Christine O'Donnell: Why she's no Sarah Palin
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| Washington
From the moment Christine O鈥橠onnell burst onto the political stage, she has drawn comparisons with Sarah Palin. The unsuccessful 2010 Republican nominee for Senate in Delaware, like the GOP鈥檚 2008 vice presidential nominee, is a young, female, telegenic, tea party conservative, who knows how to connect with voters.
During the campaign, Ms. O鈥橠onnell seemed to play up the physical similarities, with her Palin-esque clothes, hair styles, and glasses. In restaurants, O鈥橠onnell even orders what Ms. Palin orders 鈥 or at least that鈥檚 the joke among some conservatives.
Palin duly endorsed O鈥橠onnell, right before her primary upset of Republican establishment favorite Rep. Mike Castle, adding her to her den of 鈥渕ama grizzlies.鈥
The postelection O鈥橠onnell, who lost by 17 points to New Castle County Executive Chris Coons (D), is following another Palin-like trajectory. She didn鈥檛 get a gig on Fox, but she got a book contract and she鈥檚 starting a political action committee 鈥 Christine PAC (to Palin鈥檚 Sarah PAC). Her goal is to support like-minded conservatives and stay in the political game.
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Now, O鈥橠onnell is fighting back against a reported federal investigation into alleged improper use of campaign funds, and is claiming that her home-state 鈥減olitical establishment鈥 is out to get her.
鈥淲e were informed that the Delaware political establishment was going to use every resource available to them to, you know 鈥 including launching phony investigations, making false accusations, and tying me up with lawsuits to make sure that I can't move forward politically 鈥 to try to stop this movement in its tracks,鈥 O鈥橠onnell said Thursday on ABC鈥檚 鈥Good Morning America.鈥
O鈥橠onnell鈥檚 charge echoes one of Palin鈥檚 rationales when she resigned the Alaska governorship midway through her term 鈥 that she had had it with ethics probes that hindered her ability to govern.
But O鈥橠onnell, in fact, is no Palin. The former Alaska governor had held other political posts in the state before winning its highest executive office. O鈥橠onnell has run for office three times 鈥 each time for the US Senate 鈥 and never won. Her victory against Congressman Castle was indeed a stunning upset, but it took place in a low-turnout primary with a right-place, right-time anti-establishment wind at her back.
The unmarried O鈥橠onnell also doesn鈥檛 have the life experience of Palin, who is married and has five children, including one with special needs. O鈥橠onnell鈥檚 sketchy employment, educational, and financial histories may make her 鈥渞elatable鈥 to some voters, especially in tough economic times, but at a certain point, she鈥檚 just plain hard to pin down. That鈥檚 why the reported campaign finance probe may really hurt her political future 鈥 and perhaps why she鈥檚 fighting back so hard.
In discussions of the potential 2012 GOP presidential field, Palin鈥檚 name is always in the mix. Even if Republican voters are telling pollsters they鈥檇 prefer someone else as their nominee, the possibility of a Palin candidacy is taken seriously.
O鈥橠onnell isn鈥檛 in the same league. Maybe her best bet is to follow in the footsteps of another failed 2010 Senate candidate, Alvin Greene of South Carolina, the unemployed Army veteran who inexplicably won the Democratic primary. Mr. Greene is now running for the state legislature.
For now, though, O鈥橠onnell has clear staying power on cable news. Controversy around her campaign finances has no bearing on the future of the republic, but it鈥檚 news because the camera loves her, especially during the holidays, when the Obamas are on vacation and not much of anything else is going on.
O鈥橠onnell now belongs in the same breath as Paris Hilton, Bristol Palin, and the Kardashians 鈥 a celebrity, famous for being famous.
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