Since Sarah Palin was announced as John McCain’s vice president, has she uttered one word in public that wasn’t scripted by the McCain campaign?
Pathetic.
Since Sarah Palin was announced as John McCain’s vice president, has she uttered one word in public that wasn’t scripted by the McCain campaign?
Pathetic.
Ariana has some excellent advice for the Obama campaign – ignore Sarah Palin and focus your energies on John McCain and his ties to George W. Bush:
Listening to McCain, you’d think it was the Democrats who occupied the White House the last seven-plus years and it was time to throw the bastards out.
Given that 82 percent of voters believe we are heading in the wrong direction, it’s a logical position to take. But for the American people to buy into the notion that McCain, who has raced to Bush’s side on tax cuts, on offshore drilling — even on torture — is this campaign’s agent of change, it’s going to require an incredible suspension of disbelief. Or a serious case of amnesia.
And this is clearly McCain’s campaign strategy: inducing amnesia about the past and confusion about the future, attempting to hoodwink the American people about what he has become. Which is where Sarah Palin comes in. As a major distraction. In the effort to divert attention from the matter at hand — McCain’s embrace of all things Bush — Palin is the perfect storm.
Americans love the outsider plucked from obscurity. And Palin provides bucketfuls of the new and exciting. As long as voters and the media are caught up in the latest installment of As Sarah Turns or the Alaska version of All My Children, they aren’t paying attention to the lack of solutions McCain is offering to the serious crises that face us.
Forget worrying about the economy or health care or the housing crisis — think about how many people live in Wasilla, whether Bristol and Levi will live happily ever after, and if Sarah and her “First Dude” really want Alaska to secede from the union.
This is why the McCain campaign wants Palin front and center — did you notice how much time McCain spent during the speech praising Palin and how quickly the celebratory post-speech music shifted from “Raisin’ McCain” to “Barracuda”?
And it’s why Democrats need to ignore Palin, and keep the focus on reminding voters about the stark contrast between an Obama and a McCain administration. It’s tempting to prime the Palin attack pump. But Obama and the Democrats do so at their own peril.
John McCain wants to distance himself from Bush, cloud the huge policy differences between him and Obama, and hope his compelling life story carries the day. Obama’s job is to make sure he doesn’t get away with it. Forgetting Sarah Palin is a good place to start.
The Obama campaign has already figured this out. They are attacking McCain and the GOP for ignoring the problems of health care, jobs etc. You don’t hear them mentioning Sarah Palin.
Also, Hillary is going to start campaigning with a stop in Florida on Monday, and her spokesperson has made it clear she will not be attacking Sarah Palin but instead will focus her attacks on John McCain. Furthermore, the Obama camapign has not asked her to go after Palin.
Hillary Rodham Clinton has no intention of becoming a Sarah Palin attack dog — but has no qualms going after John McCain, people close to the former first lady say.
“She’s not the answer when it comes to winning conservative women — she never was — and we’re not going to be anybody’s attack dog against Sarah Palin,” said a Clinton insider. “To be fair to Obama’s people, they haven’t asked us to do that.”
This makes sense. John McCain has embraced the Bush economic policies, and that’s what this election needs to be about for Obama to win.
When the Troopergate investigation started, Sarah Palin proclaimed her innocence and told the legislature to investigate and “hold me accountable.”
Now she’s stonewalling the investigation, and the Anchorage Daily News is going after her:
Gov. Sarah Palin is taking the wrong approach to Troopergate. She should be practicing the open and transparent, ethical and accountable government she promised when running for governor and boasts about now that she’s on the national stage.
Instead, Gov. Palin has begun stonewalling the Legislature’s attempt to get the bottom of allegations that she, her family or staff violated ethical or state personnel rules.
As a result, the Troopergate allegations hang over Palin’s future and cloud her candidacy for vice president.
The allegations are that she, her family or administration improperly pressured then-Public Safety Commissioner Walt Monegan to fire Gov. Palin’s ex-brother-in-law, state trooper Mike Wooten, who had been in the middle of a custody dispute with Palin’s sister.
In July, when legislators started talking about conducting an investigation, Palin denied any wrongdoing and said she welcomed an investigation.
“Hold me accountable,” she said.
The Legislature took her up on that offer. But this week, she basically told the Legislature, “Never mind.”
Palin’s lawyer has asked the Legislature to drop its investigation. He had the governor file an ethics complaint against herself, in a bid to turn the entire matter over to the state Personnel Board, which would hire an independent investigator.
This is not an open and transparent attempt to establish Gov. Palin’s accountability. It is an attempt to drag out the investigation until after voters decide the fate of her vice-presidential bid.
Instead, Gov. Palin should honor her pledge to cooperate with the Legislature’s investigation, conducted by former state prosecutor Steve Branchflower.
Maybe this is why she’s afraid to talk to the media.
This is a good move.
Barack Obama did O’Reilly’s show tonight (more of the interview will be shown over the next couple of days), he’ll be on This Week on Sunday morning and then he’ll be on Countdown on Monday night.
This gets him back in the news, but it also provides a stark contrast to the McCain/Palin ticket. John McCain is avoiding the national media and only scheduling interviews with local outlets this weekend. Earlier this week he cancelled an interview with Larry King. You know you’re scared to discuss Sarah Palin when you’re afraid of Larry King.
As for Sarah Palin, it may be a while before we hear her interviewed by anyone. Newsweek’s Howard Fineman reported tonight on MSNBC that after tomorrow the McCain campaign will be sending her back to Alaska at least until the middle of next week so she can spend some time studying briefing books on domestic and forign affairs issues. That’s right, Ms. Governor needs to be spoon-fed what she’s allowed to say before they let her talk to anyone in the media.
This is pathetic, but we should not be surprised. She certainly understands her state issues and she has very clear, extremist views on social policy such as abortion and teaching creationism, but she has never had to formulate, express or defend any positions on foreign policy or national domestic policy.
Sarah Palin’s speech drew a huge audience, with numbers just below Obama’s speech last Thursday.
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin’s highly anticipated speech at the Republican National Convention on Wednesday night nearly matched the record-setting numbers of Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama.
Palin pulled in 37.2 million viewers across broadcast and cable networks, according to Nielsen Media Research.
That’s 55% higher than Day 3 of the DNC, when her Democratic counterpart, Joe Biden, and President Clinton took the stage (24 million).
It’s also up a sharp 99% from the Republican convention’s third day in 2004 (18.7 million). In fact, it came close to upsetting Obama’s historic address on Thursday — the most-watched convention speech in history (38.4 million viewers).
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