Sarah Palin, You Owe The Media An Apology
“I told you so” moments are pretty sweet — and thanks to Sarah Palin, now I’ve got one. Ten months to the day after her speech at the Republican National Convention, I would like for this woman to eat her words:
I’m not a member of the permanent political establishment. And I’ve learned quickly, these past few days, that if you’re not a member in good standing of the Washington elite, then some in the media consider a candidate unqualified for that reason alone.
Back then, she got a pass on the whole “for that reason alone” thing, mostly because she hadn’t done anything yet. John McCain had stunned the political establishment by naming her as his VP on the Friday morning after the DNC, and by Saturday afternoon the chattering classes were further rocked by the revelations of her daughter’s out-of-wedlock pregnancy. News started to bubble up over the next few days as the press tried to find out who this newly-announced VP nominee actually was, but certainly not with any help from the nominee herself: By Wednesday, Sept. 3rd, when Palin strode to center stage at the Republican National Convention, flanked by her sparkling extended American famiy, she still had not made herself available for any interviews or presented herself to be vetted in any way, shape or form.
Back then we didn’t know that John McCain hadn’t vetted her, either. We didn’t know about Troopergate. We didn’t know that she was completely unfamiliar with the Bush Doctrine, or the Supreme Court, newspapers. We didn’t know where she got her snazzy new wardrobe, nor how much it cost, nor who paid.
Back then we hadn’t seen Palin Meet The Press or Face The Nation, but we assumed she would, eventually. (She didn’t.) Back then we assumed she’d be interviewed by all the nightly news anchors, and cablers, in their role as Fourth Estate, kicking the tires on candidates on behalf of the voting American people. She made it to the evening news, eventually, after the McCain
campaign tried to stage-manage her into the most limited access possible, in the hopes that she’d somehow avoid making huge gaffes. (She didn’t.) She finally made it to NBC Nightly News over a month and a half after her RNC speech, weakly promising to release her medical records really, really soon. (She didn’t.) Did she promise at one point to have a nice chatty sit-down with Sean Hannity? Oh, well, that she did.
Yes, this was before she took a prank call from “President Sarkozy,” before she whipped up campaign crowds into a sorta-scary frenzy against Barack Obama; before she went rogue.
It was before she was expertly skewered by SNL, before people learned what aerial wolf hunting was, and before she tried to speak during John McCain’s concession moment. It was before the turkey-video fiasco (which effectively turned me vegetarian); before all the behind-the-scenes articles came out; before she casually posed in spandex with her arm resting even more casually on an American flag.
It was ten months ago to this day. That night, she swaggered onstage in front of the friendliest crowd ever, warmed up by Rudy Giuliani and Mike Huckabee, and blasted the media for daring to want to know who she was, what she’d done and what she stood for. Well, now we know. And it turns out that ten months ago, she was full of it.
So, Sarah Palin, you owe the media an apology. And ten months later, permit me to say:
I told you so.
Rachel Sklar is the Editor-at-Large of Mediaite. Follow her on Twitter here.
This is an opinion piece. The views expressed in this article are those of just the author.