The Scum at the Top
Commentary on the Rats in Washington
Where Palin Made Her Name
By Nathan Thornburgh
Time
© August 30, 2008
It's Friday night, and there have got to be 500 people
packed into the Sluice Box, a beer-soaked clapboard
honky-tonk at the Alaska State Fair — the state's biggest
event all year — just down the highway from Governor Sarah
Palin's hometown of Wasilla. The legendary Hobo Jim, Alaska's
official state balladeer, the guy who has opened sessions of
the legislature with a song, is onstage, working blue.
"Here's to the girl from the great Northwest," he sings,
"with tits as hard as a hornet's nest." The crowd whistles
its approval.
For the record, he's not singing about Palin, though the
curvature and comeliness of McCain's surprise vice-presidential
nominee pick are brought up by just about everyone here, man
and woman, in a way that would make lower-48 liberals and
feminists cringe. Palin-friendly talk show hosts gush how
she'll wow 'em with her toughness — and her legs. State fair
t-shirt vendor Kevin Beagley says he remembers one particular
customer last year who bought a few t-shirts that said
"Alaska: The Coldest State with the Hottest Governor".
The buyer? Palin's own father, Chuck Heath.
Hobo Jim, with his old cowboy hat and very new John McCain
sticker on his guitar, has the crowd dancing and drinking
now.
He plays a Patsy Cline cover. They cheer. He gives shout-outs
to the military, then to the great Alaska Railroad. They
cheer. He plays the Star-Spangled Banner. They cheer.
Then he takes a set break so everyone can step outside to
smoke and watch the fireworks pop off above the adjacent
field. When the finale comes, a burst of greens sizzlers,
they cheer.
Back inside: "How many of you've seen the Discovery Channel
Deadliest Catch? Ice Road Truckers?" Cheer. "We're getting
famous up here!" Huge cheer.
"And now our governor's going to be Vice President!" Roar.
That's how it was throughout the State Fair on Friday. The
news of Palin's selection is an intoxicating mix for the
people here: pride in a hometown hero, good news (finally!)
for a scandal-racked Alaska, and, for this deeply red part
of the state, relief that the Republican Presidential ticket
just got a lot more conservative than it was.
No wonder T-shirts saying Go Sarah! started sprouting up by
mid-afternoon. Beagley's own homemade batch of 150 McCain/Palin
t-shirts arrived at 2 p.m. and were sold out within the hour,
leaving Palin fans sifting in vain through piles of shirts
that say Grim Reefer and Chicks Dig Me. In town, businesses
have been putting up exuberant messages of support, as if
Sarah! was once again on the high school basketball team,
headed off to state finals.
Across the row from the State Fair livestock pavilion — with
its champion pigs, giant cabbage and 900-lb. pumpkins — Eddie
Grasser mans an NRA booth. Palin is a lifetime NRA member — a
demographic that has not been particularly high on John
McCain — and Grasser couldn't be more excited about the
governor he calls Sarah. Like Grasser, everyone here seems
to be on a first name basis with their politicians. "It's
just one of those things about Alaska politics," says Grasser.
So Governor Palin is Sarah, the irascible (and currently
indicted) Senator Stevens is Uncle Ted, and even Representative
Young, that venal pork-barreler whom few should admit to being
friendly with, is Don.
The Palins certainly seem to fit into Wasilla, which has
just over 7,000 inhabitants. This town has grown east and
west along the railroad, becoming the fastest-growing
community in the state. Many credit Palin with helping that
expansion, though critics say it is a textbook case of
unchecked suburban sprawl. As mayor, she pushed property
taxes down to miniscule amounts, and the low 2.5% sales tax
has enticed big box retailers like WalMart and Target to
come in.
The Palin family lives on Lake Lucille on the western end
of town — she's always maintained her residence here, even
though the Capitol is a long flight away in Juneau. It's a
perfectly Alaskan lake: still waters ringed by evergreens
and saw-toothed peaks, staged beneath a wolf-colored sky.
You can just make out Palin's house a stone's throw from the
public launch at the Best Western Hotel, by the red and white
floatplane on the small dock out front (the governor's husband
is a pilot in addition to being an oil worker, commercial
fisherman, prior Iron Dog snowmobile endurance race winner,
and self-anointed "First Dude").
Normal small-town life for the First Dude and his wife is
over. Even as Governor, Palin was still spotted at the market,
driving her SUV around town, or worshiping at the
nondenominational Wasilla Bible Church. On Friday afternoon,
I was able to just pick up the phone and call Palin's parents,
who live in town. They had just heard the news Friday morning
themselves; they had been out caribou hunting and gold mining —
how Alaska is that? — so there wasn't any advance warning for
them. Her mother Sally told me this before remembering that
she's not allowed to talk to reporters now, that they've been
told that they have to learn about the new protocol. She seems
genuinely sorry about this. "We're very, very proud of her,"
she told me before hanging up.
And when Marty and Cheryl Metiva, a power couple in town
(he's on city council, running for mayor, and she leads the
Chamber of Commerce), take me up the Palin's driveway to
look at the house, we are met by police officers in two Wasilla
patrol cars, who then spend a while copying down our drivers
license information. "We're on watch now, you bet," one of
the officers said with a smile.
The governor's house is actually somewhat modest: a two-story
wood shingled building with a couple hundred meters of road
leading up to it. There are a few aging trucks parked on the
grass alongside the road, alongside a couple trailers and a
shack. There's a portable basketball hoop in the driveway.
You can tell it's the governor's home because they've tacked
a moose antler with PALIN painted on it to a tree out front.
It's a picture-perfect Alaskan family home. Palin, who hunts,
fishes, and says her favorite food is moose, fits into this
community snugly, in a way that many carpet-bagging national
politicians can only dream of. And her friends here think the
rest of America will fall for her just they way they have.
But Alaska is a deeply ... different state. It's more
beautiful, more conservative, slightly rougher, though
with a protection of privacy that will be hard for her to
maintain in the spotlight. Her views, from opposing abortion
even in cases of incest or rape to drilling in ANWR, are just
more palatable here than in much of the lower 48.
Back at the State Fair, Hobo Jim finishes and starts signing
CD's. "Sarah's awesome," he tells me. "We love her here."
The question is, will enough voters in the lower 48 feel
the same way?
Find this article at:
http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1837713,00.html
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Last Modified:
October 21, 2008