Sarah Palin: Good Mother? Bad Mother?

Is Sarah Palin a good mother? When you put it as a direct question,…

by Lianne George on Tuesday, September 16, 2008 8:00pm - 46 Comments

 

Is Sarah Palin a good mother? When you put it as a direct question, her supporters are quick to cry, Sexiste! We don’t put Joe Biden’s performance as a father under the microscope, they say, so why should Palin be subject to scrutiny just because she’s a woman? But the reason the motherhood questions keep resurfacing is not that Palin’s a woman. It’s that she’s a strident family-values politician, and observers can’t help but wonder whether she’s exploiting her own family’s deeply private matters to lend her campaign even more family-values credibility. Why else did Levi Johnston, the 18-year-old hockey-loving father of her pregnant 17-year-old daughter’s baby, suddenly find himself front-and-center at the Republican National Convention?

Weighing in on the Levi Johnston matter this week, even Bonnie Fuller, the inventor of the modern celebrity tabloid, was shocked by Palin’s poor taste. In an online face-off against political commentator Dick Morris for Page Six magazine (yes, that Page Six), Fuller scolds the Alaska governor for thrusting her daughter, Bristol, and baby daddy Johnston into the spotlight. Fuller writes:

“Becoming a teen parent is traumatic enough without having millions debate your effect on the McCain-Palin ‘family values’ platform. Normally, Levi and Bristol would be able to privately decide how best to deal with their circumstances. By thrusting them onto the national stage, Sarah Palin robbed them of that option.” 

Morris, looking at it through a decidedly more strategic lens, thinks it was shrewd as hell of the McCain-Palin camp to feature Johnston:

“Levi is about to become a member of Sarah Palin’s family. It also sends a signal to all teens who get pregnant out of wedlock that they should marry and that the man should assume responsibility.”

As Barack Obama told the press when asked about the matter, “people’s families are off limits.” And yet there is no doubt that Palin’s decision to include Levi in the GOP festivities was a carefully considered one. She wanted the public to know that her daughter and Johnston were “doing the right thing.” And in this way, her daughter has become an iconic part of her platform. As have all of her children, featured prominently in magazines in the weeks since.

There are key parallels between Palin the Mother and Palin the Politician—in both roles, she’s seen either as a tough broad with strong American values, or a narcissistic bully. In this way, her performance as a mother has become inextricably intertwined with her feasibility as a candidate. 

And so the mother questions continue: 

Is she a good mother for publicly supporting her daughter and encouraging her to take responsibility, or a bad mother for prioritizing campaign optics over Bristol and Levi’s privacy? Is she a good mother for encouraging her daughter to marry the father of her child, or a bad mother for depriving her of options? Would a good mother take a job, even a really great job, even if it mean, as the Globe and Mail‘s Margaret Wente put it in a recent column, “sacrificing the privacy of her 17-year-old daughter to the global media machine”?

What do people make of the whole thing?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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  • AzMother

    “Levi is about to become a member of Sarah Palin’s family. It also sends a signal to all teens who get pregnant out of wedlock that they should marry and that the man should assume responsibility.”

    Is this a question as to whether the father should have responsibility and have their life altered? I’m grateful for the message that a young boy is to stand by a young lady and become a man in the process. This will give the young couple an opportunity to grow together and take care of the child. This effects everyone! Do not be ignorant to the cause and effect of this. There should not be intimacy if there is no intention of facing the consequences. Respect needs to come into play.

  • http://carnewsandviews.com jwl

    “But the reason the motherhood questions keep resurfacing is not that Palin’s a woman. It’s that she’s a strident family-values politician”

    Obama and the Dems get a significant percentage of their cash from teacher unions and Obama is making public education a major part of his campaign. But I have yet to see an article that discusses the fact that his daughters go to a private school or looked into their grades to see if they have gone down since they haven’t seen their dad in 18 months.

    According to you, they should be fair game because Obama and his family have appeared in print and tv interviews at least 4 times this year and he paraded them around the stage after his Denver speech.

    “Margaret Wente put it in a recent column, “sacrificing the privacy of her 17-year-old daughter to the global media machine”?

    Maybe Palin expected to be treated like the other candidates, all of whose children are off limits, and wasn’t expecting the msm to behave like the raving misogynists they have revealed themselves to be.

    Peggy is a great example. Does Wente ever write articles about what bad mothers women are who go to work? No she doesn’t. Women and work/home balance only became an issue for the ‘feminists’ when a woman not exactly like them has a chance at the White House.

    And how do you know that it wasn’t Bristol’s idea to have Levi at the convention. Are you privy to their private conservations?

    The only way to know if she’s a good mother is to see how her children behave in their adult years.

  • Blues Clair

    Children are off limits folks. Just ask John McCain… and why he thinks Chelsea Clinton is so ugly.

  • Kim

    I can’t say if Sara Palin in a good mother or a bad mother but I do know it is impossible to be a good Vice President and a good mother at the same time. They are both demanding and time consuming jobs, and it is impossible to do both well. If she becomes VP, one will suffer. Call me old fashioned, but I would never have put my daughter out there like that, nor would I think I can be VP with a special needs baby.

    What really bothers me though, and I haven’t heard anybody else complain about it is her education. She has a four year degree in Journalism??? No business, no accounting, no economics, no law. She will be unable to interpret the current financial situation, let alone make decisions regarding the crisis we are in, and John McCain is old, and possible senile after the choice of Sara.

    The main difference between the right and the left as evidenced by Sara Palin is the right pretends to be more moral and righteous, and the left is just more honest and tolerant.

  • Jarrid

    What an attractive family!

    Barack Obama’s comment that Palin’s family should be off-limits is the correct one. Unfortunately his supporters and his media cheerleaders won’t leave them alone though.

    Andrew Sullivan of the Atlantic has outdone himself for outrageousness in this regard. It’s like the beggeting of children is a strange, foreign and mysterious event to him.

    But “she’s a strident family-values politician”, after all what business does she having allowing a downs syndrome child see the light of day. She obviously deserves this full-blown media scrutiny for bucking the modern trend of eugenic abortion. Our enlightened and civil society cannot remain silent in the face of such “strident” behaviour. What an affront!

  • mt

    “And in this way, her daughter has become an iconic part of her platform.”

    Isn’t it iconic? Don’t you think? A little too iconic. Yeah I really do think.

    Gimme a break.

    There’s no excuse for cruel commentary.

  • http://cork2toronto.blogspot.com Mark Dowling

    @Lianne – an odd start to your column. Joe Biden’s (laudable) performance as a father *is* an integral part of his life history (taking the oath in the hospital, Amtrak home every day etc.) and is very much publicly discussed.

    “It’s like the beggeting (sic) of children is a strange, foreign and mysterious event to him.”

    Gay people can and do have kids Jarrid. Oh I’m sorry, did you want that to stay as subtext?

    @kim – you’re old fashioned. No charge.

  • Gerry

    The women of America need to be reminded ,what the overwhelming attitude and opinion of woman , by the majority of men in the Republican Party is, which Sarah Palins nomination has hid from veiw.

    It was clearly expressed in public at the GOP Convention in 1992 by Pat Robertson. He declared out loud at the Republican GOP convention

    “Feminism encourages women to leave their husbands, kill their children, practice witchcraft, destroy capitalism and become lesbians”

    Straight out of the mouth of Pat Robertson.

    and then the Republican Party expects Sarah Palin to con the women of America into voting for the Republicans.

    Keep dreaming Sarah and GOP.

  • gentry

    Sarah Palin is pleased that her daughter made the decision—on her own—to keep the baby. But Sarah Palin doesn’t believe that other girls should be able to make their own decisions. Sarah Palin believes abortion should be illegal in every instance—including rape and incest. So Bristol Palin is being celebrated for making a choice that Sarah Palin would like to take away from all other American women. Apparently, today’s GOP believes that choice is a special right reserved for the wayward daughters of Republican elected officials.

    Another special right: When it comes to respecting *your* family’s privacy, Palin and the GOP see no need. They want to micromanage the most intimate aspects of your private life. And if their own kids fail to live up to the standards that Palin and the GOP seek to impose on your family, well, that’s a private matter between the Palins, their daughter, their God, and the thousands of screaming imbeciles in elephant hats waving McCain/Palin signs on the floor of the Republican National Convention.

  • Jarrid

    Lianne: better questions,

    What is it about Sarah Palin that makes the left totally unhinged?

    Why is it that the media has made Sarah Palin’s qualifications for VP such a major public issue while Barack “I’ve written two books about myself but accomplished little else” Obama’s qualifications for the presidency are taken for granted?

  • Ti-Guy

    What is it about Sarah Palin that makes the left totally unhinged?

    Typical defamation by trolls like Jarrid.

  • sbt

    “She will be unable to interpret the current financial situation, let alone make decisions regarding the crisis we are in, and John McCain is old, and possible senile after the choice of Sara.”

    I don’t think Obama, Biden and McCain are exactly financial gurus who understand the intricacies of the ABCP market or what policies will help prevent a repeat of the credit crisis in the future without placing an undue burden on economic growth. There’s plenty of valid criticisms of Palin to bring up. Her education isn’t really one of them.

  • Steve M

    “No business, no accounting, no economics, no law.”

    Obama has a law degree, so even he’s only 1 for 4. And Palin has actually run a business, not to mention two levels of government.

  • Steve M

    Not trying to be troll-y here, I swear, but does anyone know where I can find figures (or even estimates) on the percentage of abortions in the U.S. or Canada that are attributed to rape and/or incest. I can’t help but feel that this is a red herring.

  • gentry

    “And Palin has actually run a business, not to mention two levels of government.”

    LMAO, she’s run a business. Don’t forget her extensive European experience – a refueling trip at Shannon airport en route to Kuwait!

  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=adtJfM--TJU SUZANNE

    Regarding Margaret Wente’s comment about Bristol Palin’s privacy…

    How do we know that Bristol Palin is not okay with this? Maybe she knows all the pitfalls of being in the limelight and is accepting of it?

    Has anyone asked?

    And Sarah Palin wants to “take away the right” to discriminate against unborn children. She believes in real equality.

    Not that fake kind peddled by feminists.

  • Steve M

    Gentry,

    Hey, She and her husband ran a commercial fishing business. I didn’t say she was Steve Jobs.

  • gentry

    Nope but you implied that her experience running a small business somehow qualifies her for the job she’s gunning for.

    The GOP seems intent on erasing all sense of proportion. Yes, being a mayor is great, but for f–k’s sake, its’ not the same being the mayor of Wasilla and the mayor of New York. It’s not the same being governor of Alaska and governor of California. It’s not the same attending North Idaho College and attending Harvard.

    It’s a completely different story whether you think such things matter. Arnold Schwarzenegger has no degrees that I know of, yet he displays a grasp and command of policy that’s simply astonishing. But those are not the arguments the GOP is making, because..well, they can’t be made. If Sarah Palin could display insight that belies her experience, I doubt you’d be hearing very much about it.

  • Anne Kingston

    Re Joe Bidden: Yes, his sacrifices as a father following the tragic death of his wife are a big part of his personal mythology, and were amply milked at the Democratic convention where he was introduced by his son. The difference is the there was–and is–no discussion about his being a “neglectful” or “bad” father for choosing a demanding political career that took him away from his young children. Curious, that.

  • Steve M

    I think the Obama camp started the proportion erasing ball rolling long ago with all the “community organizer” talk, which is a noble pursuit but a very vague job description. That could mean MLK Jr. or it could mean the head of the PTA.

    Is Palin underqualified? Probably.
    Is Obama underqualified? Probably.
    Who’s more unqualified? Depends who you ask.

    But the kicker is Palin’s not running for President.

    Voting Democrat means 100% chance of an inexperienced person in the Oval Office.
    Voting Republican means only a 25% (or whatever the actuary tables say) chance of an inexperienced person as president.

  • Steve M

    The 25% is just an estimate of the odds McCain will die within the next 4 years, but the percentage drops further if Palin is a quick study and puts her time as VP to good use. Maybe McCain only has to make it 2-3 years?

  • gentry

    Actually, voting Republican means a 100% chance of a senile person as president, which, on balance, seems much worse than an inexperienced president.

  • Steve M

    Senile? Because he bet on a dark horse for VP? Or are you going to produce a list of McCain’s on-the-stump flubs, that all politician make (57 States, Mr. Orbama?), as evidence.

    “A brilliant idea looks exactly like a stupid idea right up until it works” – Scott Adams

  • gentry

    You mean am I concerned that he bet on someone to be VP who failed out of a bunch of colleges before completing a journalism degree at Idaho? Yeah, kinda.

    Do I think McCain is in the early stages of dementia? Yeah , kinda. He’s never been the brightest bulb to begin with, but his age is making it kind of worse.

  • Steve M

    There’s a big difference between failing out and transferring between schools. Wiki says she started college in 1982 and got her degree in 1987. Doesn’t leave much room for repeating years.

    Whether she transferred around out of financial concerns, homesickness, indecisiveness, or because she didn’t like the programs, I don’t know.

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