Washington Post's King Disparages Palin as 'Simple-Minded' and 'Mediocre'
Sarah Palin “doesn't have any substance there behind her” and her
remarks at the Tea Party convention were “embarrassing at points” since
she delivered “simple, simple thoughts, very simple-mindedly expressed,” Washington Post columnist
Colby King charged on Inside Washington.
Jumbling the famous “most of the American people are mediocre. And
they have a right to be represented” quote and its source, King, the
Post's deputy editorial page editor from 2000 to 2007, applied the
“mediocre” label to Palin:
“Just as the Supreme Court nominee who
was defeated said, you know, ‘everybody needs to have a little mediocre
representation and that's what I am.’ That's what she is.”That’s a pretty mediocre recollection of the quote which actually is
from a Senator commenting on a Supreme Court nominee, not from the
nominee. As
James Taranto recounted on OpinionJournal.com in 2002:
When President Nixon appointed G. Harrold Carswell to
the Supreme Court in 1970, critics said Carswell was mediocre. Sen.
Hruska, a Nebraska Republican, rose to the nominee's defense: “It has
been held against this nominee that he's mediocre. Well there are a lot
of mediocre judges and lawyers and people. Most of the American people
are mediocre. And they have a right to be represented on the Supreme
Court.” The elitist U.S. Senate, however, rejected Carswell by a 51-45
vote.
King’s denigration of Palin, as spouted on
Inside Washington,
a weekly show produced and aired over the weekend by Washington, DC's
ABC affiliate, but first broadcast Friday night on the local PBS
station:
Sarah Palin does one thing very well, she speaks in
cliches, but she doesn’t have any substance there behind her. I watched
her speak at the Tea Party convention, then I listened to the interview
that followed with the Tea Party chairman and it was embarrassing at
points, to the point where you just want to avert your gaze when she
starts to talk. Simple, simple thoughts, very simple-mindedly
expressed.
Look, I understand she’s got a following, but just as
the Supreme Court nominee who was defeated said, you know, ‘everybody
needs to have a little mediocre representation and that’s what I am.’
That’s what she is.
— Brent Baker is Vice President for Research and Publications at the Media Research Center