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A Vice Presidental candidate thread.

 
 
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 08:45 am
@BumbleBeeBoogie,
Sarah Heath Palin (born February 11, 1964) is the current Governor of Alaska, and a member of the Republican Party. She is the youngest and first female governor of Alaska. Brought to statewide attention because of her whistleblowing on ethical violations by state Republican Party leaders, she won election in 2006 by first defeating the incumbent governor in the Republican primary, then a former Democratic Alaskan governor in the general election. On August 29, the Associated Press reported that "speculation [has] moved to [Palin as a] darkhorse" pick for the vice president running mate slot by presumptive Republican nominee John McCain. The CNBC news service is now reporting that Palin will in fact be the GOP vice-presidential nominee.

She is reported to be a possible choice for the Republican Party's nomination as Vice President of the United States in the 2008 election. Formal announcement of the presumptive nominee will be made in Dayton, Ohio on August 29, 2008, by Presidential candidate John McCain.

Family and personal background

Palin was born as Sarah Louise Heath in Sandpoint, Idaho, the daughter of Charles and Sally (Sheeran) Heath.[4] Her family moved to Alaska when she was an infant. Charles Heath was a popular science teacher and coached track. The Heaths were avid outdoors enthusiasts; Sarah and her father would sometimes wake at 3 a.m. to hunt moose before school, and the family would regularly run 5k and 10k races.

Palin was the point guard and captain for the Wasilla High School Warriors, in Wasilla, Alaska, when they won the Alaska small-school basketball championship in 1982; she earned the nickname "Sarah Barracuda" because of her intense play. She played the championship game despite a stress fracture in her ankle, hitting a critical free throw in the last seconds. Palin, who was also the head of the school Fellowship of Christian Athletes, would lead the team in prayer before games.

In 1984, Palin was second-place in the Miss Alaska beauty pageant after winning the Miss Wasilla contest earlier that year, winning a scholarship to help pay her way through college. In the Wasilla pageant, she played the flute and also won Miss Congeniality.

Details of Palin's personal life have contributed to her political image. She hunts, eats moose burgers, ice fishes, rides snowmobiles, and owns a float plane. Palin holds a lifetime membership with the National Rifle Association. She admits that she used marijuana when it was legal in Alaska, but says that she did not like it.

Palin holds a bachelor's degree in journalism from the University of Idaho where she also minored in politics. She briefly worked as a sports reporter for local Anchorage television stations while also working as a commercial fisherman with her husband, Todd, her high school sweetheart. One summer when she was working on Todd's fishing boat, the boat collided with a tender while she was holding onto the railing; Palin broke several fingers. Outside the fishing season, Todd works for BP at an oil field on the North Slope and is a champion snowmobiler, winning the 2000-mile "Iron Dog" race four times. The two eloped shortly after Palin graduated college; when they learned they needed witnesses for the civil ceremony, they recruited two residents from the old-age home down the street. Todd is a Native Yup'ik Eskimo. The Palin family lives in Wasilla, about 40 miles (64 km) north of Anchorage.

On September 11, 2007, the Palins' son Track joined the Army. Eighteen years old at the time, he is the eldest of Palin's five children. Track now serves in an infantry brigade and will be deployed to Iraq in September. She also has three daughters: Bristol, 17, Willow, 13, and Piper, 7. On April 18, 2008, Palin gave birth to her second son, Trig Paxson Van Palin, who has Down syndrome. She returned to the office three days after giving birth. Palin refused to let the results of prenatal genetic testing change her decision to have the baby. "I'm looking at him right now, and I see perfection," Palin said. "Yeah, he has an extra chromosome. I keep thinking, in our world, what is normal and what is perfect?"

Pre-gubernatorial political experience

Palin served two terms on the Wasilla City Council from 1992 to 1996. In 1996, she challenged the incumbent mayor, criticizing wasteful spending and high taxes. The ex-mayor and sheriff tried to organize a recall campaign, but failed. Palin kept her campaign promises, reducing her own salary, as well as reducing property taxes 60%. She ran for reelection against the former mayor in 1999, winning by an even larger margin. Palin was also elected president of the Alaska Conference of Mayors.

In 2002, Palin made an unsuccessful bid for Lieutenant Governor, coming in second to Loren Leman in a four-way race. After Frank Murkowski resigned from his long-held U.S. Senate seat in mid-term to become governor, Palin interviewed to be his possible successor. Instead, Murkowski appointed his daughter, then-Alaska State Representative Lisa Murkowski.

Governor Murkowski appointed Palin Ethics Commissioner of the Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission, where she served from 2003 to 2004 until resigning in protest over what she called the "lack of ethics" of fellow Alaskan Republican leaders, who ignored her whistleblowing complaints of legal violations and conflicts of interest. After she resigned, she exposed the state Republican party's chairman, Randy Ruedrich, one of her fellow Oil & Gas commissioners, who was accused of doing work for the party on public time, and supplying a lobbyist with a sensitive e-mail. Palin filed formal complaints against both Ruedrich and former Alaska Attorney General Gregg Renkes, who both resigned; Ruedrich paid a record $12,000 fine.

Governorship

Governor Palin visits a wounded soldier in Landstuhl, Germany, July 2007In 2006, Palin, running on a clean-government campaign, executed an upset victory over then-Gov. Murkowski in the Republican gubernatorial primary. Despite the lack of support from party leaders and being outspent by her Democratic opponent, she went on to win the general election in November 2006, defeating former Governor Tony Knowles. Palin said in 2006 that education, public safety, and transportation would be three cornerstones of her administration.

When elected, Palin became the first woman to be Alaska's governor, and the youngest governor in Alaskan history at 42 years old upon taking office. Palin was also the first Alaskan governor born after Alaska achieved U.S. statehood. She was also the first Alaskan governor not to be inaugurated in Juneau, instead choosing to hold her inauguration ceremony in Fairbanks. She took office on December 4, 2006.

Highlights of Governor Palin's tenure include a successful push for an ethics bill, and also shelving pork-barrel projects supported by fellow Republicans. Palin successfully killed the Bridge to Nowhere project that had become a nationwide symbol of wasteful earmark spending. "Alaska needs to be self-sufficient, she says, instead of relying heavily on 'federal dollars,' as the state does today."

She has challenged the state's Republican leaders, helping to launch a campaign by Lieutenant Governor Sean Parnell to unseat U.S. Congressman Don Young and publicly challenging Senator Ted Stevens to come clean about the federal investigation into his financial dealings. Palin supports holding occasional legislative sessions outside the state capital, and municipal revenue sharing to help local governments.

Energy policies

Palin's tenure is noted for her independence from big oil companies, while still promoting resource development. Palin has announced plans to create a new sub-cabinet group of advisors, to address climate change and reduce greenhouse gas emissions within Alaska.

Shortly after taking office, Palin rescinded an appointment by Murkowski of his former chief of staff Jim Clark to the Alaska Natural Gas Development Authority, one of thirty-five appointments made by Murkowski in the last hour of his administration that she reversed. Clark later pled guilty to conspiring with a defunct oil-field-services company to channel money into Frank Murkowski's re-election campaign.

In March 2007, Palin presented the Alaska Gasline Inducement Act (AGIA) as the new legal vehicle for building a natural gas pipeline from the state's North Slope. Only one legislator, Representative Ralph Samuels, voted against the measure, and in June Palin signed it into law. On January 5, 2008, Palin announced that a Canadian company, Transcanada, was the sole AGIA-compliant applicant.

In response to high oil and gas prices, and in response to the resulting state government budget surplus, Palin proposed giving Alaskans $100-a-month energy debit cards. She also proposed providing grants to electrical utilities so that they would reduce customers' rates. She subsequently dropped the debit card proposal, and in its place she proposed to send Alaskans $1,200 directly and eliminate the gas tax.

Social issues

Palin is strongly pro-life and belongs to Feminists for Life. She opposes same-sex marriage, but she has stated that she has gay friends and is receptive to gay and lesbian concerns about discrimination. While the previous administration did not implement same-sex benefits, Palin complied with a state Supreme Court order and signed them into law.

She supported a democratic advisory vote from the public on whether there should be a constitutional amendment on the matter.[33] Alaska was one of the first U.S. states to pass a constitutional ban on gay marriage, in 1998, along with Hawaii.

Palin's first veto was used to block legislation that would have barred the state from granting benefits to gay state employees and their partners. In effect, her veto granted State of Alaska benefits to same-sex couples. The veto occurred after Palin consulted with Alaska's attorney general on the constitutionality of the legislation.

Matanuska Maid Dairy closure

When the Alaska Creamery Board recommended closing Matanuska Maid Dairy, an unprofitable state-owned business, Palin objected, citing concern for the impact on dairy farmers and the fact that the Dairy had just received $600,000 in state money. When Palin learned that only the Board of Agriculture and Conservation could appoint Creamery Board members, she simply replaced the entire membership of the Board of Agriculture and Conservation. The new board, led by businesswoman Kristan Cole, reversed the decision to close. The new board approved milk price increases offered by the dairy in an attempt to control fiscal losses, even though milk from Washington was already offered in Alaskan stores at lower prices. In the end, the dairy was forced to close, and the state tried to sell the assets to pay off its debts but received no bids.

Budget

In the first days of her administration, Palin followed through on a campaign promise to sell the Westwind II jet purchased (on a state government credit account) by the Murkowski administration. The state placed the jet for sale on eBay three times. In August 2007, the jet was sold for $2.7 million.

Shortly after becoming governor, Palin canceled an 11-mile (18-kilometer) gravel road outside of Juneau to a mine. This reversed a decision made in the closing days or hours of the Murkowski Administration.

In June 2007, Palin signed into law the largest operating budget in Alaska's history ($6.6 billion). At the same time, she used her veto power to make the second-largest cuts of the construction budget in state history. The US$237 million in cuts represented over 300 local projects, and reduced the construction budget to nearly US$1.6 billion.

Commissioner dismissal

On July 11, 2008, Governor Palin dismissed Walter Monegan as Commissioner of Public Safety and instead offered him a position as executive director of the state Alcoholic Beverage Control Board, which he subsequently turned down. Monegan alleged shortly after his dismissal that it may have been partly due to his reluctance to fire an Alaska State Trooper, Mike Wooten, who had been involved in a divorce and child custody battle with Palin's sister, Molly McCann. In 2006, before Palin was governor, Wooten was briefly suspended for ten days for threatening to kill McCann's (and Palin's) father, tasering his 11-year-old stepson, and violating game laws. After a union protest, the suspension was reduced to five days.

Governor Palin asserts that her dismissal of Monegan was unrelated to the fact that he had not fired Wooten, and asserts that Monegan was instead dismissed for not adequately filling state trooper vacancies, and because he "did not turn out to be a team player on budgeting issues." Palin acknowledges that a member of her administration, Frank Bailey, did contact the Department of Public Safety regarding Wooten, but both Palin and Bailey say that happened without her knowledge and was unrelated to her dismissal of Monegan. Bailey was put on leave for two months for acting outside the scope of his authority as the Director of Boards and Commissions.

In response to Palin's statement that she had nothing to hide, in August 2008 the Alaska Legislature hired Steve Branchflower to investigate Palin and her staff for possible abuse of power surrounding the dismissal, though lawmakers acknowledge that "Monegan and other commissioners serve at will, meaning they can be fired by Palin at any time." The investigation is being overseen by Democratic State Senator Hollis French, who says that the Palin administration has been cooperating and thus subpoenas are unnecessary. The Palin administration itself was the first to release an audiotape of Bailey making inquiries about the status of the Wooten investigation.

Wooten and the police union alleged that the governor had improperly released his employment files in his divorce case. However, McCann's attorney released a signed waiver from Wooten demonstrating that Wooten had authorized the release of his files through normal discovery procedures.

High approval ratings

In July 2007, Palin had an approval rating often in the 90s. A poll published by Hays Research on July 28, 2008 showed Palin's approval rating at 80%.

Fred Barnes of The Weekly Standard praised Palin as a "politician of eye-popping integrity" and referred to her rise as "a great (and rare) story of how adherence to principle"especially to transparency and accountability in government"can produce political success."
okie
 
  3  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 08:50 am
@BumbleBeeBoogie,
Sarah Palin, hows she for you Clinton supporters! This is going to be interesting.
Cycloptichorn
 
  2  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 09:02 am
@okie,
The game is afoot now!

I think Palin will pull very, very few Clinton supporters. Why? She's very pro-life, and you are talking about a very pro-choice group. And just like this issue matters for you guys, it matters for them.

Gutsy move by McCain though! It will constrain his arguments about lack of experience. She has a scandal over her head - abuse of power - that the Dems will exploit to maximum advantage. She is tied to the oil industry and has a somewhat checkered past with that.

But hell. Better pick then some rich old white guy. Sorry, mittens!

Cycloptichorn
sozobe
 
  3  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 09:03 am
@okie,
OK, finally CNN gets to the scandal... evidently someone from her office made the call to her former bro-in-law's boss. (The public safety commissioner.) That person was (definitely? not sure) supposed to fire the former bro-in-law, a trooper. The former bro-in-law and Palin's sister were in the midst of a custody battle.

The trooper wasn't fired. The public safety commissioner was fired (because he didn't fire the trooper? implied but not definite).

The allegation is that Palin misused her influence. It's under investigation.

She's evidently agreed that a call was made from her office to the public safety commissioner) but insists she had nothing to do with it.
Cycloptichorn
 
  1  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 09:06 am
@sozobe,
Right, right.

I agree with Josh Marshall - she's a daring pick but a weak one overall. A risky pick. She constrains McCain's ability to attack Obama's lack of experience.

Cycloptichorn
0 Replies
 
okie
 
  2  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 09:08 am
@sozobe,
Sozobe, and others here, will everyone admit there are attack machines on both sides to the aisle. Let the dirt be dug, but I hope McCain investigated this thoroughly already. If it really hits the fan too fast, too hard, and too serious, vp picks have been known to bow out. I doubt that would happen unless she is found to be less than candid about all of this. This is the danger of picking a relative unknown. This is what irritates me about McCain. How smart is he really? All I can say is, this better turn out okay, John, or you are toast for sure.
sozobe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 09:11 am
@sozobe,
Just had the thought that this is short-term thinking. Palin creates major buzz and steps on the Dem convention and Obama's big speech... short-term win. But she has a lot of negatives too, and I think she won't be the choice that helps McCain most on November 4th.

Not sure how this will affect the debates. Biden could probably wipe the floor with her -- but since she's a woman, that has its own dangers. I'd worry both about a) him holding back, to avoid being called a bully, or b) going full-bore and being called a bully.

But he can probably do some more fine-tuned debating too, not being full attack-dog but dismantling arguments.
0 Replies
 
sozobe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 09:15 am
@okie,
Oh, there are definitely attack machines. I didn't get this info via Obama though. I just remember coming across it in coverage of possible VP picks -- the consensus seemed to be that because of the active investigation, Palin was too risky. I remembered that much, then hunted down the rest.

That's an element of what I was just saying. Basically, the "short list" was created because people who think about this stuff for a living thought that one of those three made the most sense. That one of those three would help McCain the most.

McCain gets some buzz for choosing outside the box, but ultimately he may have chosen someone who doesn't make that much sense.

We'll see. All very new still.
sozobe
 
  3  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 09:23 am
@sozobe,
Blistering take from Andrew Sullivan -- I tend to agree:

Andrew Sullivan wrote:
An Ambers reader writes:

Quote:
I thought you might like to know that under the heading of "Sarah Palin on Foreign Policy" at the On The Issues site for her, this is what's listed:

"No issue stance yet recorded by OnTheIssues.org."


The more I think about it, the more staggered I am by the pick. It's totally about electioneering (misguidedly, I'd hazard, but I don't know enough about her to know yet) and fundamentally unserious about governing.

The first criterion for a veep - and I'm simply repeating a truism here - is that they are ready to take over at a moment's notice. That's especially true when you have a candidate as old as McCain. That's more than especially true when we are at war, in an era of astonishingly difficult challenges, when the next president could be grappling with war in the Middle East or a catastrophic terror attack at home, we have a former Miss Alaska with two terms under her belt as governor. Now compare McCain's pick with Obama's: a man with solid foreign policy experience, six terms in Washington and real relationships with leaders across the globe. One pick is by a man of judgment; the other is by a man of vanity.

She may be a fine person, but she's my age, she has zero Washington experience, and no foreign policy expertise whatsoever.

McCain has just told us how seriously he takes the war we are in. Not seriously at all.
slkshock7
 
  3  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 09:30 am
@Cycloptichorn,
Haven't looked into it that deeply but based on BBB's post, the "scandal" doesn't look like much. Attorney general is saying Palin's administration is cooperating fully and they were the one's who initially brought up Bailey's stupidity in calling DPS about the trooper whom had threatened Palin's father.

From this account, I don't see Palin's "scandal" (as well as her earlier whistle-blowing reputation against Republicans) as doing much except enhancing her standing in many people's eyes. To me it appears that she simply doesn't tolerate any kind of ethics compromises on the part of anyone....an admirable quality.

Certainly this "scandal" would appear to have no more damaging impact than anything facing the Democrat team i.e. Rezko, Ayers.
slkshock7
 
  2  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 09:33 am
@sozobe,
Sozobe,
Based on the experience credentials of the Democratic presidential pick, I don't think you'll get much traction attacking the experience credentials of the Republican VP pick.
sozobe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 09:34 am
@slkshock7,
This is the best source I've found so far, complete with a transcript (and recording!) of the call in question:

http://tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com/2008/08/ak_gov_says_staffer_pressed_for_troopers_firing.php

Excerpt:

Quote:
In a press conference this afternoon, Gov. Sarah Palin (R-AK) conceded that someone inside her administration pressured the state's Department of Public Safety to fire State Trooper Mike Wooten, Palin's former brother-in-law, who is now embroiled in a bitter custody battle with Palin's sister.

Palin's statement is the latest in what has come to be known around Alaska as "Wooten-gate." The scandal began on July 11, when Public Safety Commissioner Walt Monegan was fired from his post with little explanation, a move that quickly raised questions in Alaska.

A few days later, Monegan came forward, stating that he had been pressured by those around Palin to fire Wooten -- but had refused to do so -- a choice that he believes led to his sudden dismissal. Palin denied Monegan's accusations, and a Legislative Council has appointed a special commission to probe the matter.
0 Replies
 
sozobe
 
  4  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 09:36 am
@slkshock7,
I think Obama is much more ready to be president than Palin is.

And since McCain is 72 and has a history of health problems, that's a problem for him.

If SHE's experienced enough... Obama isn't?

C'mon.
Cycloptichorn
 
  2  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 09:39 am
@slkshock7,
Hmm, I don't think that Palin's office were the first ones to call attention to this. I think the police officer in question was.

It's an abuse of power scandal. Do you honestly expect people to believe that someone, out of the blue, just up and decided to work to get her ex-brother in law, who is in a custody battle with her sister, fired? Please.

Cycloptichorn
Cycloptichorn
 
  1  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 09:43 am
@sozobe,
I agree. It's odd, for it will cut off one of McCain's strongest lines of attack.

Cycloptichorn
0 Replies
 
slkshock7
 
  2  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 09:43 am
@sozobe,
Sullivan wrote:
...we have a former Miss Alaska with two terms under her belt as governor.


Is she really a former Miss Alaska? She is attractive, but the comment seems pretty sexist.
maporsche
 
  2  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 09:43 am
@sozobe,
I like this pick.....I need to learn more about her, and still we have the debates, but it will definately make me more likely to vote for McCain than some of the other options would have.

I wouldn't be too worried about the supreme court picks, if McCain wins they will still have to get confirmed by the US Senate (which will be democratic).
Cycloptichorn
 
  1  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 09:46 am
@maporsche,
And since when have the Dems in the Senate been unable to prevent Conservative SC judges from being appointed?

You can't rely on them to stop the judges, Maporsche. Think about their track record.

Cycloptichorn
0 Replies
 
sozobe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 09:47 am
@slkshock7,
slkshock7 wrote:
Is she really a former Miss Alaska? She is attractive, but the comment seems pretty sexist.


Close, not quite. Evidently she was the runner-up. (As in, actually competed, and actually would have been Miss Alaska if something had happened to the winner.)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarah_Palin

Josh Marshall's take, won't keep doing this but I like his pith:

Quote:
So now we've learned that Sarah Palin is McCain's choice for nominee. I have to say. It's a daring pick but I think a very weak pick. I'm perfectly happy with it. Palin is in the midst of a reasonably serious scandal in her home state. Her brother-in-law is a state trooper who is in the midst of an ugly custody battle with her sister. And she's accused of getting the state police to fire him. Recently she was forced to admit that one of her aides had done this, though she insists she didn't know.

Next, John McCain's central and best argument in this campaign is that Barack Obama simply lacks the experience to be President of the United States. And now John McCain, who is a cancer survivor who turns 72 years old today, is picking a vice presidential nominee who has been governor of a small state for less than two years and prior to that was mayor of a town with roughly one-twenty-seventh of the citizens that Barack Obama represented when he was a state senator in Illinois.

Whatever you think of Barack Obama's qualifications to be President, Palin is manifestly less qualified. And that undermines the central premise of McCain's campaign.


(Emphasis mine.)
0 Replies
 
DrewDad
 
  1  
Reply Fri 29 Aug, 2008 09:48 am
@Cycloptichorn,
Cycloptichorn wrote:
It's an abuse of power scandal. Do you honestly expect people to believe that someone, out of the blue, just up and decided to work to get her ex-brother in law, who is in a custody battle with her sister, fired? Please.

I'm gonna be the voice of skepticism, here. Lots of bootlickers could/would do that, without instructions from her.
0 Replies
 
 

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