
You'd lose the bet.
Andrew Jackson resigned his US Senate seat on October 14, 1825, after two years, seven months, and ten days in that six-year term. For those keeping score, that’s a dozen days fewer than Sarah Palin served of her four-year term as Governor of Alaska. He won the 1828 election for President, the first to do so in the “Democratic Party” faction he formed from the “Democratic-Republican Party”. So the next time you hear a Democrat talk about a "quitter", remind them about Old Hickory.
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Excellent point!
ReplyDeletePalin is no quitter by any stretch of the imagination. She resigned in order to take the struggle to a completely different level. I don't know how many times I saw comments such as "we need her now, and can't wait until 2012." Well, she heard that call, and now she will be leading the fight to overturn the defeatist policies of 0bama and the far left.
ReplyDeleteEven if she wasn't taking the fight to a new level, the Alinsky-ites had neutralized her effectiveness as Governor by forcing her to focus all of her time & attention on the flood of bogus "Ethics Complaints".
ReplyDeleteLike Saul said: "Force them to follow their own Rules" - Sarah is a good person, so she had no choice but to fight for her good name and, eventually, realize that this system-manipulating tactic was destroying her ability/time/attention to govern her state.
At that point, the good & true person that is Sarah Palin could ONLY step down, so that the office of the Governor could return to working for the good of her home.
...'cause that's how actual grown-ups roll.
Counterargument: Jackson was one of the worst Presidents in history.
ReplyDelete