orichalcum: (Obama)
From my perspective, this whole thing says much more about McCain than about Palin or her daughter. I don't care what Bristol Palin's sex life is like, and I don't much care about the differential between what Palin preaches to others and her own family's behavior.

However, we've now had a very good glimpse into how both McCain and Obama choose important members of their governing team. And frankly, the sudden impulsive decision by McCain to choose a non-vetted, inexperienced, virtually unknown candidate, after giving major allies who had worked long and hard for him every reason to think he was going to choose them*, and only after he had backed down from his first choice (Lieberman) because Karl Rove told him he couldn't pick a pro-choice person...well, it doesn't indicate great managerial or judgment skills. Biden may not be the world's most exciting choice, but no one doubts he could step up to the plate and be President if something happened to Obama. Some Republicans themselves are assuming that if McCain died, Palin would resign after appointing someone more experienced (read, older white male from D.C.).

Though I disagree with her on pretty much everything, I'm not nearly as interested in Palin qua Palin as in what her pick says about McCain as an executive.

Maybe this is all a plot by Lieberman to be the sudden backup candidate.


*Yes, no one gets to feel cheated because they didn't get picked as Vice-President. But Romney and Pawlenty have to be feeling a little bitter that after months of working their @#$ses off on weekly talk shows and fundraising drives promoting their former rival, the prize goes to someone who's never campaigned for him at all.

Furthermore, if I was, say, Jodi Rell of Connecticut, an extremely popular Republican female governor, I'd be a little bit irked that I (and Senator Hutchison, and Senator Snowe, and so forth....) got passed over because of being pro-choice. I don't know if Obama could have picked an anti-abortion V-P, although he notably gave a good convention speaking slot to Senator Casey of PA, who is anti-abortion and whose father was refused a speaking slot on those grounds. And Biden has a 36% voting record according to NARAL, having voted for the "partial-birth" abortion ban and against public funding for abortions, so certainly he's not doctrinaire on this issue.

Perhaps the whole craps/poker analogy thing does reveal something about the candidates' decisionmaking styles...
Mood:: concerned

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