imperative of defending our
republic and restoring this most exceptional nation. We can't just preach to the
choir; the message of liberty and true hope must be understood by a larger
audience. “
Is that larger audience available for Palin’s unique style of
political pot-stirring?
A Rasmussen Reports poll earlier this month shows
“views of the tea party movement are at their lowest point ever,” with just
eight percent of those surveyed self-identifying as members of the movement,
down from a high of 24 percent in April 2010. Just 30 percent have a favorable
view of the movement, 49 percent an unfavorable
view.
Ends
SA/EN
Home »
» Sarah Palin vows to fight on without Fox News gig
Sarah Palin vows to fight on without Fox News gig
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment