phrases - What does “pull sb. out of the hat” mean?


I found the phrase, “pull her out of the hat” in the following sentence of the quote from Frank Bailey, the most relied-upon former aide of Ms.Sarah Palin, whose memoir, “Blind Allegiance to Sarah Palin: A Memoir of Our Tumultuous Years” is due out on Tuesday this week.


“I doubt if there's anything new in this book, just more detailed views of the gruesome story of her rise and fall. What would really be interesting is an account of who made the decisions in the GOP to pull her out of the hat. It certainly wasn't McCain.”


I don’t find the idiom, “pull one out of the hat” in any dictionaries at hand. Does it mean to “pick up” (Sarah Palinfor (vice) presidential candidate) or “remove her from (the candidate seat)? Can somebody teach me the meaning of this phrase?



Answer



To pull something (rare: somebody) out of a hat is a reference to magic. It is an idiom:



Produce suddenly and surprisingly, as if by magic. For example, We can't just pull the answers out of a hat . This expression alludes to the magician's trick of pulling some unexpected object out of a hat. That object is often a rabbit, and the expression pull a rabbit out of a hat is often used to mean "get magical results," as in "Much as I would like to be able to pull a rabbit out of a hat, I doubt if I can find further funding for this project."



In the context you provide, it seems like the decision to appoint Palin as a candidate was a surprising, sudden, and (possibly) random decision of the GOP. It is not said in this case with any positive connotation.


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