Articles found regarding Sara Palin on September 10, 2008
Dude Dads
Forget Sarah Palin. The swing voters to watch might look more like her husband, Todd.
By Bruce Reed Posted Tuesday, Sept. 9, 2008, at 5:07 PM ET Tuesday, Sept. 9, 2008
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NASCAR on Ice: Every election, pollsters and pundits introduce another voter group whose views are certain to decide the outcome: soccer moms, NASCAR dads, security moms, office park dads, and (three times in the past week) Wal-Mart moms. These categories, while sometimes useful, share an important methodological flaw: On Election Day, when undecided voters finally make up their minds, exit pollsters don't ask them where they work or where they shop, what sports they watch or what games their children play. Exit polls eschew these trendy questions in favor of boring demographic perennials like age, race, gender, education, and income level.
Precisely because exit poll questions don't change much from one cycle to the next, however, they provide an interesting portrait of how the electorate evolves—or doesn't. Some segments of the electorate are fiercely loyal to one party; others lean toward one party but more dramatically in some years than others.
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Sarah Palin, the pastor and the prophecy: judgment day is not far away
September 10, 2008
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Alexi Mostrous in Wasilla, Alaska
At the Wasilla Assembly of God Church, Sarah Palin’s former pastor sees powerful signs that the end of the world is nigh.
Pastor Ed Kalnins cites conflict in the Middle East, America’s dependence on foreign oil and the depletion of energy reserves as evidence that “storm clouds are gathering”. He told The Times: “Scripture specifically mentions oil instability as a sign of the Rapture. We’re seeing more and more oil wars. The contractions of the fulfilment of prophecies are getting tighter and tighter.”
He declined to set an exact date for the Rapture, or the “End of Days” – the belief in a time when Jesus will return, raising up believers to Heaven and leaving the wicked to be ruled by the Antichrist – but hopes it will be in his lifetime. “I’m looking out the window and I can see it’s going to rain,” he said. “I’m just looking at the turmoil of the world, Iraq, other places – everywhere people are fighting against Christ.”
Since Mrs Palin’s nomination as John McCain’s Republican running-mate 11 days ago, her social and religious beliefs have become subjected to intense scrutiny. As a supporter of the teaching of Creationism in schools, an opponent of abortion – even in cases of rape or incest – and a lifetime member of the National Rifle Association, she threatens to reopen the culture war that has scarred American politics for a quarter of a century.
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Did Palin give McCain a boost with women?
SIRI AGRELL From Wednesday's Globe and Mail September 9, 2008 at 9:11 PM EDT
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Is John McCain experiencing the benefits of a baby bump – or a surge?
A new poll by The Washington Post and ABC News found the Republican candidate has garnered a large increase in support among white women since announcing Sarah Palin as his running mate, putting him ahead of Democratic rival Barack Obama among that demographic for the first time.
But it's unclear whether voters are simply reacting to the novelty of Ms. Palin's personal story and the historic nature of her selection with a fleeting expression of support or whether her choice as vice-presidential nominee has led women to see Mr. McCain in a new light.
Before the Democratic National Convention in late August, Mr. Obama held an 8 percentage point lead among white women voters – 50 per cent to 42 per cent – but after the Republican convention earlier this month, Mr. McCain was ahead by 12 points among white women, 53 per cent to 41 per cent, the poll found.
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Obama Did Not Call Sarah Palin A Pig
09 Sep 2008 07:06 pm
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The first McCain truthsquadding telephone call is taking place right now, and ex-MA Gov. Jane Swift is complaining about an idiom Barack Obama used today:
Obama poked fun of McCain and Palin's new "change" mantra.
"You can put lipstick on a pig," he said as the crowd cheered. "It's still a pig."
"You can wrap an old fish in a piece of paper called change. It's still gonna stink."
"We've had enough of the same old thing."
Suddenly, common analogies are sexist?
The McCain campaign has little respect for Obama, but they don't think he is stupid. And the only way one can conclude that Obama meant to refer to Gov. Sarah Palin as a pig is to have concluded that Obama is as dumb as a doornail.
Obama is fond of this particular phrase. To wit, in 2007:
'I think that both General Petraeus and Ambassador Crocker are capable people who have been given an impossible assignment,' Sen. Barack Obama said yesterday in a telephone interview. 'George Bush has given a mission to General Petraeus, and he has done his best to try to figure out how to put lipstick on a pig.
And so is John McCain. Speaking about Hillary Clinton....
McCain criticized Democratic contenders for offering what he called costly universal health-care proposals that require too much government regulation. While he said he had not studied Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton's plan, he said it was "eerily reminiscent" of the failed plan she offered as first lady in the 1990s.
"I think they put some lipstick on a pig, but it's still a pig," he said of her proposal.
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Media digging for dirt on Sarah Palin
by Jon Henke | September 9, 2008 at 9:52 PM
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The media is going after Sarah Palin. Hard. Listen to this phone call to Kevin Wall, filling in on Bill Bennett's radio program. It's an Alaskan process server, who who called in to talk about how many calls she's getting from media organizations trying to get court records on Sarah Palin, her son Trak, and their friends. She names the Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times. The relevant portion starts about 1 minute in.
This is the stuff that opposition researchers usually do. I would expect the Obama campaign and the DNC to go after the personal records of Palin's family and friends like this, but the media? Did they go after Barack Obama this thoroughly on personal history?
The Left isn't exactly covering themselves in dignity, either. Randi Rhodes claims McCain was "well treated" in Vietnam.
Of course he became very friendly with the Vietnamese. They called him the Prince. He was well treated actually. And he was well treated because he traded these propaganda interviews for good treatment. So look, it’s a horrible story anyway you cut it, anyway you look at it, any way you you you deal with it.
But, it’s not the story Fred Thompson told. Nor is it the story Rudy Giuliani told. Nor is it the story Sarah Palin told. Nor is it the story anybody. Cindy McCain knew to limit herself to ‘I think what my husband did in Vietnam was heroic’ because she knows the truth too.
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Democrats scrambling as 'Palin effect' hits US polls
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The McCain campaign has used Sarah Palin's reputation to seize the change mantle. (Reuters: John Gress)
The Republicans' United States presidential nominee, Senator John McCain, and his Democrat opponent Senator Barack Obama are battling it out over who is the authentic change agent.
For months Senator McCain ran on his expertise, his foreign policy experience, while Senator Obama's slogan was and still is "change we can believe in".
But all that changed when Senator McCain chose his running mate, Governor Sarah Palin.
Now, the "Palin effect" on the presidential campaign has led to a huge surge in support in the polls for Senator McCain.
"We're the ones who will change Washington," Senator McCain said.
"She is the one who's changed Alaska.
"She is the one that took on the old bulls in the Republican Party that cleaned up the state of Alaska and she'll clean up Washington and we'll restore trust and confidence in government and again on the part of the American people."
The McCain campaign has used Sarah Palin's reputation as a reformer in Alaska to seize the change mantle.
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Palin Energizing Women From All Walks of Life
By Anne E. Kornblut Washington Post Staff Writer Wednesday, September 10, 2008; Page A04
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LEBANON, Ohio, Sept. 9 -- Susie Baron is a Republican, a mother of two and a home-schooler. She voted for Mike Huckabee in the Ohio primary, but now -- because of Sarah Palin -- she thinks she is part of something much bigger.
I wouldn't even call it a Palin movement, I'd call it a sleeping giant that has been awakened," Baron, 56, said at a rally here Tuesday. She described its members as a silent majority of women in Middle America who "are raising our families, who work if we have to, but love our country and our families first."
"And until now, we haven't had anyone to identify with," Baron said, adding that traditional feminist groups such as the National Organization for Women do "not represent me."
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Alaska Shrugs Off Palin's Faith
U.S. Election; Religion not a priority for those in Governor's state
Charles Lewis, National Post Published: Wednesday, September 10, 2008
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Sarah Palin, the Alaska Governor, may be the most overtly religious candidate for U. S. vice-president in recent memory, but she comes from the state with one of the lowest levels of interest in religion.
John McCain's Republican running mate is a deeply believing Christian with strong evangelical and Pentecostal roots.
"There seems to be a paradox," said Courtney Campbell, a professor of religion and culture at Oregon State University.
"In the Pacific Northwest a politician may have devout religious beliefs, but that is not going to be associated [by the electorate] with a political agenda of reforming the state in accord with the Christian kingdom of God."
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Sarah Palin to star at California fundraising bash
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A Silicon Valley billionaire is playing Oprah to Sarah Palin's Obama, hosting the Alaska governor at what will likely be a must-attend fundraiser for Republicans later this month. And as was true when Oprah Winfey feted Barack Obama at her 42-acre estate in Montecito last September, getting in to software magnate Thomas Siebel's shindig on the 25th won't be cheap.
The Associated Press is reporting that for $50,000, contributors become co-chairs of the event, with access to a reception for six people, a couple of seats at the nominee's table, a table for 10 at a lunch and a photo op with Palin. Mere mortals who are invited can cough up $1,000 for a ticket. (Actually this is cheaper than the Obama affair; admission to Oprah's retreat, which she calls "The Promised Land" came with a $2,300 campaign contribution).
When it comes to sheer star power, however, it's hard to imagine the Republican event attracting half the Hollywood dazzle that flocked to Obama's. Stevie Wonder played, Cindy Crawford and Halle Berry, Will Smith, and Sydney Poitier mingled with bundlers and big donors.
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Palin, And Her Family, Under Scrutiny
September 10, 2008
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1 2 next I want to thank Stan Simpson for his insightful, well-written, well-researched column "Palin's Missile Misguided" [ Connecticut section, Sept. 6]. It opened my eyes to the important role community organizers play in bringing about real, positive change to society. It also revealed the leadership skills and sound preparation for effective statesmanship a person can acquire while serving as a community organizer, provided he does his job well, as Barack Obama has done.
The article reinforced my belief that Sen. Obama is best qualified to lead America in the right direction and bring about the change America so desperately needs.
William Beckham
Hartford Stan Simpson's Sept. 6 column was deeply misguided itself. Simpson disparagingly accuses Sarah Palin of "savaging" Barack Obama and "mocking" his lack of executive experience in her speech at the Republican National Convention. On the contrary, Palin was simply making the highly valid point that Barack Obama has no executive experience, a flaw that makes many American voters nervous.
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Political Wisdom: Democrats Rough Up a Lady (Palin, That Is)
Here’s a summary of the smartest new political analysis on the Web:
by Gerald F. Seib and Sara Murray September 10, 2008, 7:22 am
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The Democrats, a bit unnerved by the rise of Gov. Sarah Palin, are hoping to blunt that rise by getting a little rough with the lady. Jim VandeHei and Mike Allen of Politico write that “Barack Obama and his Democratic allies are intensifying their attacks on Sarah Palin, as her sustained and surprising central role in this race is upending Obama’s strategy and often overshadowing” the Republican nominee himself, Sen. John McCain. Democratic Congressman Russ Carnahan, they note, introduced vice presidential contender Joe Biden at a Tuesday event by ripping into her record and ending with a “snarky jab. ‘There’s no way you can dress up that record, even with a lot of lipstick,’ he said. Later in the day, Obama used a variation of the lipstick line, though he was clearly talking about the McCain-Palin reform rhetoric. ‘You can put lipstick on a pig,’ he said. ‘It’s still a pig.’” VandeHei and Allen’s analysis: “The Obama campaign is calculating that it must reckon with Palin and the big public boost she has provided McCain in the past week….”
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Sarah Palin's impact: Women moved
Sarah Palin: 'Mother, governor, moose-shooter, it's cool'' -- Barack Obama
Posted September 10, 2008 6:15 AM by Mark Silva
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On the question of what Gov. Sarah Palin is doing for Sen. John McCain's campaign, a new survey conducted by NBC News shows that McCain has drawn virtually even with Democrat Barack Obama with growing support from women.
The NBC take on the "dead heat'' that some national polls are showing: Obama 47 percent, McCain 46 percent, in a poll with a 3.3 percent possible margin of error, a virtual tie.
McCain moved up, NBC's Chuck Todd says, "partially because women moved... Women under 50 moved 11 points in McCain's direction... Thank you, Sarah Palin.''
Of course, this swing of women voters isn't quite the 20 percent shift in white women toward McCain that ABC News had reported the day before. And both McCain and Obama had made some gains of their own in the NBC survey--with McCain's positive rating of 50 percent his highest yet, and Obama's 53 also a personal best in the NBC survey.
Enthusiasm for McCain also had grown significantly - to 34 percent - "again, thank you, Sarah Palin,'' network political director Todd said on the NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams. Enthusiasm for Obama, however, also was running at a healthy 55 percent.
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The national numbers are one thing, Todd notes, counting nine real "battleground'' states - Florida, Ohio, Wisconsin, New Mexico among them - and four states that should be considered tossups: Colorado, Ohio, Virginia and New Hampshire.
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‘Bad cop’ Sarah Palin steers GOP ticket far right
By Peter Gelzinis Wednesday, September 10, 2008 Boston Herald Columnist
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John McCain’s last true maverick gesture was called Joe Lieberman.
In his heart and in his dreams, the feisty old soldier believed the best way to shake up Washington and re-connect with his maverick roots was to enter the White House accompanied by Al Gore’s running mate.
But that’s about all it was - a dream.
McCain’s campaign staff quickly slapped him out of his reverie and reminded him he would never make it out of St. Paul with his friend and fellow senator by his side. They told him to wake up and keep to the right - the hard right.
So, this 72-year-old guy, who was never one to foam at the mouth over the so-called wedge issues (see guns, God and gays) hooked up with a beguiling wedge candidate for his final sprint toward the presidency.
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'I Am Sarah, Watch Me Act'
Barbara Kay, National Post Published: Wednesday, September 10, 2008
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How I wish I'd been the proverbial fly on the wall watching the changing expressions on Barack Obama's face as Sarah Palin delivered her already-legendary speech at the Republican convention last Wednesday.
I imagine his pre-speech expression as alert, but relaxed paternalism, like a chief surgeon set to supervise a lowly resident's clumsy initial attempt at an appendectomy. Then puzzlement as the surgeon realizes that he's to be the patient, and finally horror as, strapped to the table and, before a nation of fascinated onlookers, he is subjected to ... a palinoscopy!
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