
Sarah Palin is getting herself a private jet for the campaign, which seems reasonable given that she's the VP candidate for the Republican Party. It does remind you of her make-believe eBay story, but since this is privately-funded, I'll give her a pass on the hypocrisy angle (she's still a liar, though).
Speaking of funding, there is one thing to pay close attention to: how will the McCain-Palin campaign pay for the jet? They may try to use primary money -- Kerry-Edwards tried to do the same thing in 2004. But according to an FEC audit, that's not legal. Keep an eye on this one.
I first started blogging at The Jed Report early last year, and I never would have guessed that it would end up becoming a full-time endeavor. But here I am, spending most of my waking hours TJR -- and loving each and every moment of it, especially the community that has developed here.
Now, as we head into the final two months of the campaign, I'm reaching out to you to ask for your support in by making a donation to help keep TJR humming along. Your continued support helps me cover hardware, software , and service expenses, and makes it possible for me to devote as much time to TJR as I do. (And it keeps those dreadful ads off the site!)
Many of you have already made a contribution through the PayPal link that I've set up, and I'm grateful for your generosity. But whether or not you are able to make a donation, the important thing is that we are all working towards the same goal during this election season.
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On a related housekeeping note, please indulge me as I tout some traffic milestones that TJR achieved in the past seven days (as of the publishing of this post):
As for jedreport.com, traffic is also booming according to stats tracked with Google Analytics:
I still can't think of a better man to have defended "small-town values" from the onslaught of Democratic "cosmopolitan" elitism than Rudy Giuliani.
Here's the former New York City mayor's small-town values in action:
Reporters were barred from Giuliani's cigar party Monday night, despite a massive crowd that attended the $25,000-per-sponsor event. ... But it was Citizen Giuliani's motorcade that caught our eye: two black Town Cars and a black SUV double-parked in the bike lane on busy Hennepin Avenue downtown, fronted by a Hennepin County sheriff's car flashing red and blue lights. Sweet! (Normal VIPs have to, like, wait for their drivers to show up.)
How does a former elected official/presidential candidate score an official escort? He just called up and asked, according to our spies. (Why didn't we think of that?) Alas, the cars drove off, sans Rudy, before we could ask more questions.
Some quick stats: Rudy has 3 marriages, 2 children, and 0 children who talk with him. Oh, and he likes to wear drag. In retrospect, he was actually attacking himself on Wednesday night. What a prick.
As I write this, Sarah Palin has been the GOP's vice presidential nominee for 8 days, 5 hours, 24 minutes, and 19 seconds -- and she still hasn't done a single serious interview on the issues.
GOP strategist Todd Harris tried to defend the political wisdom of the McCain campaign's decision to hide Palin. If they put Palin out too quickly, he says, she might "make a mistake."
The problem with that spin is obvious: if they are afraid to have Sarah Palin talk with Wolf Blitzer, they must be downright petrified at the thought of her becoming president.
It's already clear that they had no idea who they were picking when they chose Sarah Palin. Now, the longer they keep her in hiding to prepare her for her first interview, the harder it's going to convince skeptical voters that they honestly believe she's ready to be president.
Barack Obama, earlier today in Terre Haute, IN:
"I know the governor of Alaska has been, you know, saying she is change," Obama said at a town hall meeting here. "And that is great. She is a skillful politician. But when you [have] been taking all these earmarks when it is convenient and then suddenly you are the champion anti-earmark person.
"That is not change, come on," Obama continued. "I mean, words mean something. You can't just make stuff up. You can't just make stuff up. We have a choice to make and the choice is clear."
As you can see, I've added a feature on the left sidebar that tracks the amount of time since Sarah Palin was added to John McCain's ticket, and I'm going to keep the clock running until she sits down for her first serious issue interview broadcast on television.
I've gotten a ton of requests by e-mail to widgetize the no comment watch (which would allow people to cut-n-paste the code, proliferating it across the web) and I'm working on doing just that.
In the meantime, allow me to point out to you this article about the Bush speechwriter Matthew Scully who wrote Sarah Palin's speech.
Scully started working on the vice-presidential speech a week ago, before he or anyone else knew who the nominee would be, and it's not hard to pick out the parts that would have been the same regardless of who delivered it.
...Scully was a good choice to help moderate Palin's right-wing image. A veteran of the early Bush White House, his specialty was crafting Bush's pro-life message in a way that would not offend soccer moms or mainstream Catholics who get nervous around some of the more extreme Evangelical rhetoric.
...If Palin was viewed as the most likely right winger to sell in the swing states, Scully is the right pick to help repackage her from a base pleaser into a bridge builder.
As you can see, the only thing that speech told us about Sarah Palin is that she can read.
Maybe this isn't the best, but if not, it's right up there, delivering a wonderful ride through the final night of the GOP convention:
Here's Real Time With Bill Maher from earlier tonight. Kerry Washington totally destroyed Michael Steele again and again and again during the panel discussion, and Bill Maher ripped on the Sarah Palin embarassment throughout.
h/t: YouTuber heathr456 for all the videos.
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Opening Monologue:
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RNC New Rules:
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Jeffrey Toobin Interview:
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Panel Discussion Pt 1:
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Panel Discussion Pt 2:
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Panel Discussion Pt 3:
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At RNC, Dan Savage Looks For
Signs That George W. Bush Was President:
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New Rules
Key Alaska allies of John McCain are trying to derail a politically charged investigation into Gov. Sarah Palin's firing of her public safety commissioner in order to prevent a so-called "October surprise" that would produce embarrassing information about the vice presidential candidate on the eve of the election.
Todd Harris, a GOP strategist who is close to the McCain campaign, says Palin won't be available to the press for about two weeks. His defense? She might make "a mistake."
If she goes out and makes a mistake, that is something that [voters will] care about, and that's something that will haunt [McCain] for awhile, so I think this is a smart move.
This has got to be one of the craziest messaging decisions ever: Harris is conceding that Palin's not even ready to be a vice presidential candidate, let alone be president.
I just don't see how they can sustain two weeks of keeping Palin in hiding. Every day the McCain campaign keeps her away from reporters just highlights the fact that they don't think she's ready.
This strikes me as a pretty impressive strategic blunder.
Sarah Palin on Wednesday:
Our son Track is 19. And one week from tomorrow - September 11th - he'll deploy to Iraq with the Army infantry in the service of his country.
It's a touching story of patriotism inspired by the 9/11 attacks, except according the New York Daily News, it turns out not to be entirely true -- her son is actually deploying on September 12, not September 11.
Palin was expected to break from the trail to return to Alaska and see off her oldest son, Track, 19, who is deploying to Iraq with his Army unit on Sept. 12.
Of course, there is no need to embellish her son's honorable decision to serve this country, and nothing that Sarah Palin can say can cheapen that. But if the Daily News story is accurate, it says something pathetic about her character.
This is awesome -- Joe Biden just tears John McCain and Sarah Palin apart for completely ignoring every single major economic issue facing America and for offering nothing but sarcastic personal attacks.
CBS has it at 42-42 in a poll conducted Monday through Wednesday. This is an outlier poll, but both Rasmussen (Obama +2, 48-46) and Gallup (Obama +4, 48-44) also have the race tightening.
I'm not at all alarmed by these polling numbers, at least not as far as my confidence that we will win this campaign. (It is a bit disturbing that people get sucked in by the Palin-McCain campaign, but that's a different story.)
In fact, as I mentioned earlier, the tightening polls might be good for press coverage: we all know how much the the media enjoys a close, exciting race, and if it's already close, they may be less likely to target Barack Obama or to take it easy on McCain.
It also underscores the importance of what they are doing to vet Sarah Palin. The fact remains that the first time most of us had ever seen her in action was one week ago, and even though I'm sure we will win the election, the polls are close and America deserves to know more about her.
Including, for example, the fact that her fabled Ebay jet sale...didn't actually happen.
A small-town mayor asks about volunteer fire departments. Barack answers, and a bit over three minutes into the clip addresses the failure of the GOP convention to confront any issues that really matter.
Now this is hilarious...Chris Wallace reacts to the backdrop disaster:
"It was a green backdrop behind him, it was a big lawn in front of a big house. You thought what the heck was that? It looked like it could have been one of the McCain mansions."
Ben Smith expands on Howard Fineman's report about the Palin-McCain campaign's decision to let her return to Alaska for several days, adding the crucial detail that she will campaign with McCain at a stop or two before heading up there (as she obviously did in Cedarburg).
Fineman's source (and mine) said she'd spent much of the time between now and the middle of next week (when her son leaves for Iraq) straightening her affairs, tending to her official duties and packing her bags -- having departed abruptly for the national stage. She also seems unlikely to do many major media interviews between now and then, and the campaign seems to feel no urgency about putting her on the Sunday shows.
The campaign will "also use the plane time and time on the ground to begin the education of Sarah Palin," Fineman said. "They want to take that pause to train."
First: McCain is getting his bounce -- 48/46 in Rasmussen, 48/44 in Gallup (Obama still leads in both polls). Poll numbers don't mean much right now, but these close numbers should remind reporters that there is a very good chance that Sarah Palin could be elected VPOTUS -- so we are depending on them to continue vetting her, despite the McCain campaign's bullying.
Second: Ben Smith has an awesomely hilarious post about the former governor's plane Sarah Palin listed on Ebay. Turns out it never sold (she never claimed it did, only that she listed it). When it finally sold offline, the state lost $500K. But apparently McCain -- like almost everybody else in America, including me -- believed that the plain had sold online, because today he falsely claimed that it had, and falsely claimed that it had been sold at a profit.
Just another example of the vetting disaster.
I wonder how this speech would have gone over.
CNN finds a troubling number of lies during Sarah Palin's speech on Wednesday night. To be fair, they also found some things she was telling the truth about, but that's not really the point: aren't you always supposed to be honest? For more information, you can find a detailed fact check from the Obama campaign here.
Update (1:15AM): Prior to Howard Fineman's report, USA Today had reported that the Palin-McCain campaign will campaign together in Wisconsin and Michigan on Friday and in New Mexico and Colorado on Saturday. It'll be interesting to see which (if any) of those states they actually end up going to. It would seem smart for them to make an appearance together before Palin leaves the trail.
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Original post: Forget whether or not Sarah Palin is ready to be president. She's not even ready to be a candidate for vice president!
Howard Fineman reports a top McCain adviser tells him that Palin is going to be taking a "timeout" from the campaign trail through the middle of next week. According to Fineman, Palin will use the time to "begin the education of Sarah Palin." Apparently, the excuse will be that she needs to attend to personal business, including seeing her son off to Iraq.
Fineman says they want to make sure she understands John McCain's positions on issues and the issues she is going to need to deal with as a vice presidential candidate. Most notably, she won't be doing any substantial media interviews until she returns to the trail, which could be at least as late as next Wednesday.
Here's the video:
McCain connected with the crowd at two points during speech: first when he talked about Sarah Palin, who is beloved by the extreme conservatives in attendance at the convention, and then later when he talked about war.
McCain used the word "fight" 25 times -- he used the word "change" ten times. The problem is that McCain's brand of "fighting" isn't metaphorical -- despite his claim to hate war, he literally relishes the fight.
In fact, of the two moments where he connected with the crowd, the only points where he showed any passion at all were moments when he discussed war. That's one of the things that frightens me about McCain.
"I thought it was the worst speech by a nominee that I've heard since Jimmy Carter in 1980. I thought it was disorganized, I thought it was it was theme-less, I thought it was very, very boring...I personally cannot remember a single policy proposal that he made because they had nothing connecting them. I found it shockingly bad."
Former Bush speechwriter Michael Gerson says the speech missed an opportunity to speak to independents:
What will you be doing during JSM's speech?
Also, interesting news: Sarah Palin attended 5 colleges in 6 years, including a stint in Hawaii.
Update -- It's over. Some thoughts:
Also, the fact that they had the green screen malfunction (the backdrop was supposed to be a house with a lawn) hurts his argument that he's more competent than Obama.
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The One: John McCain As The Messiah
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Moranic McCainiac Hearts The Mavrick
I ask this as a serious question. I have not seen the video that Olbermann references -- I've been watching football, but I've got the video recorded and I'm going to watch it now.
I hope Keith is wrong.
Update (6:35PM): The Boston Globe chimes in. "One of the most enduring taboos in American politics, the airing of graphic images from the September 11 attacks in a partisan context, died today. It was nearly seven years old."
Update 2 (6:49PM): You can watch the "tribute" video here. It's definitely a partisan video -- without actually naming McCain, it expressly advocates for his election, saying that we will win the war on terrorism because "we will have a president who knows how." My verdict: way across the line. It shows the explosion of the second plane, the collapse of one of the towers, and the blood of the dead.
Sarah Palin is the new fundraising weapon -- for the good guys.
Thank you Sarah!
Update: The GOP raised $1 million after the speech.
Okay, the score is 16-7, and we're in the third quarter.
I know this is damn near impossible, but here's what we need: three consecutive unanswered field goals by the Redskins. That'll send the game into overtime on the night of John McCain's big speech.
If I were James Dobson, I might even suggest we pray...
I think it starts at 5pm Pacific, 8pm Eastern. You watching?
Update 2: Wow that was lame. 30+ minutes of waiting and he plays like 6 or 7 minutes of the interview and wants people to watch again next week? No thanks. Obama did fine, but he shouldn't go on that show again unless O'Reilly shows him some respect.
Update: In honor of the start of the NFL season -- Mike Holmgren's last one, at least with my team -- Go SEAHAWKS!

Forgive me if this is old news to you, but I just read it and it cracked me up:
The Phonetic Sarah Palin
An oddity from the prepared text of Palin's speech [emphasis added]:
Terrorist states are seeking new-clear weapons without delayI didn't look in time to see if it was rendered this way on the teleprompter but I assume this spelling was designed to prevent her from a mockery-inducing Bush-like pronunciation of "newkyuler."
--Michael Crowley
This video is so awesomely hilarious. It's like they took those web ads they were running against Barack Obama...and then turned into positive spots for Sarah "The Moosehunter Messiah" Palin:
Earlier today in York, PA, Barack Obama talked with reporters about the negative, meaningless Republican convention. His basic message:
This is what they do. They don't have an agenda to run on. They haven't offered a single concrete idea so far in two nights about how they would make the lives of middle class Americans better.
Transcript of his comments about why he's focusing on McCain instead of Palin below the fold. Here's video:
Asked why he's not slamming Sarah Palin:
Because John McCain is running for president, I'm running against John McCain. And as far as I can tell, I don't get a sense that Governor Palin has ideas that are different from John McCain's. And that speech that she delivered was on behalf of John McCain. And the central question in this campaign is who's got a better plan, a better agenda to move this country forward and fundamentally change it from the economic and foreign policy failures that we've seen over the last eight years. I believe the American people need change, they want change, and I'm in the best position to bring it, on a whole host of issues from energy to health care to education. And if it some point Senator McCain actually addresses those issue, I think that's going to be a useful debate for the American people to listen to.
Barack Obama in York, PA:
You wouldn't know that this is such a critical election by watching the convention last night. I know we had our week and so, you know, the Republicans deserve theirs. But it's been amazing to me to watch. Over the last two nights, if you sit there and you watch it, you're hearing a lot about John McCain - and he's got a compelling biography as a POW. You're hearing an awful lot about me, most of which is not true. What you're not hearing is a lot about you.
I mean, you haven't heard one word about how they're going to make the health care system work so that if a union's negotiating with a company, it's not all just a discussion about higher premiums, and you can actually start talking about higher wages and benefits. You haven't heard one word about how we're going to create more apprenticeship programs like the ones that we have here or give other people a chance to train in new trades. You haven't heard a word about getting serious about green and alternative energy, the kind of work that is resulting in all the expansion and additional hiring here. You haven't heard a word about how we're going to strengthen unions so that working people get a decent stake. You haven't heard a word about how we're going to improve math and science education so that we can hire more engineers to create more products in green technology. You haven't heard a word about how we're going to deal with any aspect of the economy that is affecting you and your pocketbook day-to-day. Haven't heard a word about it. I'm not exaggerating. Literally, two nights, they have not said a word about it. They've had a lot to say about me, but they haven't had anything to say about you. And the thing that I'm insisting on in this election is that we can't keep playing the same political games we always play.
I've watched some excerpts from Palin's speech last night again, and leaving aside all the truthiness issues, and leaving aside the anger management questions, it strikes me that her delivery really wasn't quite as good as some people are saying. She did nail the sarcasm, but much of the speech was just a big droning monotone -- without the crazy, spiteful crowd roaring their approval to her slashing attacks, the speech probably would have bombed.

CAP offers a thorough debunking of Palin's claim to be a champion of earmark reform.
Here's the Obama campaign's thorough fact-check of Sarah Palin's "Bridge to Nowhere" speech. They put this out last night but I hadn't checked it out until now. It's pretty extensive.
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Obama Campaign Fact Check of Governor Palin's Speech
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STATEMENT |
RESPONSE |
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PALIN: "Our opponents say, again and again, that drilling will not solve all of America's energy problems - as if we all didn't know that already. But the fact that drilling won't solve every problem is no excuse to do nothing at all." |
REALITY: PALIN SAID SHE WOULD BEG TO DISAGREE WITH ANY CANDIDATE WHO SAID WE CAN'T DRILL OUR WAY OUT OF OUR PROBLEM Palin Said She Would Beg to Disagree With Candidate Who Said We Can't Drill Our Way Out of Our Problem. Asked by Invester's Business Daily "Some politicians and presidential candidates say we can't drill our way out of our energy problem and that drilling in ANWR will have no effect. What's your best guess of the impact on prices?" Palin responded, "I beg to disagree with any candidate who would say we can't drill our way out of our problem or that more supply won't ultimately affect prices. Of course it will affect prices. Energy being a global market, it's impossible to venture a guess on (specific) prices." [Investor's Business Daily, 7/11/08] |
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PALIN: "Senator McCain also promises to use the power of veto in defense of the public interest - and as a chief executive, I can assure you it works." |
REALITY: PALIN OPPOSED CRUCIAL EDUCATION, HEALTH CARE AND SENIORS FUNDING EDUCATION/CHILDREN Total: 396,000. Anchorage - Fire Lake Elementary School Replacement of Unsafe Sports Equipment. Palin vetoed $10,000. [FY08 Budget] Tanana City School District - Repair School Bus. Palin vetoed $36,000. [FY08 Budget] American Lung Association of Alaska - Asthma Control Program and Champ Camp. Palin voted $350,000. [FY08 Budget] HOSPITALS/HEALTH CARE Total: $4,527,500. Ketchikan General Hospital Surgical Suite Expansion/Relocation. Palin vetoed $4,400,000. [FY09 Budget] Ketchikan General Hospital - Replacement of Outdated Equipment. Palin vetoed $70,000. [2007 Legislature Supplemental] Sitka - Community Hospital - Medical Equipment. Palin vetoed $31,000. [2007 Legislature Supplemental] Kenai Peninsula Borough - Diagnostic Hospital Equipment. Palin vetoed $26,500. [2007 Legislature Supplemental] SENIORS Total: $600,000. Ketchikan Senior Citizens, Inc. - Access Road for Pioneer Heights. Palin vetoed $300,000. [FY08 Budget] AARP Ketchikan - Access Road for Ketchikan Senior Housing Project. Palin vetoed $100,000. [2007 Legislature Supplemental] Catholic Community Services - Angoon Senior Center Stove, Refrigerator and Freezer. Palin vetoed $20,000 twice. [FY08 Budget, 2007 Legislature Supplemental] Alpha Omega Life Care, Inc. - Delivery Van and Moveable Building. Palin vetoed $20,000. [FY09 Budget] Older Persons Action Group - Senior Voice Equipment Upgrade. Palin vetoed $20,000. [FY09 Budget] Statewide Independent Living Centers - Assistive Technology for Alaska's Centers for Independent Living. Palin vetoed $125,000. [FY09 Budget] Kodiak Senior Center - Facilities repair and Equipment. Palin vetoed $15,000. [2007 Legislature Supplemental] |
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PALIN: "Before I became governor of the great state of Alaska, I was mayor of my hometown." |
REALITY: UNDER PALIN, WASILLA GOVERNMENT SPENDING & DEBT SKYROCKETED. Total Government Expenditures Increased 63 Percent Under Palin. In fiscal 2003-the last fiscal year Palin approved the budget-the total government expenditures of Wasilla, excluding capital outlays, were $7,046,325. In fiscal 1996-the year before Palin took control of the budget-the expenditures were $4,317,947. The increase was 63 percent. [Wasilla Comprehensive Annual Financial Report 2003, Table 1] Palin Supported Increasing Wasilla Sales Tax From 2 to 2.5 Percent to Build $14.7 Million Sports Center. "Wasilla residents have given the go ahead to building a new multiuse sports center in town and to raising the city sales tax to pay for it. With the final votes counted Friday, residents voted 306 to 286 in favor of a measure to raise the city sales tax from 2 percent to 2.5 percent to pay the estimated $14.7 million cost of building the center...Mayor Sarah Palin, who supported the measure, said the tight vote will motivate city officials to keep a close eye on the budget for the center." [Anchorage Daily News, 3/9/02] Palin Left Behind Almost $19 Million In Long-Term Debt, Compared to None Before She Was Mayor. In fiscal 2003-the last fiscal year Palin approved the budget-the bonded long-term debt was $18,635,000. In fiscal 1996-the year before Palin took control of the budget-there was no general obligation debt. [Wasilla Comprehensive Annual Financial Report 2003, Table 10] |
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PALIN: "It was the spirit that brought me to the governor's office, when I took on the old politics as usual in Juneau ... when I stood up to the special interests, the lobbyists, big oil companies, and the good-ol' boys network." |
REALITY: PALIN HAS A LT. GOVERNOR WHO IS A FORMER OIL LOBBYIST, HIRED WASILLA'S FIRST FEDERAL LOBBYIST (A FORMER STEVENS STAFFER) & HAD THE SUPPORT OF ENTRENCHED ALASKA POLITICIANS DURING HER 2006 RACE. Palin's Oil & Gas Appointee Is Former Lobbyist for TransCanada. "Marty Rutherford, who leads Gov. Sarah Palin's gas pipeline team, made $40,200 in 2003 while consulting in Juneau for a pipeline subsidiary of TransCanada. TransCanada is one of the companies bidding for a state license to build a pipeline to carry gas to market from Alaska's North Slope. It's not a disqualifier, but the past connection deserves a second thought." [Anchorage Daily News editorial, 12/15/07] Palin "Counting on Her Lieutenant Governor Candidate... Former Oil Lobbyist" to Help Win Oil Industry Support. "The defiantly grass-roots nature of the campaign may have distanced her from certain traditional centers of power in Alaska. The oil industry is one -- but the campaign says it is counting on her lieutenant governor candidate, Parnell, a former oil lobbyist and legislator, to help there." [Anchorage Daily News, 10/24/06] Palin's Former Chief of Staff is Stevens' Campaign Manager. "Monegan says pressure came from those around Palin, including former Palin chief-of-staff Mike Tibbles, Department of Administration Commissioner Annette Kreitzer, and director of boards and commissions Frank Bailey. Tibbles, who is now the campaign manager for Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens, said Friday he couldn't comment on whether he spoke to Monegan about Wooten." [Anchorage Daily, 7/19/08] As Mayor, Palin Hired a Washington Lobbyist to Help Get Earmarks for Wasilla - Lobbyist Was Former Chief of Staff for Indicted Senator Ted Stevens. "And as mayor of the small town of Wasilla from 1996 to 2002, Palin also hired a Washington lobbying firm that helped secure $8 million in congressionally directed spending projects, known as earmarks, according to public spending records compiled by the watchdog group Citizens Against Government Waste and lobbying documents. Wasilla's lobbying firm was headed by Steven Silver - a former chief of staff to Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens, a key proponent of the bridge project." [USA Today, 8/31/08] The Usual Alaska Suspects - Ted Stevens, Don Young, And Lisa Murkowski Fundraised For Palin. "Will we see Ted Stevens stumping for Sarah Palin? Palin said this morning that Stevens appeared at a fund-raiser for her in Ketchikan and gave a speech about 'moving Alaska forward.' But does that mean he'll pop up in any advertisements? (Remember his arguably pivotal role at the end of the Knowles and Murkowski Senate race?) Palin said she doubts it and hasn't asked... She said Don Young came to one of her fund-raisers two days ago, and she expects Lisa Murkowski at an upcoming event. Tonight she planned to talk with John Binkley, who she says is writing a letter to his supporters on her behalf, and she planned to meet with Frank Murkowski tomorrow morning." ["The Trail" blog, Anchorage Daily News, 10/13/06] In Her 2002 Campaign for Lieutenant Governor, Palin Raised 'About 10 Percent Of Her Campaign Fund' From Veco, An Oil Company At the Heart of Federal Investigation. "While mayor of Wasilla, Palin ran for lieutenant governor in 2002. She gathered $5,000 -- or about 10 percent of her campaign fund -- from Veco officials or their wives along the way." [Anchorage Daily News, 9/6/06] |
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PALIN: "I came to office promising major ethics reform, to end the culture of self-dealing. And today, that ethics reform is the law." |
REALITY: PALIN SIGNED WEAK ETHICS REFORM BILL & HAS HAD NUMEROUS ETHICAL FLAPS OF HER OWN. Palin Signed Ethics Reform Legislation That Anchorage Republican Bob Roses Said Didn't Go Far Enough. "An ethics reform package for state officials was signed into law Monday by Gov. Sarah Palin, just minutes after a former state representative was convicted on seven federal extortion and bribery counts. Palin said the law will help re-establish trust between the public and elected officials by improving on existing statutes. ... Ethics reform had been a recurring theme throughout Palin's election campaign, and she pushed hard for the bill to become a bipartisan effort in the Legislature this session. She said she remains determined to clean up Alaska politics. ... Rep. Bob Roses, R-Anchorage, who succeed Anderson in the Legislature when Anderson didn't seek re-election in 2006, said the law didn't go far enough. Campaign contributions should be available for immediate public scrutiny, he said, and all contributions should be reported, even those below the current $1,000 threshold. 'Quite frankly, I thought some of the things should have been a little tighter than what they were, but this is a first step,' he said." [The Associated Press State & Local Wire, 7/10/07] AUGUST 2008: Ethics Complaint Filed Against Gov. Palin Over Alleged Involvement in Hiring a Campaign Contributor. In August 2008, former state House member Andree McLeod" filed against Gov. Sarah Palin and her staff today with the Attorney General's Office. It accuses the governor's office of using its pull to get a Palin supporter hired to a [Department of Transportation] job in Fairbanks." McLeod said " 'Executive branch employee shouldn't be getting involved in the recruitment process unless it's based on merit,' said Andree McLeod, who wrote the complaint based on a series of e-mails between members of Palin's team...The complaint accuses Palin, her acting chief of staff and others of breaking executive ethics branch and hiring rules. It centers on the hiring of surveyor Tom Lamal, who once co-hosted a Palin fundraiser, for a state right-of-way agent job in Fairbanks." The complaint is available at http://community.adn.com/sites/community.adn.com/files/McLeod Ethics Complaint1.pdf [Anchorage Daily News, http://community.adn.com/adn/node/128527, 8/6/08; Anchorage Daily News, http://www.adn.com/front/story/486163.html, 8/7/08] July 2008: Special Counsel Appointed Last Month to Investigate Palin Abuse of Power Claim. In July 2008, the Alaska State Legislator voted 12-0 to approve $100,000 for a special investigator to begin an investigation into claims Palin fired a former state official because he would not fire a state trooper who was involved in a bitter custody battle with Palin's sister. The legislator's intent was to investigate the events surrounding the termination of former Dept. of Public Safety Commissioner Walt Monegan and potential abuses of power and improper action by Palin and her administration. [KTVA 11, 07/28/08] |
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PALIN: "I suspended the state fuel tax, and championed reform to end the abuses of earmark spending by Congress." |
REALITY: ALASKA HAS REQUESTED $589 MILLION IN PORK SINCE PALIN TOOK OFFICE & AS MAYOR, SHE HIRED WASILLA'S FIRST FEDERAL LOBBYIST TO SECURE EARMARKS FOR THE TOWN. Over $589 Million in Federal Pork Requests During Palin's Tenure as Governor. According to Citizens Against Government Waste, www.cagw.org, under Palin's tenure as Governor the state of Alaska has asked for $589,599,715 in pork barrel projects. [2007 and 2008 Pig Book, www.cagw.org]
As Mayor, Palin Hired a Washington Lobbyist to Help Get Millions in Earmarks for Wasilla - Lobbyist Was Former Chief of Staff for Indicted Senator Ted Stevens. "And as mayor of the small town of Wasilla from 1996 to 2002, Palin also hired a Washington lobbying firm that helped secure $8 million in congressionally directed spending projects, known as earmarks, according to public spending records compiled by the watchdog group Citizens Against Government Waste and lobbying documents. Wasilla's lobbying firm was headed by Steven Silver - a former chief of staff to Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens, a key proponent of the bridge project." [USA Today, 8/31/08]
McCain Criticized Earmarks that Palin Sought as Mayor. "Three times in recent years, McCain's catalogs of "objectionable" spending have included earmarks for this small Alaska town, requested by its mayor at the time -- Sarah Palin... In 2001, McCain's list of spending that had been approved without the normal budget scrutiny included a $500,000 earmark for a public transportation project in Wasilla. The Arizona senator targeted $1 million in a 2002 spending bill for an emergency communications center in town -- one that local law enforcement has said is redundant and creates confusion. McCain also criticized $450,000 set aside for an agricultural processing facility in Wasilla that was requested during Palin's tenure as mayor and cleared Congress soon after she left office in 2002. The funding was provided to help direct locally grown produce to schools, prisons and other government institutions, according to Taxpayers for Common Sense, a nonpartisan watchdog group." [LA Times, 9/3/08] |
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PALIN: "In fact, I told Congress -- I told Congress, 'Thanks, but no thanks,' on that bridge to nowhere." |
REALITY: PALIN WAS FOR THE BRIDGE TO NOWHERE BEFORE SHE WAS AGAINST IT. October 2006" Palin Supported Bridge To Nowhere. In 2006, Palin was asked, "Would you continue state funding for the proposed Knik Arm and Gravina Island bridges?" She responded, "Yes. I would like to see Alaska's infrastructure projects built sooner rather than later. The window is now--while our congressional delegation is in a strong position to assist." [Anchorage, 10/22/06, republished 08/29/08] 2006: Palin: Don't Allow "Spinmeisters" To Turn Bridge To Nowhere Project "Into Something That's So Negative." "Part of my agenda is making sure that Southeast is heard. That your projects are important. That we go to bat for Southeast when we're up against federal influences that aren't in the best interest of Southeast.' She cited the widespread negative attention focused on the Gravina Island crossing project. 'We need to come to the defense of Southeast Alaska when proposals are on the table like the bridge and not allow the spinmeisters to turn this project or any other into something that's so negative,' Palin said." [Ketchikan Daily News, 10/2/06] REALITY: PALIN ONLY ANNOUNCED OPPOSITION TO ONE "BRIDGE TO NOWHERE," STILL SUPPORTS THE OTHER ONE Palin Refused to Fund Ketchikan Bridge, But Did Not Stop Funding for Knik Arm Bridge."Among the earmarks: $449 million for what critics have ridiculed as two 'bridges to nowhere' -- one in Ketchikan and one across Knik Arm in Anchorage formally named Don Young's Way. Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, also a Republican, last month refused to use any more money for the Ketchikan project, redirecting it for other purposes." [Anchorage Daily News,11/11/07] As Recently as June, State Asking for Cost Estimate Proposals for Knik Arm. "An independent party will be called in to look at one of the most elusive aspects of a proposed bridge linking Anchorage and Mat-Su: the price tag. Gordon Keith, regional director for the state Department of Transportation and Public Facilities, said his office will be putting the job of estimating the cost of the controversial project out for bids in coming weeks. He said the task of coming up with a price could cost up to $200,000 and take up to 3½ months. 'The issue keeps swirling around, so we thought it best to go ahead and do an independent estimate,' he said. The cost to get the estimate is going to be high 'if you want to do it correctly,' he said. The cost of a span reaching across Knik Arm from Anchorage to Point MacKenzie has ranged over the years from $450 million to $1 billion, depending on what kind of bridge is envisioned and what starting date is plugged into the formula... Randy Ruaro, a special assistant to Gov. Sarah Palin, said the administration, even in the face of the recent lengthy report from the bridge authority, was having trouble getting an accurate picture of everything that is involved in the project, of the timing of the phases, and of the costs. He said the independent estimate is expected to answer those questions. Mary Ann Pease, spokeswoman for the authority, said she welcomes the effort to get updated costs." [Anchorage Daily News, 6/22/08] |
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PALIN: "But we are expected to govern with integrity, and goodwill, and clear convictions..." |
REALITY: PALIN UNDER INVESTIGATION FOR ABUSE OF POWER. Former State Official Accused Palin, Palin's Former Chief of Staff and Current Ted Stevens Campaign Manager and Palin's Husband Of Pressuring Him to Fire Trooper. In July 2008, former state official Walt Monegan accused Palin, Palin's former Chief of Staff and current Stevens' campaign manager Mike Tibbles and husband Todd Palin of pressuring him to fire Palin sister's ex-husband Mike Wooten. [Anchorage Daily News, 07/18/08] July 2008: Special Counsel Appointed Last Month to Investigate Palin Abuse of Power Claim. In July 2008, the Alaska State Legislator voted 12-0 to approve $100,000 for a special investigator to begin an investigation into claims Palin fired a former state official because he would not fire a state trooper who was involved in a bitter custody battle with Palin's sister. The legislator's intent was to investigate the events surrounding the termination of former Dept. of Public Safety Commissioner Walt Monegan and potential abuses of power and improper action by Palin and her administration. [KTVA 11, 07/28/08] |
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PALIN: "As Governor, I have a record of being a strong fiscal conservative and have vetoed millions in special projects pushed by legislators." |
Palin Increased Taxes on Oil Companies to Pay for $1,200 Giveaway to Every Resident in the State. "One of her most significant accomplishments as governor was passing a major tax increase on state oil production, angering oil companies but raising billions of dollars in new revenue. She said the oil companies had previously bribed legislators to keep the taxes low. She subsequently championed legislation that would give some of that money back to Alaskans: Soon, every Alaskan will receive a $1,200 check." [New York Times, 8/30/08] |
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PALIN: "I understand that we must reduce our dependence on foreign energy. I've worked with our state's energy producers to expand our production so that we can have a safe, reliable supply of energy produced here in the United States." |
REALITY: PALIN SUPPORTED EXPORTING NATURAL GAS WHILE ALASKA BUSINESSES CLOSED BECAUSE OF SHORTAGES Palin Backed A Two-Year Extension Of The Export License To Export Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) To Japan And Other Asian Countries-Criticized Because Alaska's Gas Reserves Are Declining. "Alaska producers can continue shipping gas to Asia after DOE last week approved an extension of the export license for the Kenai liquefied natural gas plant owned by ConocoPhillips and Marathon. The companies will be allowed to export up to 98.1 Bcf to Japan and other Pacific Rim countries over a two-year period through March 31, 2011. [...] The application came under fire from local end-users, including gas distribution companies Enstar and the Chugach Electric Association, as well as fertilizer maker Agrium, all of which claimed the exports would exacerbate the problem of declining gas reserves in south-central Alaska. Agrium permanently closed its plant near Kenai due to an inability to find enough local supply for the facility that used 53 Bcf/year. In January, ConocoPhillips and Marathon reached a deal in which they agreed to step up development in the Cook Inlet region in return for the state's support of the export license extension. The producers also agreed to divert gas from the LNG plant as needed to meet the peak winter supply needs of the local utilities. [...] Alaska Governor Sarah Palin welcomed the DOE approval. "In these times of economic uncertainty, this is great news for the state and its residents. This extension will secure a future for the LNG operation and is another step toward ensuring energy supplies and energy security for Alaska," the Republican governor said. [Platts Inside FERC, 6/9/08]
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PALIN: "And despite fierce opposition from oil company lobbyists, who kind of liked things the way they were, we broke their monopoly on power and resources." This |
REALITY: PALIN IS CLOSE TO THE OIL INDUSTRY Sierra Club Director Carl Pope Said "No One is Closer to the Oil Industry Than Governor Palin." "No one is closer to the oil industry than Governor Palin," said Carl Pope, executive director of the Sierra Club in comments reflecting the views of a cross section of environmental activists. They cite her eagerness to embrace expanded offshore oil development, her lawsuit against further protection of polar bears so as not to hinder oil drilling in Alaska's ice-filled waters and her ardent support to allow oil companies into the Alaska wildlife refuge. [Associated Press, August 30, 2008] Palin Took $13,000 from Lobbyists Representing the Oil Industry in Her 2006 Campaign for Governor. The lobbyists who donated to her campaign represent a range of industries, including oil and gas, tobacco, education and the Native Alaskan community. "She's fought oil companies and party bosses and do-nothing bureaucrats and anyone who puts their interests before the interests of the people she swore an oath to serve," Mr. McCain said Friday at an Ohio rally to introduce her as his running mate. But since Mrs. Palin leads a major oil-producing state, that industry is one of her top donors. She collected nearly $13,000 from lobbyists who represent oil and gas industries in her primary and general campaigns, according a review of her campaign donations and 2006 registered state lobbyists. [Washington Times, September 1, 2008] |
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PALIN: "Starting in January, in a McCain-Palin administration, we're going to lay more pipelines ... build more new-clear plants ... create jobs with clean coal ... and move forward on solar, wind, geothermal, and other alternative sources." |
REALITY: PALIN CUT FUNDING FOR RENEWABLE ENERGY 2007: Palin Vetoed $20 Million Toward A Fire Island Wind Farm Project. "[Sen. Hollis] French and [Anchorage Mayor Mark] Begich both lamented the [Palin] veto of $20 million toward a Fire Island wind farm project and connecting transmission lines. That money was part of Railbelt Energy Fund cash that Palin said she doesn't want to spend until a study on energy needs is finished." [Anchorage Daily News (Alaska), 7/30/07] 2008: Palin Cut $20 Million For Chugach Electric Association Wind Farm. As part of a large package of budget cuts, in June 2007, Gov. Sarah Palin, R-AK, cut $20 million in funding for a Chugach Electric Association wind farm. The funding was expected to come from a fund called the Railbelt Energy Fund. Palin said she cut the $20 million because she wanted more information before dipping into the Railbelt Energy Fund. [Anchorage Daily News, 6/30/08] |
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PALIN: "Taxes are too high ... he wants to raise them." |
REALITY: PALIN HAS REPEATEDLY SUPPORTED TAX INCREASES Palin Supported Increasing Wasilla Sales Tax From 2 to 2.5 Percent to Build $14.7 Million Sports Center. "Wasilla residents have given the go ahead to building a new multiuse sports center in town and to raising the city sales tax to pay for it. With the final votes counted Friday, residents voted 306 to 286 in favor of a measure to raise the city sales tax from 2 percent to 2.5 percent to pay the estimated $14.7 million cost of building the center...Mayor Sarah Palin, who supported the measure, said the tight vote will motivate city officials to keep a close eye on the budget for the center." [Anchorage Daily News, 3/9/02] Palin Increased Taxes on Oil Companies to Pay for $1,200 Giveaway to Every Resident in the State. "One of her most significant accomplishments as governor was passing a major tax increase on state oil production, angering oil companies but raising billions of dollars in new revenue. She said the oil companies had previously bribed legislators to keep the taxes low. She subsequently championed legislation that would give some of that money back to Alaskans: Soon, every Alaskan will receive a $1,200 check." [New York Times, 8/30/08] |
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PALIN: "It was just a year ago when all the experts in Washington counted out our nominee because he refused to hedge his commitment to the security of the country he loves. With their usual certitude, they told us that all was lost - there was no hope for this candidate who said that he would rather lose an election than see his country lose a war. But the pollsters and pundits overlooked just one thing when they wrote him off. They overlooked the caliber of the man himself - the determination, resolve, and sheer guts of Senator John McCain. The voters knew better." |
REALITY: MCCAIN COUNTED MCCAIN OUT TWICE February 2008: Palin Wouldn't Endorse McCain. "Top Alaska Republicans were downcast Thursday as Mitt Romney suspended his presidential campaign just two days after overwhelmingly winning the state party caucus. Romney's decision makes it nearly certain Arizona Sen. John McCain will be the party's nominee for president. McCain finished dead last in the Alaska Republican preference poll, behind Romney, Mike Huckabee and Ron Paul. McCain opposes drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and has repeatedly battled with Sen. Ted Stevens over federal spending on Alaska projects... Republican Gov. Sarah Palin said she won't make an endorsement until she can speak to McCain. [Anchorage Daily News (Alaska), 2/3/08] July 2007: Palin Was Waiting For A New Player In GOP Primary. 'A lot of us are sitting back and waiting to see if there will be new players in there,' Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin said. 'That's probably why that box that says 'none of the above' is so popular right now.' [The Associated Press State & Local Wire, 7/23/07] Palin Couldn't Support McCain Because Of His Opposition To ANWR. "Some Alaska Republicans are conflicted over McCain, including Gov. Sarah Palin. They like his maverick reputation and military background but not his opposition to drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. 'She said she'd like to support McCain but felt she couldn't at this particular time because of his stand on ANWR,' said the governor's spokeswoman, Sharon Leighow." [Anchorage Daily News (Alaska), 2/3/08] |
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PALIN: "They are the ones who do some of the hardest work in America ... who grow our food, run our factories, and fight our wars." |
Palin Backed A Two-Year Extension Of The Export License To Export Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) To Japan And Other Asian Countries-Criticized Because Alaska's Gas Reserves Are Declining. "Alaska producers can continue shipping gas to Asia after DOE last week approved an extension of the export license for the Kenai liquefied natural gas plant owned by ConocoPhillips and Marathon. The companies will be allowed to export up to 98.1 Bcf to Japan and other Pacific Rim countries over a two-year period through March 31, 2011. [...] The application came under fire from local end-users, including gas distribution companies Enstar and the Chugach Electric Association, as well as fertilizer maker Agrium, all of which claimed the exports would exacerbate the problem of declining gas reserves in south-central Alaska. Agrium permanently closed its plant near Kenai due to an inability to find enough local supply for the facility that used 53 Bcf/year. In January, ConocoPhillips and Marathon reached a deal in which they agreed to step up development in the Cook Inlet region in return for the state's support of the export license extension. The producers also agreed to divert gas from the LNG plant as needed to meet the peak winter supply needs of the local utilities. [...] Alaska Governor Sarah Palin welcomed the DOE approval. "In these times of economic uncertainty, this is great news for the state and its residents. This extension will secure a future for the LNG operation and is another step toward ensuring energy supplies and energy security for Alaska," the Republican governor said. [Platts Inside FERC, 6/9/08]
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PALIN: "As for my running mate, you can be certain that wherever he goes, and whoever is listening, John McCain is the same man. I'm not a member of the permanent political establishment." |
1999: Campaigning In San Francisco, CA, McCain Said "I Would Not Support Repeal Of Roe v. Wade." In August 1999, the San Francisco Chronicle reported that McCain said he "would not support repeal of Roe vs. Wade": "I'd love to see a point where (Roe vs. Wade) is irrelevant, and could be repealed because abortion is no longer necessary. But certainly in the short term, or even the long term, I would not support repeal of Roe vs. Wade, which would then force X number of women in America to (undergo) illegal and dangerous operations." [The San Francisco Chronicle, 8/20/99]
At A Private Meeting With Hispanic Community Leaders, McCain "Assured Leaders He Would Push Through Congress Legislation To Overhaul Federal Immigration Laws If Elected." "Republican presidential John McCain assured Hispanic leaders he would push through Congress legislation to overhaul federal immigration laws if elected, several people who attended a private meeting with the candidate said Thursday. Democrats questioned why the Arizona senator held the meeting late Wednesday night in Chicago. But supporters who were in the room denied that McCain held the closed-door session out of fear of offending conservatives, many of whom want him to take a harder line on immigration. ... 'He's one John McCain in front of white Republicans. And he's a different John McCain in front of Hispanics,' complained Rosanna Pulido, a Hispanic and conservative Republican who attended the meeting. Pulido, who heads the Illinois Minuteman Project, which advocates for restrictive immigration laws, said she thought McCain was 'pandering to the crowd' by emphasizing immigration reform in his 15-minute speech. 'He's having his private meetings to rally Hispanics and to tell them what they want to hear,' she said. 'I'm outraged that he would reach out to me as a Hispanic but not as a conservative.'" [AP, 6/20/08]
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PALIN: "But we are expected to govern with integrity, and goodwill, and clear convictions..." |
REALITY: PALIN UNDER INVESTIGATION FOR ABUSE OF POWER. Former State Official Accused Palin, Palin's Former Chief of Staff and Current Ted Stevens Campaign Manager and Palin's Husband Of Pressuring Him to Fire Trooper. In July 2008, former state official Walt Monegan accused Palin, Palin's former Chief of Staff and current Stevens' campaign manager Mike Tibbles and husband Todd Palin of pressuring him to fire Palin sister's ex-husband Mike Wooten. [Anchorage Daily News, 07/18/08] July 2008: Special Counsel Appointed Last Month to Investigate Palin Abuse of Power Claim. In July 2008, the Alaska State Legislator voted 12-0 to approve $100,000 for a special investigator to begin an investigation into claims Palin fired a former state official because he would not fire a state trooper who was involved in a bitter custody battle with Palin's sister. The legislator's intent was to investigate the events surrounding the termination of former Dept. of Public Safety Commissioner Walt Monegan and potential abuses of power and improper action by Palin and her administration. [KTVA 11, 07/28/08] |
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PALIN: "We need American energy resources, brought to you by American ingenuity, and produced by American workers." |
Palin Responded Favorably to Obama's Energy Plan. According to a news release from her office, Gov. Sarah Palin, R-AK, said she was "pleased" by Obama's energy plan. "I am pleased to see Senator Obama acknowledge the huge potential Alaska's natural gas reserves represent in terms of clean energy and sound jobs," she said. "The steps taken by the Alaska State Legislature this past week demonstrate that we are ready, willing and able to supply the energy our nation needs." The press release said that "in a speech given in Lansing, Michigan, Senator Obama called for the completion of the Alaska natural gas pipeline, stating, 'Over the next five years, we should also lease more of the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska for oil and gas production. And we should also tap more of our substantial natural gas reserves and work with the Canadian government to finally build the Alaska natural gas pipeline, delivering clean natural gas and creating good jobs in the process.'" [Palin press release, 8/4/08] |
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PALIN: " But listening to him speak, it's easy to forget that this is a man who has authored two memoirs but not a single major law or reform - not even in the state senate." |
REALITY: OBAMA PASSED THE MOST SWEEPING REFORMS SINCE WATERGATE IN BOTH THE ILLINOIS AND US SENATES, AMONG OTHER ACCOMPLISHMENTS Obama Helped Pass The 2007 Ethics Reform Law, Which Curbed The Influence Of Lobbyists And Was Described As The "Most Sweeping Since Watergate." In the first week of the 110th Congress, Obama joined with Senator Feingold to introduce a "Gold Standard" ethics package. Many of the Obama/Feingold bill's most important provisions were included in the final ethics reform package passed by the Senate in late January: a full ban on gifts and meals from lobbyists including those paid by the firms that employ lobbyists; an end to subsidized travel on corporate jets; full disclosure of who's sponsoring earmarks and for what purpose; additional restrictions to close the revolving door between public service and lobbying to ensure that public service isn't all about lining up a high-paying lobbying job; and requiring lobbyists to disclose the contributions that they "bundle" - that is, collect or arrange - for members of Congress, candidates, and party committees. In January 2007, the Washington Post wrote in an editorial that "...Mr. Reid, along with Sens. Russell Feingold (D-Wis.) and Barack Obama (D-Ill.), deserves credit for assembling and passing this package." In September 2007, the AP reported, "President Bush signed a bill Friday that will require lawmakers to disclose more about their efforts to fund pet projects and raise money from lobbyists, a measure that backers call the biggest ethics reform in decades...Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill. who had pushed for the bundling provisions and was one of four lawmakers who participated in a Democratic conference call to reporters said the measure marks "the most sweeping ethics reform since Watergate." [S. 230, 110th Congress; S.1, Became Public Law 109-110-81, 9/14/07; AP, 9/15/07;The Washington Post, Editorial, 1/21/07] Obama Passed Illinois State Gift Ban Act "Heralded As the Most Sweeping Good-Government Legislation in Decades." In 1998, Obama passed the Illinois Gift Ban that prohibited legislators, state officers and employees, and judges from soliciting or receiving gifts from a person or entity with interests affected by government. The Chicago Tribune wrote, "Gov. Jim Edgar signed into law Wednesday an ethics and campaign finance package heralded as the most sweeping good-government legislation in decades." The law also required greater campaign finance disclosure and limited the uses for which raised money could be spent. Obama said, "I have seen a general cynicism from taxpayers about government. They believe they have no influence on the process since they don't have the money of special interest groups. With the gift ban and the ban on Springfield fund-raisers that are contained in this legislation, I think at least some of this confidence will be restored." [HB672, 3R P 52-4-1, 5/22/98; PA 90-0737, 8/12/98; Chicago Tribune, 8/13/98; Chicago Independent Bulletin, 6/4/98] Ø Illinois Ethics Bill Most Far Reaching Since Watergate, Product Of Bipartisan Work. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch wrote of Obama's bill, "The ethics restrictions would be the most far-reaching since the Watergate-era campaign financial disclosure law. They are the product of months of negotiations among two lawmakers of each party, other state officials and Mike Lawrence. He is an aide to former Sen. Paul Simon, a Democrat, and used to be an aide to Edgar, a Republican." [St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 5/24/98] Obama And Lugar Passed Law Boosting U.S. Efforts To Keep WMDs And Other Dangerous Weapons Out Of The Hands Of Terrorists. In 2006, Obama and Lugar introduced The Cooperative Proliferation Detection Act, which was passed by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee unanimously on May 26, 2006 and was eventually incorporated into the Department of State Authorities Act of 2006 and signed into law on January 11, 2007. According to a Senate Foreign Relations Committee report on its legislative activity in the 109th Congress, "The committee passed S. 2566, The Cooperative Proliferation Detection, Interdiction Assistance, and Conventional Threat Reduction Act of 2006 by unanimous consent on May 26, 2006. The legislation authored by Chairman Lugar and Senator Obama enhances: (1) U.S. cooperation with foreign governments to destroy conventional weapons stockpiles around the world; and (2) the United States' ability to provide assistance to foreign governments aimed at helping them detect and interdict weapons and materials of mass destruction. The legislation, which garnered 26 co-sponsors (including 8 committee members), sought to energize U.S. programs to secure lightweight anti-aircraft missiles...The initiative was modeled after the Nunn-Lugar program that focuses on weapons of mass destruction in the former Soviet Union. The legislation was signed into law on January 11, 2007, as a part of H.R. 6060, the Department of State Authorities Act of 2006." [P.L. 109-472, 1/11/07; House Report 109-706, 9/3/06; S. 2566, 109th Congress; S.1949, 109th Congress; Senate Report 110-40, 3/29/07] Ø Lugar Said It Was Accurate That Said Obama Reached Out To Him And They Passed Legislation To Lock Down Loose Nuclear Weapons. "Republican Sen. Dick Lugar (IN) today said an Obama campaign ad which features him is 'accurate.' The ad makes the point the Obama previously 'reached out' to Lugar to 'help lock down loose nuclear weapons.' Lugar is widely considered one of the most knowledgeable in the area of nuclear weapons proliferation and the coauthored of the 1991 Nunn-Lugar Act on cooperative threat reduction. 'He did' reach out, Lugar said. He explained that in 2005, Obama asked if he could join Lugar on a trip to Russia and other countries to visit sites under the Nunn-Lugar program. 'After that, we had legislation that we cosponsored together which passed' dealing with dangerous missiles. 'So I am pleased we had that opportunity to work together,' Lugar said. 'I'm pleased we had the association Sen. Obama describes.' But Lugar made clear up front that while the ad was accurate, and he's comfortable with the association, 'There is no chance I will consider running with Barack Obama.'" [MSNBC, 7/15/08] Obama and Coburn Passed A Bill Creating A "Google-like" Database For The Public To Search Details About Federal Funding Awards. In 2006, Obama and Coburn co-authored a bill to create a "Google-like" database of information on federal spending. The bill requires the OMB by January 1, 2008, to make available to the public a searchable, free website that includes the (1) amount; (2) transaction type; (3) funding agency; (4) North American Industry Classification System code or Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance number; (5) program source; (6) an award title descriptive of the purpose of each funding action; (7) the name and location of the recipient and the primary location of performance; and (8) a unique identifier of the recipient and any parent entity. The site must allow users to conduct separate searches that distinguish between awards that are grants, sub-grants, loans, cooperative agreements, and other forms of financial assistance and awards that are contracts, subcontracts, purchase orders, task orders, and delivery orders. [S. 2590, Passed by Unanimous Consent, 9/7/06; Became PL 109-282, 9/26/06] Obama Passed Law Ensuring That Wounded Veterans Recovering In Military Hospitals Do Not Have To Pay For Their Meals Or Phone Calls To Family Members. In 2005, Obama sponsored and passed an amendment that to the 2005 emergency supplemental appropriations act ensuring that wounded veterans recovering in military hospitals do not have to pay for their own meals or phone calls to family members. The amendment was then passed in each of the following Congresses. Prior to passage of the amendment, service members receiving physical therapy or rehabilitation services in a medical hospital for more than 90 days were required to pay for their meals. Obama's amendment required the military to provide free meals for service members in military hospitals undergoing recuperation or therapy as a result of wounds sustained in Iraq or Afghanistan. The amendment was retroactive to January 1, 2005 in an effort to provide those injured service members who received bills for their meals with some relief from those costs. The amendment became law. [S. Amdt. 390, Passed by unanimous consent, 4/14/05 to H.R.1268, Signed by the President, 5/11/05, Became Public Law No: 109-013; Obama Press Release, 5/11/05] Obama Proposals Providing Improvements In Health Care For Recovering Soldiers Were Passed Into Law, Including Requirements For Post-Deployment Mental Health Screenings And National Study On The Needs Of Iraq War Veterans. H.R. 976, passed by the Senate on August 2, 2007, includes several provisions from bills originally sponsored by Senators Obama and McCaskill. The provisions would improve health care services and health care tracking for service members, and would require post-deployment, face to face mental health screenings for returning service members within 30 days. The bill also adopts other Obama-McCaskill legislation, the HERO Act, which would launch a major national research endeavor into the readjustment needs of returning service members, veterans and their families. The bill also included measures to improve and reform the disability rating process. [Vote 307, H.R. 976, Passed, 68-31, 8/2/07; S. 713, 110th Congress; S. 1271, 110th Congress; Obama Press Release, 7/25/07; H.R. 4986, Became Public Law No: 110-181, 1/28/08] Obama Worked With Republicans To Pass Legislation, Which Became Law, Improving And Increasing Services For Homeless Veterans. In 2006, Congress passed a Veterans Affairs Committee bill which included several provisions originating in Obama's SAVE Act (S. 1180) and Homes for Heroes Act (S. 3475). "The legislation...includes a number of proposals from legislation Senator Obama had previously introduced (S.1180, the SAVE Act and S.3475 the Homes for Heroes Act) to expand and improve services for homeless veterans. The bill permanently authorizes and increases funding to $130 million per year for a competitive grant program to provide homeless services to veterans. It greatly increases a successful program to provide rental vouchers to homeless veterans. The legislation extends programs to providing treatment for veterans with mental illnesses and other special needs. And it permanently extends VA's ability to transfer property it owns to homeless shelters." Obama worked with VA Committee Republicans Craig and Burr on the committee legislation that eventually became law. [S. 3421/P.L. 109-461; S. 1180, 109th Congress; S. 3475, 109th Congress; Obama Press Release, 6/26/06] Obama Passed Bipartisan Legislation That Expanded Health Care Coverage To 154,000 Residents, Including 70,000 Children. As a state senator, Barack Obama sponsored and helped pass legislation that expanded and made permanent Illinois' KidCare program by raising eligibility from 185% to 200% of the federal poverty level. The legislation provided coverage for an additional 20,000 children and 65,000 more Illinois adults in the first year, and by 2007 had expanded health care to 70,000 kids and 84,000 adults. In its endorsement for his Senate race, the State Journal-Register wrote, "Obama brings similar common-sense views to improving health care in America - for example, as a state senator he championed the successful KidCare program that assists thousands of children of the working poor." The bill was sponsored in the state House by Sandra Pihos, a Republican and passed 42-13. [93rd GA, SB 130, 3R P 42-13-2; Signed into law 6/30/03, PA 93-0063; Chicago Daily Herald, 7/2/03; Blagojevich release, 1/9/07; Blagojevich release, 4/13/07; Kaiser family report, 5/07; State Journal-Register, 10/29/04] Obama Passed A Bill Creating $100 Million Earned Income Tax Credit As A Member Of The Minority Party In The Illinois Senate. In 1999, Obama was the lead sponsor of a bill making Illinois the 11th state to adopt an earned income-tax credit. The bill provided that each individual taxpayer is entitled to a credit against the tax imposed by the Act in an amount equal to 5% of the federal earned income tax credit allowed. Then-Gov. George Ryan opposed the move, but an unlikely political alliance - including Republicans and Democrats - formed to reduce the tax burden on working poor families. The AP wrote, "The new law, which offers about $105 million in tax breaks over the next three years, gives a state income tax credit equal to 5 percent of a similar federal tax credit. For the average working family making less than $30,580, that amounts to about $55 a year, or 15 cents a day. The maximum credit for families with two or more children is $191 a year." [91st GA, HB 3939; 4/14/00, 3R P; 59-0-0; P.A. 91-0700, 5/11/00; Chicago Tribune, 4/10/99] Obama Passed Near-Unanimous Death Penalty Overhaul Package. Obama was the chief co-sponsor and voted for bill creating the Capital Punishment Reform Study Committee Act. The proposal, which was approved on a 57-1 vote, was virtually identical to reforms pushed in 2002 by then-Gov. George Ryan. If passed by the House and signed into law by the governor, the bill would let judges rule out a death sentence for someone convicted solely on the testimony of a jailhouse informant, accomplice or single witness; let the state Supreme Court overturn a death sentence that was "fundamentally unjust.; Reduce the crimes eligible for the death penalty by focusing on "inherently violent" offenses; Expand defendants' access to genetic evidence used against them; Ban police officers from the police force if they committed perjury in a murder case; and Require juries to consider a defendant's history of abuse or mental illness when deciding whether to impose the death sentence. Obama said, "As far as the Bill goes, it doesn't address whether the death penalty is applied fairly to all races and in all regions of the state. And it doesn't appease those who want capital punishment eliminated." [93rd GA, SB 0472; 4/3/03, 3R P; 57-1-0; 5/29/03, HA1 SC; 56-3-0; 11/5/03, OAV P; 58-0-0; P.A. 93-0605, 11/25/03; Pantagraph, 4/4/03; Associated Press, 4/24/03] |
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PALIN: "America needs more energy ... our opponent is against producing it." |
REALITY: Obama has expressed support for a bipartisan compromise that would cut tax breaks for oil companies, invest in alternative energies, and allow for limited new offshore drilling Obama Said He Would Be Open To Offshore Drilling If We Come Up With "A Genuine Bipartisan Compromise" To Get To Energy Independence. "Senator Barack Obama said Saturday that he would reluctantly consider accepting some new offshore oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico in exchange for stripping oil companies of tax breaks and extending several tax credits to spur the search for alternative fuels. At the same time, Senate Republicans appear to have dropped their insistence on opening the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to drilling. Mr. Obama has until now opposed any offshore drilling. But in a news conference here, he noted that there had been 'very constructive' talks between Senate Republicans and Democrats on this issue in recent days, applauding a plan unveiled by a group of Republican and Democratic senators to permit drilling while supporting an effort to convert most vehicles to using alternative fuels in 20 years. 'If we come up with a genuine bipartisan compromise, where I have to accept some things that I don't like in order to get energy independence,' Mr. Obama said, 'that's something I will have to consider.' Still, he cautioned that he was not yet 'ready to sign off on any approach.'" [New York Times, 8/3/08] Ø Tapper: "This Strikes Me As Not A Complete And Utter Reversal "But Rather "A Recognition That Energy Legislation Requires Compromise." "Sen. Barack Obama, D-Illinois, now says he'd be willing to consider legislation including expanded off-shore drilling if part of a larger package, despite his long-time opposition to the idea. I'm with my friend Marc Ambinder -- this strikes me as not quite a complete and utter reversal, but certainly a shift in tone and language, indicating a softening of his opposition and a recognition that energy legislation requires compromise. Not unlike Sen. John McCain's statement that when it comes to Social Security reform, everything must be on the table, even though he personally opposes tax increases. (Though the back-peddling on that was confounding.)." [ABC News, 8/2/08] Ø Ambinder: "This Strikes Me As Less Of A Shift And More As A Gesture Of Sorts To The Reality That The Major Cap And Trade Legislation Next Year...Requires The Participation Of And Compromise From The Industry." Marc Ambinder wrote, "In an interview yesterday, Obama said that he'd be willing to accept additional domestic oil exploration as part of a bipartisan compromise on energy reform. This strikes me as less of a shift and more as a gesture of sorts to the reality that the major cap and trade legislation next year that Congress will mark up -- legislation that will be introduced regardless of who's president -- requires the participation of and compromise from the industry. The oil industry has two cards, basically, in the negotiations. One: that windfall profits taxes would disincentivize further exploration somehow... two: that, as the staple source of energy, oil companies ought to have more land/water to figure out where oil is and then tap those pools. Democrats are more likely to compromise on the second, rather than the first. Note that Obama is still opposed to expanded drilling off the coasts of Florida." [The Atlantic, 8/2/08] Ø Stoller: Obama Supported A "Real Compromise" On Energy. Obama's position on drilling is "actually a real compromise...the compromise put forward by Obama would in fact move us forward on sustainable energy while raising taxes on the oil companies. Since opening up new areas to oil companies is more about financial manipulation of oil leases than actually drilling, this is calling the oil company's bluff." [Open Left, 8/5/08] Ø Pelosi: Obama Position On Gang Of Ten Compromise Was Presidential. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi said, "What Senator Obama said is what we want a president to say...Let's look at all of the options. Let's compare them. And let's see what really does increase our supply, protect our environment, save our economy, protect the consumer, instead of a single-shot thing that does none of the above." [Washington Times, 8/4/08] |
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PALIN: "Victory in Iraq is finally in sight ... he wants to forfeit." |
REALITY: BUSH ADMINISTRATION AND INDEPENDENT MILITARY EXPERTS AGREE THAT DRAWING DOWN ONE TO TWO BRIGADES A MONTH IS NOT ONLY POSSIBLE BUT SAFE
McCain Said He Thought 16 Months Is A Pretty Good Timetable For Withdrawal >From Iraq. McCain was asked, "So why do you think he said that 16 months is basically a pretty good timetable?" McCain responded, "He said it's a pretty good timetable based on conditions on the ground. I think it's a pretty good timetable, as we should -- or horizons for withdrawal. But they have to be based on conditions on the ground." [CNN, 7/25/08] Iraqi Prime Minister Maliki: "Obama Is Right When He Talks About 16 Months." "Asked in an interview with German news magazine Der Spiegel of when he would like to see American forces leave Iraq, Maliki said: 'As soon as possible, as far as we're concerned.' He then added that 'Obama is right when he talks about 16 months. Assuming that positive developments continue, this is about the same time period that corresponds to our wishes.'" [The Hill, 7/19/08] Maj. Gen. Anderson Said Current Capacity to Remove 2 ½ Brigade Combat Teams a Month. "The military has been redeploying troops for years, and Maj. Gen. Charles Anderson, who would help with the withdrawal, told us as we toured Camp Arifjan in Kuwait, 'We have the capacity to do a minimum of two-and-a-half brigade combat teams a month -- can we expand that capacity? Sure. Can we accelerate? It depends. It depends on the amount of equipment that we bring back. And it's going to depend on how fast we bring them out.'" [ABC News, 7/11/08] 4/8/08: Petraeus, Asked By a McCain Ally Whether A Brigade a Month Could Be With Drawn From Iraq, Said It Could Be "Doable." In a Senate Hearing before the Committee on Armed Services, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), asked General Petraeus what would happen if one brigade per month was withdrawn beginning in January 2009. Petraeus responded, "It clearly would depend on the conditions of that time. If conditions were good, quite good, that might be doable." [Senate Hearing before Senate Committee on Armed Services, 4/8/08] 9/07: Larry Korb Wrote "A Phased Military Redeployment From Iraq Over The Next 10 To 12 Months Would Begin Extracting U.S. Troops From Iraq's Internal Conflicts Immediately And Would Be Completed By The End Of 2008." Lawrence J. Korb, former Assistant Secretary of Defense in the Reagan Administration, along with Max A. Bergmann, Sean E. Duggen, Peter M. Juul, wrote for a Center for American Progress Report, "A phased military redeployment from Iraq over the next 10 to 12 months would begin extracting U.S. troops from Iraq's internal conflicts immediately and would be completed by the end of 2008. During this timeframe, the military will not replace outgoing troops as they rotate home at the end of their tours and will draw down force and equipment levels gradually, at a pace similar to previous rotations conducted by our military over the past four years. According to a U.S. military official in Baghdad involved in planning, a withdrawal could take place safely in this time period." ["How to Redeploy: Implementing a Responsible Drawdown of U.S. Forces from Iraq" September 2007, Center for American Progress] 7/13/07: Pace Said US Forces Were "Designed Right Now To Be Able To Increase Or Decrease About One Brigade Per Month." General Peter Pace, former Chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff said, "On the logistics side, the system itself is designed right now to be able to increase or decrease about one brigade per month. Can you surge U.S. military and commercial capacity beyond those numbers? Sure. But for a normal planning factor, we're looking at either adding or subtracting about one brigade a month." [DoD Media Roundtable with Secretary Gates and Gen. Pace, 7/13/07] 12/6/06: Iraq Study Group Report Said "All Combat Brigades Not Necessary For Force Protection Could Be Out Of Iraq" By the First Quarter of 2008-15 Months. The Iraq Study Group's independent assessment, released Dec. 6, 2006, found that, "By the first quarter of 2008, subject to unexpected developments in the security situation on the ground, all combat brigades not necessary for force protection could be out of Iraq." [Iraq Study Group Report] |
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PALIN: "Terrorist states are seeking new-clear weapons without delay ... he wants to meet them without preconditions." |
REALITY: REPUBLICANS AGREE WITH DIRECT TALKS WITH IRAN Defense Secretary Gates: We Need To "Sit Down And Talk" With Iran. "The United States should construct a combination of incentives and pressure to engage Iran, and may have missed earlier opportunities to begin a useful dialogue with Tehran, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said yesterday. 'We need to figure out a way to develop some leverage . . . and then sit down and talk with them," Gates said. "If there is going to be a discussion, then they need something, too. We can't go to a discussion and be completely the demander, with them not feeling that they need anything from us.'" [Washington Post, 5/15/08] Henry Kissinger Said That The U.S. Should Negotiate Directly With Iran. "Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger said the U.S. should negotiate directly with Iran over its nuclear program and other bilateral issues. 'One should be prepared to negotiate, and I think we should be prepared to negotiate about Iran,' Kissinger, who brokered the end of the 1973 Yom Kippur war and peace talks with the North Vietnamese, said yesterday in an interview with Bloomberg Television. Asked whether he meant the U.S. should hold direct talks, Kissinger, 84, responded: 'Yes, I think we should.'" [Bloomberg, 3/14/08] Hagel: The United States Should Actively Pursue Direct, Unconditional, And Comprehensive Talks With Iran. Hagel said, "Now is the time for the United States to actively pursue an offer of direct, unconditional, and comprehensive talks with Iran. We cannot afford to refuse to consider this strategic choice any longer. We should make clear that everything is on the table, our issues and Iran's issues." [CNN, 11/8/07] Lugar: Direct Talks With Iran "Would Be Useful." "The United States needs to pursue direct talks and other diplomatic avenues with Iran about its disputed nuclear program before considering a military option, lawmakers from both parties said yesterday. 'I think that would be useful,' said Richard Lugar, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, when asked on ABC's 'This Week' about having direct talks. 'The Iranians are a part of the energy picture,' said Lugar, a Republican from Indiana. 'We need to talk about that.'" [AP, 4/17/06] Former H.W. Bush Secretary of State James Baker: "It's Not Appeasement to Talk to Your Enemies." James Baker said, "I can't make that judgment here this morning because I don't know what other elements are involved in it. I will say just generally as I've been saying since I've been on this book tour that I believe in talking to your enemies. I don't think you restrict your conversations to your friends. At the same time, it's got to be hard-nosed. It's got to be determined. You don't give away anything, but in my view, it's not appeasement to talk to your enemies. There ought to be some way. I mean, I point out the fact that I made 15 trips to Damascus back in 1991 when they were on our list of countries of state-sponsored terrorism and they changed 25 years..."["This Week," ABC News Transcripts, 10/8/06] Arlen Specter: It Seems Unrealistic That We Say To The Opposite Party That As A Precondition To Discussions We Want The Principle Concession We're After. Republican Senator Arlen Specter said in a hearing of the Defense Subcommittee of the Senate Appropriations Committee, "Now, the position taken by the secretary of State has been we won't talk to Iran unless, as a precondition, they stop enriching uranium. It seems to me that it is unrealistic to try to have discussions but to say to the opposite party, as a precondition to discussions, we want the principle concession that we're after. Do you think it makes sense to insist on a concession like stopping enriching uranium, which is what our ultimate objective is, before we even sit down and talk to them on a broader range of issues?" [Hearing of the Defense Subcommittee of the Senate Appropriations Committee, 5/20/08] Rice: I Am Prepared To Meet My Counterpart At Any Time If Iran Suspends Its Enrichment and Processing Activities. Condoleezza Rice said, "I am prepared to meet my counterpart or an Iranian representative at any time if Iran will suspend its enrichment and reprocessing activities. That should be a clear signal." [AP, 2/25/07] |
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PALIN: "Government is too big ... he wants to grow it. Congress spends too much ... he promises more." |
REALITY: IT IS MCCAIN'S BUDGET PLAN THAT WILL BREAK THE BANK Analysts Say McCain's Plan Would Increase The Deficit More Than Obama's. "Experts say that both the McCain plan and the Obama plan would increase the deficit, and that neither man has adequately explained how his proposals would be paid for. But several analysts have said they believe that Mr. McCain's plan would increase the deficit more, because of the size of the tax cuts he is seeking." [New York Times, 6/11/08] McCain's Tax Cuts Will Either Explode The Federal Deficit Or Require "Unprecedented Cuts" In Federal Spending On Domestic Programs. "Sen. John McCain is proposing tax cuts that would either cause the federal deficit to explode or would require unprecedented spending cuts equal to one-third of federal spending on domestic programs. Once thought of as a deficit hawk, the near-certain Republican presidential nominee is now putting more stress on the traditional Republican orthodoxy of tax cuts." [Wall Street Journal, 4/22/08] New York Times: McCain's Budget Will Add $200 Or $300 Billion To The Deficit Per Year. "The Obama campaign claims it can pay for all this, and even reduce the deficit, through tax increases and spending cuts. I think a more skeptical look at its budget leaves you worried it may add something like $50 billion a year to the deficit. But applying the same arched brow to Mr. McCain's stated plans leaves you worried that he will add $200 billion or $300 billion or, depending on his voluntary tax system, even more." [New York Times, 6/18/08] Tax Policy Center Report Said That McCain's Budget Plan Would Add $5 Trillion To The Debt Over The Next Decade. "Obama's plan -- cuts targeted to middle- and low-income Americans and increases for the wealthy -- would increase the national debt by an estimated $3.4 trillion in the next decade, the center said. Under a similar analysis, McCain's plan -- largely a continuation of Bush's tax reductions -- would add $5 trillion." [Los Angeles Times, 7/24/08]
Doubling The Dependent Tax Exemption Would Cost $65 Billion A Year. "Doubling the dependent exemption would cost $65 billion a year." [Wall Street Journal, 4/16/08] April 2008: McCain "Changed His Position" On Balancing The Budget, Said Economic Conditions Made It Unrealistic. John McCain had previously said he would balance the budget in four years, but changed his position in April saying that "economic conditions are reversed" and it would instead take eight years. [New York Times, 4/16/08] |
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PALIN: "Taxes are too high ... he wants to raise them. His tax increases are the fine print in his economic plan, and let me be specific. The Democratic nominee for president supports plans to raise income taxes ... raise payroll taxes ... raise investment income taxes ... raise the death tax ... raise business taxes ... and increase the tax burden on the American people by hundreds of billions of dollars." |
REALITY: OBAMA TAX PROPOSAL WILL NOT RAISE TAXES AND WILL PROVIDE A BIGGER BREAK FOR MIDDLE CLASS FAMILIES THAN MCCAIN'S PLAN Annenberg Political Fact Check: McCain's Ad Attacking Obama's Plans That Would Increase Taxes And Bring On "Years Of Deficits" And "Billions In New Government Spending" "Puts Another Stitch In What We've Call His Pattern Of Deceit On Obama's Tax Plan." "McCain's new ad puts another stitch in what we've called his pattern of deceit on Obama's tax plan. This one claims Obama and congressional Democrats plan to push forward 'painful tax increases on working American families' and that they will bring about 'years of deficits,' 'no balanced budgets' and 'billions in new government spending.' The ad is plain wrong about higher taxes on working families. In fact, Obama's economic plan would produce a tax cut for the majority of American households, with middle-income earners benefiting most. As for 'years of deficits,' exactly the same claim could be made about McCain's program. It's unlikely either Obama or McCain would balance the budget, and both are projected to increase the debt by trillions." [FactCheck.org, 9/2/08] Washington Post Editorial: "McCain Campaign Insists on Completely Misrepresenting Mr. Obama's Plan" on Taxes - Under McCain's Plan, "Wealthiest Taxpayers Make Out Terrifically." "Instead, the McCain campaign insists on completely misrepresenting Mr. Obama's plan. The ad opens with the Obama-as-celebrity theme - 'Celebrities don't have to worry about family budgets, but we sure do,' says the female announcer. 'We're paying more for food and gas, making it harder to save for college, retirement.' Then she sticks it to him: 'Obama's solution? Higher taxes, called 'a recipe for economic disaster.' He's ready to raise your taxes but not ready to lead.' The facts? The nonpartisan Tax Policy Center found that the Obama plan would give households in the bottom fifth of the income distribution an average tax cut of 5.5 percent of income ($567) in 2009, while those in the middle fifth would get an average cut of 2.6 percent of income ($1,118). 'Your taxes' would go up, yes -- but not if you're someone who is sweating higher gas prices. By contrast, Mr. McCain's tax plan would give those in the bottom fifth of income an average tax cut of $21 in 2009. The middle fifth would get $325 -- less than a third of the Obama cut. The wealthiest taxpayers make out terrifically. The country can't afford the tax cuts either man is promising, although Mr. McCain's approach is by far the more costly. We don't expect either side to admit that. But neither side should get to outright lie about its opponent's positions, either." [Washington Post Editorial, 8/31/08] Analysts Say That Obama's Tax Cut Plan "Offers Three Times The Break For Middle Class Families Than Proposals" Of McCain. "The tax cut plan of Democratic nominee to be Barack Obama offers three times the break for middle class families than proposals of likely Republican nominee John McCain, according to analysts working for a left-leaning think tank. Families making between $37,595 and $66,354 of annual income with Obama would get an average tax cut of $1,042 per family while McCain's tax cut for this group would be $319, the report states." [Nashua Telegraph, 6/12/08] Under Obama's Plan The Middle Of The Middle Class Would See Taxes Cut By $1,042 A Year; McCain's Tax Plan Would Give Them Only A $319 Tax Cut. According to the non partisan Tax Policy Center's computations, "under Mr. Obama's plan, the middle of the middle class, or those earning $37,595 to $66,354, would see taxes cut by $1,042 a year. Under Mr. McCain's plan, taxes for people in that category would also fall, but by $319; the largest chunk of the benefits would go to those making $2.8 million a year or more." [New York Times, 6/13/08] Obama Plan: $80 Billion A Year In Tax Cuts "To Middle-Class Workers, Homeowners And Retirees." "Senator Barack Obama proposed a plan on Tuesday to provide at least $80 billion a year in tax cuts to middle-class workers, homeowners and retirees, saying if he was elected president he would 'end the preferential treatment that's built into our tax code.' Mr. Obama said he would give a $500 tax credit to more than 150 million workers, create a tax credit for homeowners who do not itemize their deductions and eliminate income taxes for older taxpayers who make less than $50,000 a year." [New York Times, 9/19/07; Tax Fairness For The Middle Class] REALITY: OUTSIDE OBSERVERS AGREE: CLAIMS THAT OBAMA WILL RAISE TAXES ARE "WRONG," "FALSE," "MISLEADING" Time: McCain's Tax Plan "Benefits Mostly Those In Higher Income Brackets While Obama's Plan Benefits Mostly Those In Lower-And Middle Income Tax Brackets." "They do, however, offer plans that differ strikingly from each other. McCain's tax plan benefits mostly those in higher income brackets, while Obama's plan benefits mostly those in lower- and middle-income tax brackets. McCain wants a tax cut for corporate profits, while Obama has proposed a whole host of tax cuts that will benefit those in the middle-income brackets." [Time, 7/24/08] "Overwhelmingly Most Americans Will Not See Their Income Taxes Increased" Under Obama's Tax Plan. Anne Mathias, an economist at the Stanford Group Company, "points out that 95.1% of the American people are in households that earn less than $200,000 -- so overwhelmingly most Americans will not see their income taxes increased, if Obama's math is correct." [ABC News, 7/7/08] New York Sun: "Some Conservatives Are Praising" Obama For His Tax Plan And A Senior Policy Analyst At The Heritage Foundation Said That The Middle Class Would Likely Pay Less Under Obama's Plan Than McCain's. "Senator Obama, with his lead against Senator McCain narrowing in some polls, is trying to portray himself as the real tax-cutter in the presidential race. And even some conservatives are praising him for it. A senior policy analyst at the conservative Heritage Foundation, Rea Hederman Jr., praised Mr. Obama for proposing a 20% tax rate on dividends and capital gains, lower than a 28% rate he had initially floated, though still more than the current 15% rate. 'That's a great step in the right direction,' Mr. Hederman said. 'It's a big change from what we thought the Obama tax plan would be at the beginning of the summer.' Mr. Hederman said the middle class would likely pay less under Mr. Obama's plan than Mr. McCain's but that the Democrat was excessively reliant on complicated tax breaks that would make the tax code more confusing. 'Instead of a grab bag of tax credits, lower the marginal rates,' Mr. Hederman said." [New York Sun, 8/15/08] Washington Post Fact Checker: McCain Campaign Attacks on Obama Tax Plan "Overblown," "Wrong," and "Greatly Exaggerated." "The McCain camp is attempting to persuade Americans that their taxes will increase dramatically with Barack Obama as president. The presumptive Republican nominee has repeatedly said that Obama would enact 'the largest tax increase since the Second World War.' A surrogate, former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina, insists that Obama has not proposed 'a single tax cut' and wants to 'raise every tax in the book.' ... The claim that Obama will 'enact' the largest tax increase since World War II is also overblown. The Bush tax cuts will expire automatically at the end of 2010, so it is hardly a question of 'enacting' a new tax increase. ... Carly Fiorina is wrong to claim that Obama has proposed no tax cuts and wants to raise 'every tax in the book.' John McCain is on more solid ground when he claims that Americans from many different backgrounds could be affected by a rise in capital gains taxes, but he has greatly exaggerated the adverse impact." [Washington Post, 6/11/08] Politifact: McCain's Statement That Obama's Tax Plan Would Raise Taxes Is "False." Politifact reported, "So calling it a tax increase might not be considered fair. There's no disputing that taxes will rise, but the question of who's responsible for that tax increase is another matter entirely. At PolitiFact, we've concluded, as have others, that it's unfair to call Obama's plan a tax increase merely because it doesn't change existing tax law to keep rates low. We think about it this way: The reason taxes will increase is because of tax policy signed into law not by Obama, but by somebody else... the more recent data - combined with the fact that Obama's proposal does not constitute a tax increase in the traditional sense, since some taxes would be lower under his plan than they would under current law - persuades us to classify McCain's statement as False." [Politifact, 6/11/08] Washington Post: McCain's Attack On The Obama Tax Plan "Crosses The Line From Reasonable Argument To Unacceptably Misleading." "Barack Obama and John McCain have important differences on tax policy. These are fair game for campaign ads, and no one expects 30-second spots to be suffused with nuance. But Mr. McCain's latest attack on the Obama tax plan crosses the line from reasonable argument to unacceptably misleading." [Editorial, Washington Post, 8/10/08] Annenberg Political Fact Check: Claim That Obama "Promises More Taxes On Small Business, Seniors, Your Life Savings, Your Family" Is "Simply Not True For The Vast Majority Of Viewers Who Will See It." "The TV ad also says that Obama 'promises more taxes on small business, seniors, your life savings, your family.' This statement is simply not true for the vast majority of viewers who will see it. Obama, in fact, promises to deliver a $1,000 tax cut for families making up to $150,000 a year, and he says he would increase income tax rates, capital gains tax rates and taxes on dividends only for those with family incomes over $250,000 a year, or for single taxpayers making over $200,000." [FactCheck.org, 8/8/08] |
Seems as if the "Wandering Eyes" video might've gotten to him...
It's not just the economy:
Forgotten war?
A reader points out -- and a search of the speech texts on the GOP convention site seems to confirm -- a surprising fact: There hasn't been a single mention of Afghanistan at this convention.
Will Bunch labels Sarah Palin's address last night as "The Speech to Nowhere" which I think is a brilliant description, but as I think about it, perhaps we ought to remember this speech by Palin -- as important as it was, though not in a positive way -- as "The Bridge to Nowhere" speech.
The idea, of course, is to remember her caustic speech for the single most obvious falsehood contained within.
I'll conclude with a few thoughts about tomorrow, and then leave this up as an open thread.
Here's my video response to the Republican Party's angry old attacks and tired, mean-spirited bluster:

Where in the world is George W. Bush? Has his name come up once since he spoke last night? Maybe that's the secret genius of the Sarah Palin pick. We're not talking at all about the economic track record of the last eight years. We're not talking at all about the real impact of Republican rule.
And he's an eastern liberal media elitist.
"No question, she's got a lot of homework to do, let's face it. You just don't walk out and say 'our next vice president,' y'know. And I know people who are working with her, and I've got a lot of confidence in 'em. And, um, I'd be happy to have her come to North Carolina any day she wants."
I am so outraged at this you could call me Steve Schmidt. Or Rick Davis. Or even a whiner. And to think, he said this on national TV. Just another part of the conspiracy against small town America.
I'm furious! EIGHT MORE YEARS!

Three more hours until Palin's speech. I'm sure her speech will go well -- she's a former sportscaster, and she did a very good job in her other two speeches.
So far, the convention has been entirely devoid of substance. We already know she will read an attack Obama, but will she take the opportunity to discuss her energy policy in any detail? That is the policy area that she knows the most about.
Other question: Will she be true to her right wing record and try and fire up the GOP base (pictured above), or will she try to obscure her extremism with misleading rhetoric? Will she be more honest than she has been so far? Or will she continue to invent facts about her record? Will she say anything about Bush or Cheney, or will she pretend the last eight years never happened?
As for the media: how will they handle the bullying from McCain? Will they wilt under pressure from McCain, or will they continue to ask tough questions that need answers?
Chuck Todd dropped a little bombshell earlier today during some cross-talk with Ron Allen, but unfortunately couldn't elaborate because he had to cut away for the soap opera photo op with John McCain and Bristol Palin's beau. Here's the transcript:
CHUCK TODD: Well Ron, We've been able to see that there are a few folks who are saying she's actually going to hole up in Alaska for a little, she's got to see her son off who's going to be deployed to Iraq, so we may not see her on the campaign trail for a little while.
RON ALLEN: Yes she hasn't been home for a long time, and she's obviously got some business to deal with there.
Perhaps Romney ought to dust off his mittens? And not to get too conspiratorial, but Mike Murphy (of the open mic mind moment, which also involved Chuck Todd) is a former Romney operative. Might he have been Chuck's source?
Conservatives Mike Murphy and Peggy Noonan have an open mic moment and dump all over McCain and Palin.
Rudy calls concerns about the vetting process "silly" and says that as mayor of Wasilla, Palin had more experience than Barack Obama and Joe Biden combined. Gotta' give him this much...he's good for a laugh!
This is a tough ad (h/t: Ben Smith):
First sign you've completely screwed up: you stop talking to the media.
Over the last three days, there has been a LOT more talk about Bristol Palin from the right than the left. For example, here's National Review's Byron York writing about something that hadn't even occured to me:
Perhaps I'm focusing on an irrelevant issue, but the presence, or non-presence, of Johnston on the stage tonight strikes me as important. It's one thing for delegates to be understanding and compassionate about the fix these two teenagers have gotten themselves into. It's another to actually celebrate it. And, given what we've learned in the last few days, if Johnston is up on stage with his girlfriend and the Palin family, and Republicans are wildly cheering, it will certainly look like they are celebrating this situation.
I don't usually engage in these scenarios, but I'll do it here. If the Obamas had a 17 year-old daughter who was unmarried and pregnant by a tough-talking black kid, my guess is if that they all appeared onstage at a Democratic convention and the delegates were cheering wildly, a number of conservatives might be discussing the issue of dysfunctional black families.
Update, 1:54PM: McCain stages a photo op with Bristol's boyfriend.
TIME, via AMERICAblog:
Stein says that as mayor, Palin continued to inject religious beliefs into her policy at times. "She asked the library how she could go about banning books," he says, because some voters thought they had inappropriate language in them. "The librarian was aghast." That woman, Mary Ellen Baker, couldn't be reached for comment, but news reports from the time show that Palin had threatened to fire Baker for not giving "full support" to the mayor.
As John Cole says, the only thing missing is a degree from Regents University.
First Read (emphasis added):
And we thought Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton would give the most highly anticipated convention speech. Well, that was before McCain selected the first-term governor of Alaska to be his running mate and before the country found out about the Troopergate firing scandal (which NBC's Lisa Myers reported on TODAY), her past advocacy of earmarks and the Bridge to Nowhere (both of which McCain has railed against on the trail), her pregnant 17-year-old daughter, and now the Washington Post scoop that McCain's chief vetter only conducted a lengthy interview with her the day before Palin was selected.
This has got to be one of the best: The McCain campaign claimed the FBI had done a background check on Sarah Palin.
One has to wonder what sort of crack they are smoking, because as a government agency, the FBI doesn't do background checks for political campaigns.
Yesterday, Ben Smith posted a remarkable story about Sarah Palin's attendance at an anti-Semitic sermon delivered at her church just two weeks ago.
The sermon, given by the executive director of Jews for Jesus, blamed Jewish victims of terrorism for the attacks which claimed their lives. If Jews had just converted to Christianity, he said, they would have lived.
This is crazy, paranoid stuff, and it is far beyond anything Jeremiah Wright ever said, yet we went through six weeks of nonstop scrutiny over his politically extreme statements.
I don't want to see a repeat of that inquisition, but I do want to know more about how Sarah Palin reacted to this lunacy.
So far, all we have is a statement from the McCain campaign's blogger that Palin does not share the views expressed at her church. That's not enough.
I want to hear a full accounting from her. Did she agree with what was said? If not, did she complain to her pastor? Is she still a member of the church? Is this the first time she's sat through such anti-Semitic ravings? How many more anti-Semitic sermons would it take for her to leave the church?
On a related note, her former church has mysteriously blocked access to its archives, citing technical problems due to high traffic volume. This is the equivalent of saying the dog ate my homework. There is more there, there.
These are reasonable questions to ask, both about the anti-Semitic sermon and her former church's curious decision to block access to its archives. There's no need to super-sensationalize it, but there's also no excuse for sweeping it under the rug.
After all, if John McCain does get elected, she will have a better chance of becoming President than any other Vice President in the history of the United States of America.

This picture of Sarah Palin campaigning for the Bridge to Nowhere contradicts her false claim that she was against it from the beginning. (h/t: Ben Smith)
::: ::: :::
Now that she's a national politician, Sarah Palin says she told Congress "Thanks, but no thanks" when it came to the pork barrel bridge to nowhere.
It's a lovely story, but the idea that a sitting governor would turn down free money is an absolute joke. Such a thing never happens, and in this case, it did not happen.
Remember, when the Bridge to Nowhere was still a feasible option, Sarah Palin not only supported it, but she campaigned for it. In fact, Palin's eventual opposition to the Bridge to Nowhere only occured after Congress had already effectively killed it off.
But she still kept the money that Congress had appropriated for use on Alaska's transportation projects.
There's nothing wrong with what she did. The only thing that's wrong is that she's lying about it now.
Basically, what we're left with is two options:
Whichever option it is, the fact remains that the basic story just isn't true. Here's some of the reporting that debunks the McCain-Palin fable:
Anchorage Daily News (McClatchy):
Palin was for the Bridge to Nowhere before she was against it.
The Alaska governor campaigned in 2006 on a build-the-bridge platform, telling Ketchikan residents she felt their pain when politicians called them "nowhere." They're still feeling pain today in Ketchikan, over Palin's subsequent decision to use the bridge funds for other projects -- and over the timing of her announcement, which they say came in a pre-dawn press release that seemed aimed at national news deadlines.
"I think that's when the campaign for national office began," said Ketchikan Mayor Bob Weinstein on Saturday.
"I told Congress, 'Thanks, but no thanks,' on that bridge to nowhere," Palin said Friday in Ohio, using the critics' dismissive name of the project. "'If our state wanted a bridge,' I said, 'we'd build it ourselves.'"
While running for governor in 2006, though, Palin backed federal funding for the infamous bridge, which McCain helped make a symbol of pork barrel excess.
And as mayor of the small town of Wasilla from 1996 to 2002, Palin also hired a Washington lobbying firm that helped secure $8 million in congressionally directed spending projects, known as earmarks, according to public spending records compiled by the watchdog group Citizens Against Government Waste and lobbying documents.
Wasilla's lobbying firm was headed by Steven Silver -- a former chief of staff to Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens, a key proponent of the bridge project.
In the fall of 2005, Congress removed the language specifically directing the money to the bridge, but it kept the money in place and left it up to Alaska to decide which transportation projects the state would like to spend it on.
By the time Palin pulled the plug on the Gravina bridge project in September 2007, much of the federal funding for the bridge had already been diverted to other transportation projects. The bridge would cost $398 million, Palin said then, and Alaska was $329 million short.
"Ketchikan desires a better way to reach the airport, but the $398 million bridge is not the answer," Palin said. "Despite the work of our congressional delegation, we are about $329 million short of full funding for the bridge project, and it's clear that Congress has little interest in spending any more money on a bridge between Ketchikan and Gravina Island."
Finally, after the bridge failed, Palin complained:
"Much of the public's attitude toward Alaska bridges is based on inaccurate portrayals of the projects here."
Well, that was pretty boring tonight. Fortunately, tomorrow night should be far more interesting with Sarah Pawlenty Palin speaking. I'm with Eugene Robinson -- I think she'll do just fine. In fact, she'll probably do a better job than John McCain will on Thursday.
My only other major observation is that Donna Brazile's advice to McCain still holds: he needs to distinguish himself from Bush and explain why the country can afford another four years of Republican rule.
Anyway, I'm going to turn in early tonight and catch up on some much needed sleep. I'll leave you with the RNC convention chairwoman's "Sarah Pawlenty" moment, which has to be the highlight of the convention so far:
Fred Thompson's speech is just about entirely untethered to reality, but after a cold start, he's finally warmed up, and I'll give him this: he'd be a much better general election candidate for the GOP than John McCain.
Update: One thing Thompson could have done but didn't do is to offer just one single reason why America should endure another four years like the last eight.
Also, here's a photo from the convention floor taken earlier in the day that I thought what was pretty telling:

Update 2: Twice, Lieberman has lied and called himself a Democrat. He's not. He's an independent. Moreover, he's also called all his Democratic senate colleagues liars. I'll leave it up to Democratic senators to figure out what they need to do, but if I were them, he'd never be allowed inside the Democratic caucus room again.
We've already heard the other one enough:
Update 7:35PM: I think Fred Thompson just smeared McCain, he said being a POW didn[t qualify you to be president.
6:52PM: Bush finally shows some good judgment. Very smart move to have Laura defend his presidency. She seems so much more presidential than he does.
6:54PM: I doubt I'll have much to say about this speech, but George W. Bush just looks spooky on that big screen. I'm having trouble stopping myself from busting out in laughter. He is his own joke.
6:56PM: Now Chickenhawk Bush is using McCain's POW service to innoculate himself, and to attack, in his words, "the angry left." No sir, we aren't angry. We're laughing at you. You are a joke. :)
6:59PM: "Fellow citizens we live in a dangerous world, and we need a president who remembers the lessons of September 11, 2001." Yeah, like attacking Iraq? "The man we need is John McCain."
7:19PM: Fred Thompson began his speech a little while ago. He started out talking about how important Gustav recovery was...but then immediately said the RNC convention was also important. Off message?
7:20PM: McCain dated a stripper? Weird thing for Thompson to talk about.
Eugene Robinson just made a good point on MSNBC about Sarah Palin's speech tomorrow night. Whatever we may think about her qualifications, and whatever we now know about the inadequacy of the vetting process, one thing is pretty clear: she's going to give a better speech tomorrow than John McCain will give on Thursday.
I hope McCain's operatives don't listen to Donna Brazile's advice, because it's damn good. As she says, McCain's convention will be a failure if he leaves St. Paul without having drawn a clear distinction between himself and George W. Bush.
So far this thing seems like American Idol, without the fun.
CBS Evening News asks the question:

WaPo's Chris Cillizza:
Rick Davis, campaign manager for John McCain's presidential bid, insisted that the presidential race will be decided more over personalities than issues during an interview with Post editors this morning.
"This election is not about issues," said Davis. "This election is about a composite view of what people take away from these candidates."
Hard to blame him. What else would you say if you had to defend eight years of the Bush calamity?
This is pretty cool -- a TJR video hits the television screen, in the form of one of a Jeanne Moos unconvention convention report. (Last I checked, the video had gotten 270,000 plays on YouTube.)
In the end, Moos concludes that McCain's wandering eyes weren't "casting a backside glance" but instead were "copping a look at whatever was on the podium."
I don't think I've sounded off yet on where I thought his eyes were wandering, but I half agree with Jeanne. Based on the angle of his eyes, I never really thought he was taking a backside glance -- I always thought it was a frontside glance, if you know what I mean. And I think Palin sensed it too, given the way she pulls away from him when he goes in for the creepy hug at the end.
So McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds falls flat on his face during a CNN interview last night, and the McCain campaign responds by pulling their candidate from a scheduled interview with Larry King. Doesn't this kind of media bullying remind you of somebody named...George W. Bush?
Kate Klonick at TPM Muckracker:
This afternoon, the director of Division of Elections in Alaska, Gail Fenumiai, told TPMmuckraker that Todd Palin registered in October 1995 to the Alaska Independence Party, a radical group that advocates for Alaskan secession from the United States.
Besides a short period of a few months in 2000 when he changed his registration to undeclared, Todd Palin remained a registered member of AIP until July 2002 when he registered again as an undeclared voter.
What's so special about 2002? As Josh Marshall notes, it's the first time Sarah Palin ever ran for statewide office.
Update 2:40PM: CNN reports that Sarah Palin addressed the AIP by video in 2006 as well as 2008.
I suspect these numbers will shrink over the next few days as the RNC kicks into gear, but for now it's pretty sweet seeing this post-Palin, post-DNC surge in polling numbers for Barack Obama.
The chart from pollster.com doesn't include the most recent Rasmussen and Gallup tracking polls, both of which show Obama at 50 or above.
Update 2:35PM: The state of Alaska now confirms that Todd Palin was in fact a member of the AIP until 2002, when Palin first ran for statewide office. Update 2, 2:40PM: CNN reports that Sarah Palin also addressed the AIP by video in 2006 as well as 2008.
Original post: So the McCain campaign is now denying assertions that Sarah Palin was ever involved with the secessionist Alaskan Independence Party.
Superficially, they seem to have a good case. As Jake Tapper writes, according to voter registration records, Palin first registered to vote in 1982. She registered as a Republican and hasn't changed her registration since. Case closed, right?
Not exactly.
Her partisan registration notwithstanding, nobody can dispute that she recorded a video welcome for the 2008 AIP convention in which she highlighted her view that Alaska could be "self-sufficient." Nor can they dispute that in October, 2007 -- long before she was considered a VP prospect -- AIP vice chairman Dexter Clark spoke of her past involvement.
Clark, the AIP vice chairman, addressed Palin's involvement with the party in October, 2007, speaking before The Second North American Secessionist Convention. Keep in mind that this was before McCain had won the nomination, let alone selected Palin as his VP.
Clark talked about Palin at The First North American Secessionist Convention, held in 2006 before Palin was elected governor.
Our current governor, we mentioned at the last conference, the one we were hoping would get elected, Sarah Palin, did get elected. ... She was an AIP member before she got the job as a mayor of a small town - that was a non-partisan job. But you get along to go along - she eventually joined the Republican Party.
Given the timing of Clark's comments -- before any VP speculation and before she even become governor -- he doesn't seem to have a political motivation to lie.
And now the AIP is sticking to its assertions that Palin attended their convention in 1994 and has been supportive of their party.
Meanwhile, the McCain campaign does have an obvious political motivation to lie, and in fact has a track record of lying about Palin's record. And when you factor in Palin's 2008 video greeting to the AIP's convention, which included obvious secessionist codewords like "self-sufficient," the McCain campaign's denials seem even less credible.
The exact nature of Sarah Palin's relationship and involvement with the AIP certainly does require more research and vetting. But isn't that why you shouldn't pick a completely unknown as a vice presidential candidate only 67 days before the election?
Phil Gramm defends Sarah Palin.
"We went through a process of vetting all possible candidates,'' narrowing it down to three before choosing Palin.
"We went through a process"?
But I thought he'd been banished to Belarus?
::: :::
Bonus: Gramm, who was in Minneapolis for the RNC, said McCain supporters aren't the ones who are whiners: "If you're sitting here today, you're not economically illiterate and you're not a whiner, so I'm not worried about who you're going to vote for."
John McCain = George Bush = More of the same...twins in the Twin Cities:
Update, 12:57PM: For the record, the McCain camp is now denying any involvement by Palin in the AIP, and while it is apparently true that she was not technically registered with the AIP, the McCain camp's blanket denial is impossible to square with this video. Update 2, 2:35PM: The state of Alaska now confirms that Todd Palin was in fact a member of the AIP until 2002, when Palin first ran for statewide office. Update 3, 2:40PM: CNN reports that Sarah Palin also addressed the AIP by video in 2006 as well as 2008.
::: :::
Original post: Building on the great research of Liz Arnett and others, I've edited together a video showing why Sarah Palin's past membership in and current ties to the secessionist Alaskan Independence Party is going to be such a big problem for John McCain.
Here's the key details:
Big kudos to Arnett, who was the first to uncover Palin's ties to the AIP. georgia10 kept the heat on, and now both Jake Tapper and Marc Ambinder have covered the story.
Who'd have guessed that in the middle of the first presidential election to feature an African-American nominee, the guy making accusations of racism and sexism would be the old white dude?
Take, for example, McCain's flack Nancy Pfotenahauer. On the opinion page of today's Wall Street Journal, she calls critics of John McCain's VP selection process "chauvinists."
As James Carville made clear last night, that's an obvious load of bull, but it's nothing new for Pfotenahauer who has made similar attacks before, including a ludicrous accusation of reverse racism against the Obama campaign.
In early August, she said Barack Obama was playing the race card when he pointed out that John McCain was mocking the idea of his face on U.S. currency -- even though John McCain was mocking the idea of Obama's face on U.S. currency.
Here's audio:
And here's a screenshot of McCain's ad mocking Obama on U.S. currency:

The moral of this story is pretty clear: you just can't take anything the McCain campaign says seriously.
They are a complete joke.
On August 14, two weeks before John McCain selected her to be his running mate, Roll Call interviewed Sarah Palin and asked her whether she had been vetted. Her answer:
Palin: [The national GOP has asked for old speeches] and that's been kind of recent. But other than that, I don't know anything about how they're doing anything.
RC: Who has asked for your old speeches?
Palin: Those who are putting on the GOP convention, or the RNC. But, no, I wouldn't consider that any kind of official vetting. So, again, more evidence of this out of the realm of possibility.
The New York Times documents John McCain's inadequate vetting of Sarah Palin, including this choice graph (emphasis added):
With time running out -- and as Mr. McCain discarded two safer choices, Gov. Tim Pawlenty of Minnesota and former Gov. Mitt Romney of Massachusetts, as too predictable -- he turned to Ms. Palin. He had his first face-to-face interview with her on Thursday and offered her the job moments later.
As Joe Sudbay says:
This pick says more about John McCain than Sarah Palin. It really does. John McCain caved to the anti-abortion theocrats running the Republican party, made a hasty pick for his v.p., and is now suffering the consequences.
McCain had five months to make his choice. And this is the best job he could do? Not that I hadn't already decided against him, but shouldn't this rash decision essentially disqualify him from being president?
If he really wanted Palin, he could have picked her three or four months ago, and given her a chance. Now he's given her no chance. She's going to crash and burn, and it's all John McCain's fault.
I think we're going to have to give this round to James...
I almost (but not quite) feel sorry for Tucker Bounds. Pressed by CNN's Campbell Brown, he can't cite a single decision made by Sarah Palin relating to national security. Total ownage.
So it turns out that in the 1990s, Sarah Palin was a member of the Alaskan Independence Party whose primary objective is to secure a vote on whether Alaska should secede from the United States. Their party's motto? "Alaska First - Alaska First Always."
I'm sure McCain will eventually have to comment, but according to Marc Ambinder: "A McCain spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment." I'll guarantee you that we know more about Sarah Palin than does McCain or his campaign.
For more background, see Jake Tapper and Marc Ambinder, as well as this post and this post at Daily Kos.
Update (5:06PM): Here's a video of Palin, when she was governor, addressing the Alaskan Independence Party convention. By this point, she was a Republican, but it's not often you hear of a member of one political party addressing members of another political party, is it? She emphasizes what they have in common, including her vision for a "self-sufficient" Alaska, which surely sounds like a code word for secession, does it not?
Despite their bluster about putting America first, Republicans danced and drank the night away at the Republican National Convention to the tunes of a band called "Hookers and Blow." I'm not kidding:
Update: As usual, the brilliant minds at Daily Kos beat the MSM to the story. Here's two posts on it: one and two.
Original posts: Wow. Sarah Palin was a member of a political party in Alaska that wanted to give citizens there a vote on seceding from the United States. Their slogan?
Alaska First - Alaska First Always
Remember what she said earlier this summer about whether or not she'd take the job of VP? "We want to make sure that VP spot would be a fruitful type position, especially for Alaskans." Here's video:
I know this runs counter to the broadcast media's normal "in the moment" instincts, but I hope they can somehow remember once this hurricane passes us by that there is a presidential campaign going on, and that the McCain campaign has tried to use the media's single-minded focus on the weather to dump a whole bunch of damaging news about McCain's process for choosing a VP. I hope they understand that McCain's "document dump" is as political as it gets -- he is exploiting their inability to multitask, and laughing at them the whole way.
Update: CNN, to its credit, has actually devoted a fair amount of coverage to this. Kudos.
So I go to sleep for a few hours after staying up all night deal with a wrecked server and wake up to find out it was all a bigger lie than I ever could have ever imagined.
When I went to sleep, John McCain's VP pick, who was supposedly a great social conservative whose PTA background and family values made up for her lack of foreign policy experience, and whose anti-Washington reformer instincts would bring the change we need to DC.Every single thing they try to tell us turns out to be a lie. Everything big and small. It doesn't matter if their talking about WMD or the PTA.
It's just not true.
Sarah Palin's personal story, and her views on personal morality, are at the core of her politics and of why she was nominated, and why she'd energized the conservative base.
Now, her daughter's pregnancy has cast her views on teenagers and sex directly into the spotlight.
Democrats noted, before and after today's announcement, that Palin took a hard line on a question in 2006 from the conservative Eagle Forum Alaska:
Q: Will you support funding for abstinence-until-marriage education instead of for explicit sex-education programs, school-based clinics, and the distribution of contraceptives in schools?
SP: Yes, the explicit sex-ed programs will not find my support.
Oh boy. When Jed wakes up, he's gonna get a huuuuuge surprise.Sounds like stash was right!
Not using the storm for politics?
Just as Gustav makes landfall, we get what sure feels like a dump of McCain news: a sympathetic version of Todd Palin's DUI and the news that the Palins are due to have a grandson.
Starting at around 7:45PM last night, TJR's new web hosting provider went down, completely blocking access to the site. The server finally came back to life around 2:00AM, but by then I'd decided to switch to a new provider because it was the second serious outage in 3 days. So now TJR is hosted with GoDaddy.com, which is far more reliable and has much better customer service. (Update: Apparently GD is owned by a rightwing nut. I didn't know that last night while trying to fix the broken server, but I'll look at switch providers when the election is over. The good news is that the GD owner contributed heavily to Ted Stevens, because if there's any GOP senator I'd like to see get campaign cash, it's one under indictment!) Some things aren't quite functioning the way they should, but I'm ironing out the kinks.
I apologize for the inconvenience, but this should be the last significant service interruption before the election. Drop me an e-mail or leave a comment if you're continuing to have any problems.If John McCain hadn't made his houses gaffe, wouldn't he have picked Mitt Romney?
From the video archives:
007 GoldenMansion
AMERICAblog has been all over this, and as John Aravosis says, it's sick. Here's some of their coverage from today:
McCain, who first met Sarah Palin when she was six months pregnant, did not ask his staff to vet Palin by checking the archives of her own hometown newspaper.
It's just another piece of evidence that John McCain selected a running mate who neither he nor his campaign know anything about. Whether or not she ultimately is proven to be qualified is not even all that important; the point is that John McCain made the most irresponsible choice for VP imaginable.
He was flying blind. Well, maybe not totally blind:
Guest post by barath
Right or wrong, in a democracy, the voters ultimately decide. They judge the candidates and cast their lot with one or the other. Put differently, the number of votes a candidate has received in his or her lifetime is an upper limit on the number of Americans that have judged that candidate to be worthy of support. So how many Americans have judged McCain and Obama worthy of support?
Well, it turns out that since 1982, Barack Obama has earned more votes (21.6 million) than John McCain (19.5 million).
Here's the numbers:
Votes McCain has received in his career:
2008 (presidential primary), 9,840,746
2004 (senate), 1,505,372
2000 (presidential primary), 6,061,332
1998 (senate), 696,577
1992 (senate), 771,395
1986 (senate), 521,850
1984 (house), 162,418
1982 (house), 89,116
= 19,648,806 votes
Votes Obama has received in his career:
2008 (presidential primary), 17,869,542
2004 (senate), 3,597,456
2002 (state senate), 48,717
1998 (state senate), 45,486
1996 (state senate), unknown
= 21,561,201 votes
These numbers omit state-level primaries, which are negligible, such as McCain's two Arizona Republican house/senate primaries and Obama's two Illinois Democratic state senate/senate primaries.
The bottom line is that more voters have evaluated, made a judgment, and cast their ballot in support of Obama than they have for McCain, despite the fact that McCain is 25 years older than Obama.
A swing and a miss.
Be careful what you wish for, huh? And yes, if it turns out that the next two months transform Palin into a national laughingstock with no future outside Alaska, I won't be terribly happy with John McCain's decision-making process. I intend to wait slightly longer than 48 hours, though, before I pass judgment on that question.
Though I have my doubts, Palin may the best thing since sliced bread, at least in terms of her potential. But there's almost no chance we're going to be able to resolve that question in the span of two month -- it is virtually impossible for a total unknown to win over the trust of Americans in the final nine weeks of a campaign that's already been going on for 19 months.
Will McCain ruin her? I have no idea. But I'm pretty sure that McCain ruined himself by picking her.
How a college sophomore put Alaska's governor on the map.
By Timothy Noah
According to both the Aug. 29 Anchorage Daily News and the June 13 Colorado Springs Gazette, Sarah Palin became John McCain's vice presidential candidate largely through the machinations of someone even younger and less experienced than herself. From the Anchorage Daily News:
The hype can probably be traced to the Web site of a 21-year-old college senior majoring in political science at the University of Colorado in Colorado Springs. Adam Brickley, a political buff who will graduate in May, started a "Draft Sarah Palin for Vice President" blog last year and has relentlessly promoted the idea ever since.
Brickley has never been to Alaska or met Palin. But while researching potential vice presidents, he stumbled on Palin and thought she would be a good No. 2 to just about all of the major Republican candidates in the race at the time.
As the GOP's frenzied reaction to Gustav unfolds, just think about how many lives might have been saved if Hurricane Katrina had hit New Orleans during an election year.
We all know what happened with Katrina: as the storm battered the Gulf Coast, the most important thing on John McCain's mind was celebrating his 69th birthday with George W. Bush.
And as they shared cake together, the most damaging hurricane ever to hit the United States wreaked havoc on the nation.
Nearly two thousand confirmed dead. Hundreds more missing. A city destroyed. Nearly $100 billion in damages.
And John McCain and George W. Bush did nothing to help. Nothing at all.
But they got their cake.
McCain on his impulsive decision-making process:
"I make them as quickly as I can, quicker than the other fellow, if I can," Mr. McCain wrote, with his top adviser Mark Salter, in his 2002 book, "Worth the Fighting For." "Often my haste is a mistake, but I live with the consequences without complaint."
Yeah, except this time, if McCain wins the presidency, the United States and the world will be forced to live with his mistake.
They just lie and lie and lie and lie...
Palin touts stance on 'Bridge to Nowhere,' doesn't note flip-flop
By TOM KIZZIA, Anchorage Daily News
When John McCain introduced Gov. Sarah Palin as his running mate Friday, her reputation as a tough-minded budget-cutter was front and center.
"I told Congress, thanks but no thanks on that bridge to nowhere," Palin told the cheering McCain crowd, referring to Ketchikan's Gravina Island bridge.
But Palin was for the Bridge to Nowhere before she was against it.
The Alaska governor campaigned in 2006 on a build-the-bridge platform, telling Ketchikan residents she felt their pain when politicians called them "nowhere." They're still feeling pain today in Ketchikan, over Palin's subsequent decision to use the bridge funds for other projects -- and over the timing of her announcement, which they say came in a pre-dawn press release that seemed aimed at national news deadlines.
...and lie and lie and lie and lie.
To put it charitably, the WaPo hasn't had the most enthusiastic of editorial pages towards Barack Obama, but now that John McCain has made the worst vice presidential selection in modern history, thing are changing.
On back-to-back days, the WaPo editorial page has slammed McCain, first on his VP choice, and now today on taxes:
Continuing Deception: Mr. McCain's ads on taxes are just plain false.
THERE IS a serious debate to be had in this presidential campaign about the fundamentally different tax policies of Barack Obama and John McCain. Then there is the phony, misleading and at times outright dishonest debate that the McCain campaign has been waging -- most recently with a television ad.
The two candidates have very different positions on taxes. Mr. Obama wants to raise taxes on the wealthiest Americans and cut them substantially for low- and middle-income taxpayers. He would cut taxes for more households, and by a larger amount, than Mr. McCain, who would give the greatest benefits to wealthy households and corporations.
Given the lack of timeliness of this editorial, it makes me wonder if it isn't something of a shot across McCain's bow that he ought to reconsider his VP choice. Is it possible that Romney ought to dust off his mansions and get ready to replace Palin?
This is classic Obama -- personally generous to Palin ("compelling person") without letting her off the hook for representing John McCain's Republican vision, which would just deliver more of the same (transcript below):
Barack's answer was understated and mellow, but was nonetheless biting; he pounded home his message on what this campaign is about: the change we need versus McCain = Bush = More of the same.
Any day that he can satisfactorily answer a question by emphasizing the campaign's core message is a day that we've won.
So while the McCain camp did manage to steal the spotlight on Friday, they didn't manage to fundamentally change the nature of the campaign, and they didn't do anything to knock Barack Obama off stride.
Unless they can somehow figure out a fresh way to do that, they've got no chance of winning in November.
::: ::: :::
Transcript: You know, I haven't met her before. She seems like a compelling person, obviously a terrific story, personal story, and, you know, I'm sure that she will help make the case for the Republicans. Unfortunately, the case is more of the same, and so, you know, ultimately, John McCain at the top of the ticket. As I indicated in my speech last night, I think that he wants to take the country in the wrong direction. I'm assuming Governor Palin agrees with him in his policies.
But the fact that she's been nominated I think -- or will soon be nominated I think is one more indicator of this country moving forward, the enafact that you've got a woman as the nominee of one of vice presidential nominee of one of the major parties I think is one more hit against that glass ceiling. And I congratulate her, look forward to a vigorous debate. I'm pleased with my choice for vice president, Joe Biden. I think he's the man who can help me take guide country in a better direction and help working families.