A séance with Richard Nixon


by Neil Robertson    
October 12, 2008 at 11:08 am

Nixon might be dead, but politics is a magnet for people who possess the same corruptible mindset. In a ruling that will surprise nobody, a committee of 4 Democrats and 8 Republicans found Sarah Palin guilty of abusing her position as Governor of Alaska in a bid to get her brother-in-law sacked.

The phrase ‘a heartbeat away’ has become so over-used that it now sounds like a shrill chiché, but in this case it’s useful to remember when considering the enormity of this ruling. What these events tell us is that John McCain believes Sarah Palin, who, like Nixon, has used the power of her office to persue petty personal grievances, possesses the competence and character to assume the Presidency. If I was an American, I’d be deeply insulted.

This report from Noam Schreiber is full of unsettling similarities between Palin and the author of Watergate: the inferiority complex, the class resentment, the deceit, treachery and vindictiveness. I don’t really agree with all the hyperventillating about this being the ‘most important election ever’, but I do know that the times are far too serious for a pernicious, superficial little hack who mutters malaprops and mangled talking points and can’t even manage the bare minimum commitment to ethics & integrity. America deserves better.

· About the author: Neil Robertson is a regular contributor to Liberal Conspiracy. A Cambridge graduate, he works for an engineering consultancy and writes from a liberal-left perspective about such emotive political subjects as (yawn) electoral reform, social issues, the maddening rightwards lurches of the Labour Party and the need to revitalise grassroots political activism. He blogs primarily at: Bleeding Heart Show.
· Other posts by Neil Robertson

· Send to:   Facebook   |   del.icio.us   | 
· Filed under: Blog , Crime , United States


13 Comments in response   ||  



at 2:33 pm on October 12, 2008
- direct link -  
1.  comment by
     Woobegone

“America deserves better.”

To be honest, even John McCain deserves a lot better. I don’t believe for a second that he wanted Palin as his VP, he’s not an idiot. Someone in the party must have convinced him that he needed a pick that would rouse the conservative Christian base because - as we saw in Wisconsin and elsewhere recently - he’s just not crazy enough for a lot of them. He’s too sensible. And he has too much integrity to pretend otherwise (although not enough to prevent him picking Palin.)

at 3:48 pm on October 12, 2008
- direct link -  
2.  comment by
     Tom

I have just finished reading the independent investigator’s report and, frankly, Palin has been convicted on a technicality.

All she appears to have done is to fail to restrain her husband from approaching and lobbying public officials to get a State Trooper fired.

Since Todd Palin can claim First Amendment rights to free speech just like everyone else, it’s hard to see why Governor Palin should be expected to rein her husband in.

And here’s where the technicality comes in - Palin has been found guilty of preventing her husband from using her office and office phone in pursuing his private vendetta.

Big Deal. Hardly a Watergate-scale offence.

Given that the said State Trooper is alleged to have been drinking on duty andto have tasered an 11-year-old boy, I’d guess most sensibe Americans would be wondering why he hadn’t been fired and quite sympathetic to Todd Palin’s attempts to remove him.

at 6:39 pm on October 12, 2008
- direct link -  
3.  comment by
     Scott Redding

Shouldn’t the parallel be Nixon and McCain … i.e. picking a governor under an ethics cloud (Agnew/Palin) as a VP running mate?

at 8:06 pm on October 12, 2008
- direct link -  
4.  comment by
     Neil

@Tom

A technicality? Well, I guess you say tomato, I say tomato. That Wooten comes out of this incident smelling like a complete prick is undeniable, but ultimately irrelevant: his actions were to be judged by a court of law or by the Alaska State Troopers’ disciplinary procedures, not by a chief executive with a grudge. Also, it wasn’t Sarah Palin’s phone and it wasn’t Sarah Palin’s office - it was the state of Alaska’s. The Governor’s aides, who were asked by Todd Palin to do his bidding, were also paid by the state of Alaska and he used them all to pursue something which, if he’d been successful, would’ve been to his and his wife’s personal benefit. According to Alaska’s ethics laws, this is a violation of public trust.

Of course this isn’t Watergate; the stakes are smaller, no federal crime was committed and the Palins weren’t trying to pursue a political enemy (although the Noam Schreiber piece I link to provides evidence to suggest she’s done that in the past as well). But politicians are judged on their record and when you’ve been found guilty of violating ethics in your last job, there’s going to be a fear that you’ll do the same in your next job. If President/Vice President Palin knew a US marine who she thought was a real ass, would she then go to the Secretary of Defense and insist he was fired? And if the Secretary couldn’t/wouldn’t sack the officer in question, would he then be out of a job? Would any of that be acceptable? For me, the fact we’re even asking these questions disqualifies Palin as a responsible candidate.

at 8:11 pm on October 12, 2008
- direct link -  
5.  comment by
     Neil

Scott,

The analogy was based on what their actions reveal about their characters, rather than strict a strict historical comparison. By that measure, there’s quite a big difference between McCain’s character (even when you consider how much he’s shamed himself in this election) and Nixon’s. That said, I reserve the right to alter that opinion just in case this election gets even nastier than it is already.

at 8:40 am on October 13, 2008
- direct link -  
6.  comment by
     Scott Redding
at 10:20 am on October 13, 2008
- direct link -  
7.  comment by
     Tom

@ Nell

You make a good case against Todd Palin. Sure he pursued a personal vendetta. As is his right as a free citizen. What did Sarah Palin do wrong…. beyond turn a blind eye to her husband using her (sorry, the State of Alaska’s) phone?

at 11:26 am on October 13, 2008
- direct link -  
8.  comment by
     Neil

Well, Tom, if you subscribe to the idea that Todd Palin’s actions were solely those of a private citizen and are no reflection on her wife’s performance as the Governor of Alaska, then it’s entirely coherent to argue that she’s personally innocent of any wrongdoing. I don’t, and the reason I don’t is that your average private citizen/‘Joe sixpack’ wouldn’t have been able to get the ear of the Public Safety Commissioner, wouldn’t he have been able to get the Governor’s aides to follow-up on his requests, wouldn’t have been able to get the Governor herself to send a number of emails mentioning the matter, and wouldn’t have been able to get the Commissioner removed because, in part, he wasn’t willing to play along. In each of these instances the actions of Todd Palin were inextricably linked with the office of the Governor of Alaska, and if she didn’t want that office to be tainted by the pursuit of vengeance then she could and should have intervened. This was a decisive factor in the (overwhelmingly Republican) commission’s ruling and seems to be the consensus opinion in the media/commentariat.

There’s several ways of looking at it, I suppose. In any case, this is only of real consequence if John McCain gets elected, and right now I suspect the only white house Sarah Palin will be entering come Inauguration Day will be the Alaska Governor’s Mansion.

at 12:28 pm on October 13, 2008
- direct link -  
9.  comment by
     Tom

@ Nell

this is only of real consequence if John McCain gets elected, and right now I suspect the only white house Sarah Palin will be entering come Inauguration Day will be the Alaska Governor’s Mansion.

Don’t count your chickens. By the time 3 to 4 million fraudulent ACORN-registered voters have been disqualified, the electoral math could be looking very different.

at 12:44 pm on October 13, 2008
- direct link -  
10.  comment by
     Neil

“Don’t count your chickens. By the time 3 to 4 million fraudulent ACORN-registered voters have been disqualified, the electoral math could be looking very different.”

Ah, touche! I can assure you, Tom, that I’m not counting my chickens just yet. A chronic case of the jitters is something of a family tradition…

at 1:02 pm on October 13, 2008
- direct link -  
11.  comment by
     BenSix

Sarah Palin:

“Well, I’m very very pleased to be cleared of any legal wrongdoing … any hint of any kind of unethical activity there.”

Report:

Palin abused her power by violating Alaska Statute 39.51.110(a) of the Alaska Executive Branch Ethics Act.

at 1:03 pm on October 13, 2008
- direct link -  
12.  comment by
     BenSix
at 8:18 pm on October 13, 2008
- direct link -  
13.  comment by
     thomas

Can I mention Bretton Woods?

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.

Liberal Conspiracy is the UK's most popular left-of-centre politics blog. Our aim is to re-vitalise the liberal-left through discussion and action. More about us here.

You can read articles through the front page, via Twitter or rss feeds.
Recent articles across Liberal Conspiracy
HERE AND THERE
Featured blogs

Conor Foley

Why listen to Nick Cohen?


Sunny Hundal

Blogging and sleaze


Exclusive

Policy Exchange sorry!



Recently popular
European Elections live blog
(193 replies)

The left needs to confront the root causes of BNP support
(182 replies)

I'm taking a test tonight
(154 replies)

The BNP is definitely far-right
(132 replies)

Melanie Phillips: the thick or nasty dilemma
(112 replies)

Latest comments
» tim f posted on Sarah Palin resigns! (video)

» LIberal Icon posted on Those FibDems...

» Adam Bienkov posted on Sarah Palin resigns! (video)

» redpesto posted on Sarah Palin resigns! (video)

» Denim Justice posted on Sarah Palin resigns! (video)

» Denim Justice posted on Sarah Palin resigns! (video)

» Tim Ireland posted on Sarah Palin resigns! (video)

» James posted on Sarah Palin resigns! (video)

» Sunny Hundal posted on Sarah Palin resigns! (video)

» andy gilmour posted on Sarah Palin resigns! (video)

» Sunny Hundal posted on Sarah Palin resigns! (video)

» Denim Justice posted on Sarah Palin resigns! (video)

» Denim Justice posted on Sarah Palin resigns! (video)

» Jim Jay posted on Sarah Palin resigns! (video)

» Denim Justice posted on Sarah Palin resigns! (video)

  Last 50 // Comments feed