Sarah Palin’s Tour de Force Speech
Saturday night, I watched Sarah Palin deliver a spell-binding, stirring speech that, I suspect, reached well beyond the GOP’s traditional conservative base. In doing so, Sarah Palin demonstrated that this movement isn’t confined to the Republican Party, though she emmphasized that the “Republican Party would be very smart to absorb as much of the Tea Party movement as possible.”
One of her best lines was about Scott Brown’s win in Massachusetts:
The White House blames their candidate, and Nancy Pelosi, she blamed the Senate Democrats, and Rahm Emanuel, he criticized a pollster. And yet again, President Obama, he found a way to make this all about George Bush. When you’re 0-for-3, you’d better stop lecturing and start listening.
Gov. Palin spent a substantial amount of time during opening portion of her hour-long speech criticizing President Obama’s foreign policy, first saying this:
Treating this like a mere law enforcement matter places our country at great risk. To win that war, we need a commander-in-chief, not a professor of law standing at the lectern.
After that, she leveled this shot on President Obama’s SOTU speech:
It’s no wonder that our president only spent about 9 percent of his State of the Union address discussing national security, foreign policy, because there aren’t a whole lot of victories he can talk about.
The best tweak she gave to President Obama, though, was this line:
Well, a special hello to the C-SPAN viewers. You may not be welcome in those health care negotiations but you have an invitation to the TEA Party.
NRO’s Robert Costa reminds us in this post of another Palin tweak of President Obama:
“The tea-party movement is about the people” and “it’s a lot bigger than any charismatic guy with a teleprompter.”
Here’s another great snippet from her speech:
I am a big supporter of this movement. I believe in this movement. I’ve got lots of friends and family in the lower 48 who attend these events and across this country knowing that this is a movement and America is ready for another revolution and you’re all a part of it.
Simply put, Sarah Palin is in touch with the American people. She knows how worried people are about the Democrats’ lack of spending discipline. She gets it that there are times when bipartisanship is overrated, that there’s times when fiercely defending the principles that our Founding Fathers and our great leaders since have espoused isn’t just the right thing to do but the only thing to do.
Most important in Gov. Palin’s speech was her exhorting those gathered in the hall and those watching on TV to make the movement about policies, not personalities. During her speech, she also talked about returning to free market principles and living within the limits of the Tenth Amendment. She staked out solid federalist ground.
During the speech, I couldn’t help but think that having Sarah Palin visit your district will yield more positive results than visits from President Obama or Speaker Pelosi.
A post on Gov. Palin’s speech simply wouldn’t be complete without mentioning her tweaking the Obama administration’s secretiveness. At one point, she criticized Vice President Biden’s transparency committee on tracking stimulus money, saying that she tried getting information on the meeting, only to find out that the transparency meeting “was held behind closed doors.”
Simply put, the GOP nomination is her’s barring something unforeseen happening. She’s a rock star. More importantly, she’s shown an ability to connect with people of all political stripes since entering the national stage 18 months ago. Her fiscal conservative credentials are solid. Her willingness to take on corruption wherever it’s found is well-documented. Her pro-life credentials are impeccable. Federalists, constitutionalists and libertarians won’t have any difficulty supporting her.
Whether she runs or not in 2012, there’s no denying the fact that she’d start with an incredible GOTV army and impressive base of support, not to mention the fact that she’d have incredible fundraising abilities.
In summation, there’s no question that Saturday night’s speech to the National TEA Party Convention will elevate her standing with middle class voters and people who’ve become frustrated with government’s desire to control people’s lives.
After last night, there’s no questioning where the pecking order starts with in the GOP.
Technorati Tags: Activism, Conventions, TEA Parties, Sarah Palin, Scott Brown, Federalism, Tenth Amendment, Foreign Policy, National Security, Transparency, President Obama, Vice President Biden, Speaker Pelosi, Spending, Stimulus, Democrats
Cross-posted at LetFreedomRingBlog
February 7th, 2010 at 9:14 am
The sad part is, Mikey and gang were probably sitting in a room watching it and wondering how to derail this new train with such dangerous ideas. Mikey’s already started with the “Me too!” meme, trying to act like the tea parties were as much his direction and desire as anyone’s.
Like Beck has been stressing: “Liars, cheats, thieves, liars, cheats, thieves.”
I exhort you, if you wish to donate, donate to a particular candidate, not to the national or to any PAC that is simply a national toady group. If national ever wakes up and discovers what’s going on, maybe they’ll clean house and really get with the program.
February 7th, 2010 at 10:06 am
Watched it. It was like the debate with biden. A first class job of getting the point across.
February 7th, 2010 at 3:06 pm
It was OK. I thought couple times it semed like she was reading it for the first time, but she delivered well and scored her points.
Did anyone else beside Fox, cover the whole thing? Not I really give a rat’s a&&.
February 7th, 2010 at 3:17 pm
Well Im shocked! Shocked to find out she wrote something on the palm of her hand. Why the very idea!
How ghastly common of her!
February 7th, 2010 at 6:14 pm
Of course, USN. It’s always better to have someone else write what you’re thinking and what you believe, then read it on a teleprompter.
February 7th, 2010 at 7:47 pm
LOL I was being sarcastic, of course. Midwest habit of mine.
A lost art it seems out here in “Im so cool California”.
February 7th, 2010 at 9:06 pm
One of the problems I’ve suffered for decades is being able to point out Californians here in our backwater state just to the north of there. I’ve never been able to point to a specific thing, other than to say nearly every one walks with an ‘tude of “Look at me! I’m from CA and I’m a star!” I don’t know that that’s the entirety of it, or if it’s only in my mind, but when they cross a border going anywhere else, no matter what they were like in-state that’s what they are extra-state.
Sarah, of course, hasn’t been inflicted with that (at least not yet), and will have to guard against any tendency to verify rumors about her anger and self-star attitude (common among former cheerleaders, especially ones from small towns). But at least she has the sense to know when to have a backup plan.
February 8th, 2010 at 2:47 pm
Sounds like you’ve been around a lot of the central coast and metro San Francisco/west LA crowd. They all got their noses in the air.
Rest of the state is more down to earth, but sometimes a little too laid back to a fault.
May 6th, 2010 at 7:21 am
Sarah Palin is a very vocal person and most of the time she speaks what she thinks and how she feels. :
August 18th, 2010 at 9:57 am
Saraha Palin is one of the best woman politician that i know:.: