Baltimore Sun

Sarah Palin lost her bid for Congress, but we may not have seen the last of her

- By Jill Lawrence Jill Lawrence (Twitter: @JillDLawre­nce) is a writer, an editor and the author of “The Art of the Political Deal: How Congress Beat the Odds and Broke Through Gridlock.” This essay originally appeared in the Los Angeles Times.

When Fox News canceled Sarah Palin’s contributo­r contract in 2013, I wrote that it was “the end of an era.”

I was, of course, wrong about that. Not only did Fox give her another contract six months later, her divisive brand of insults and misreprese­ntations became the template for Donald Trump and his flock of imitators in Congress, state government­s and legislatur­es nationwide.

This year, she figured she could easily get back into the game. But Alaskans, in a state that Mr. Trump won by 10 points in 2020, threw her over.

Last Wednesday, in her first attempt to revive the political career she walked away from 13 years ago, Ms. Palin lost a special election to finish the late Don Young’s term in the House. The upset winner, Democrat Mary Peltola, is an Alaska Native and a former state legislator who advertised herself as the only pro-abortion rights candidate in the race.

The three-way matchup of Ms. Peltola, Ms. Palin and Nick Begich, another Republican in the race, will be reprised in the November general election to fill the full term for the House seat. But at least for now, Alaskans have denied Ms. Palin a national platform.

Ms. Palin shot onto the national stage as the late Sen. John McCain’s running mate in 2008, then quit her day job as Alaska governor in mid-2009 and moved on to books, reality TV and punditry. Alaskans have also moved on, possibly permanentl­y.

Ms. Palin is 58 — not exactly ancient for a politician — but Republican and formerly Republican Alaskans in recent focus groups have brushed her off as an embarrassi­ng has-been: She’s a quitter, she’s a “loon,” they want something different.

“Alaskans see her as a dilettante who comes and goes,” Glenn Wright, a political scientist at the University of Alaska-Juneau, told me in an interview.

The California and Hawaii coasts have always been extraordin­ary. But The Ritz-Carlton has a knack of making paradise even better, especially with recent upgrades to its shoreline hotels in the Golden and Aloha states.

Ivan Moore, a longtime Alaska pollster, says Ms. Palin was popular and practical as governor, but became an attack dog and “a caricature of herself ” during the McCain campaign. She resigned the governorsh­ip because “she just didn’t want to do it anymore and gave up. And that is not Alaskan behavior,” Mr. Moore told me.

His polls showed her positive rating falling to 41% in March 2010, then cratering at 29% in September 2011. This July, her positive rating sat at 31%, close to her 30.9% share of first-place votes in the special election.

Even Alaska’s new ranked choice voting system couldn’t save Ms. Palin. Voters whose first choice was Mr. Begich, who came in third, had their ballots reallocate­d to their second choice candidate. But only half of them ranked Ms. Palin second. It wasn’t enough. Mr. Trump’s endorsemen­t wasn’t enough either and may have hurt her in a ranked-choice contest that rewards broad appeal over polarizati­on. It probably didn’t help that her former in-laws recently held a fundraiser for Mr. Begich.

Ms. Palin has made polarizati­on part of her persona. During the 2008 campaign, she mocked and attacked future President Barack Obama and accused him of “palling around with terrorists.”

She later said Mr. Obama should be impeached over immigratio­n and, at a 2016 Trump rally, even connected one of her son’s arrests to Mr. Obama allegedly neglecting and disrespect­ing veterans like him.

Has Palin changed? Signs say no.

She “won” Politifact’s inaugural “Lie of the Year” title in 2009 for her viral “Pants on Fire” claim that Mr. Obama’s Affordable Care Act would set up death panels to decide whether senior citizens should get health care. Last month, she was named a “super-sharer of unreliable sources” in a New York University study of candidate Facebook pages.

As a woman in a Begich ad put it, “I get it. Sarah Palin is famous. But come on. U.S. Congress?”

Ms. Peltola will be the incumbent in the seat and the only champion of abortion access in a state that solidly favors legal abortion, wants Congress to guarantee the right to abortion nationwide and overwhelmi­ngly (80%) opposes a national ban. This is a winnable race for Democrats.

Will Ms. Palin even stick around after losing this week? Given her short attention span as governor, it’s a fair question.

 ?? MARC LESTER/AP ?? Sarah Palin joins other candidates on stage during a forum for U.S. House candidates at the Alaska Oil and Gas Associatio­n annual conference in Anchorage last Wednesday. Democrat Mary Peltola, right, won the special election.
MARC LESTER/AP Sarah Palin joins other candidates on stage during a forum for U.S. House candidates at the Alaska Oil and Gas Associatio­n annual conference in Anchorage last Wednesday. Democrat Mary Peltola, right, won the special election.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States