Palin's Problem: She's Too Much Like McCain Kindred spirit running mate can't rein in candidate: Brooks By Kevin Spak Posted Sep 2, 2008 2:16 PM CDT Copied John McCain, Ariz., left, introduces his vice presidential running mate, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, at a campaign stop in Washington, Pa. Saturday, Aug. 30, 2008. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic) Sarah Palin’s inexperience and family turmoil don't concern David Brooks of the New York Times. She's a “marvelous person” who “seems to get up in the morning to root out corruption,” much like—maybe too much like—John McCain. "My worry about Palin is that she shares McCain’s primary weakness," Brooks writes, "that she has a tendency to substitute a moral philosophy for a political philosophy." McCain has shown he can be a savvy aisle-crossing policy force, but he also has “a restless, thrill-seeking personality.” For many of the issues of today, like health care or energy, he’ll need a clear-cut vision about what government should and shouldn’t do. Palin, for all her charms, doesn’t have one. “The real second fiddle job,” Brooks concludes, “is still unfilled.” Read These Next Trump doesn't use pot, but he's mulling pot-friendly policy. Hegseth admires pastors with some eyebrow-raising thoughts on women. Nutritionists and regulators are rethinking orange juice. She tried to save a chimp from the 'evil clutches of PETA.' Report an error