
Covering the growing buzz that Sarah Palin might mount a 2012
presidential campaign, the morning shows on Friday repeated liberal
talking points proclaiming that it would be a disaster. Good Morning
America's George Stephanopoulos insisted that the White House looks "at Newt Gingrich, Sarah Palin and Michele Bachmann as, basically, re-election insurance." CBS's Chris Wragge hinted that Palin might become a "distraction."
On NBC's Today, David Gregory appeared and lectured that "[Palin's] not
seen as a general election candidate." He added that "she's still
relevant. She's still using Facebook. She's still opining. She's still
attacking the President, but she's lost a little bit of that sting in
her punch."
Co-host
Meredith Vieira gloomily wondered, "But David, she also has higher
negatives than any other GOP candidate. So how viable would her
candidacy even be?"
Appearing as a guest on GMA, political analyst Matt Dowd was a little
more optimistic about Palin's chances against Obama. He suggested the
White House may be "celebrating" the idea of the former Alaska governor
running, but he allowed "...Though I think Sarah Palin would help him
get reelected, it's no slam-dunk if the economy isn't doing well, come a
year from now."
Over on CBS's Early Show, correspondent Jan Crawford was more positive,
pointing out that Palin raises the "energy," she explained, "But I've
got to say, a lot of Republicans think that the bus tour is win-win for
the party. Palin can get out there and talk about the issues, really
take on President Obama, and get conservatives fired up about this
election."
However, co-host Wragge sounded a similar, defeatist theme:
"Well, we know she galvanizes Republicans, but she also does not have a
high favorability rating in the national electorate. If she can't beat
the incumbent, President Obama, right now, does she become more of a
distraction for the Republican Party?"
For more on this, see a post by the MRC's Brent Baker on how the evening newscasts covered Palin.
A transcript of the David Gregory segment, which aired at 7:07am EDT, follows: