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#1 Palin stepping down this month

Posted: Fri Jul 03, 2009 2:15 pm
by The Minx
Link
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Gov. Sarah Palin announced Friday that she will step down as Alaska's chief executive by the end of the month. She will not seek election to a second gubernatorial term in 2010.

Palin, a Republican, was elected governor in 2006. She was tapped as Arizona Sen. John McCain's vice presidential running mate last year.

Palin said she was transferring authority to Lt. Gov. Sean Parnell, who will be sworn in at the Governor's Picnic on July 25.

A Republican source close to her political team told CNN's John King that it was a "calculation" she made that "it was time to move on." The governor's "book deal and other issues" were "causing a lot of friction" in her home state, the source said, adding that he believes she is "mapping out a path to 2012."

As the 2008 Republican vice presidential nominee, Palin has been considered one of the front-runners for the GOP nomination in 2012. Her decision not to seek another term as governor is sure to stoke speculation that Palin is seriously eyeing a run for the White House.

In an interview last month with CNN's Wolf Blitzer, Palin said she was unsure about her re-election bid because she needed to focus on her state and her family.

"So, no decision yet on either 2010 or let alone 2012?" Blitzer asked.

"No decision that I'd want to announce today," Palin responded.

Palin catapulted on the national stage last August when McCain, the Republican presidential nominee, chose her as his running mate.
Well, that came out of the left field. Though I'll admit that I haven't been following the goings on there recently. :???:

#2

Posted: Fri Jul 03, 2009 4:10 pm
by Derek Thunder
As a former Alaskan resident, this brightens my day.

On the other hand, this could lend credence to the idea that 2012 really will be the end of times, and explains the mysterious carving seen on many Mayan temples which loosely translates to "ya betcha."

#3

Posted: Fri Jul 03, 2009 11:31 pm
by SirNitram
Couldn't even hack an entire term. And poor caribou barbie went into politics, then whines when they give some light taps?

#4

Posted: Sat Jul 04, 2009 5:06 am
by frigidmagi
Please, after 2008? No way the old boys are letting her on to the stage again. She shows up in 2012 and she's bantha fodder. Fuck, I hear Newt is thinking of climbing into the ring. He'll eat her alive... That may actually be literal now that I think of it.

#5

Posted: Sat Jul 04, 2009 2:55 pm
by General Havoc
I almost hope she DOES win the nomination, in that doing so would deliver President Obama his second term on a garnished platter.

But I say almost because amusing as it would be to watch Obama trounce her, I don't want to take the 0.005% chance that she might actually win. I know the republicans are going to run a nutcase next time, but surely even they can do better than her.

#6

Posted: Sun Jul 05, 2009 3:55 pm
by Mayabird
So, what's people's guesses as to why she did this? The big ones being tossed about are some developing major scandal and/or her desire to run for president, with this somehow being part of a Strategy. I think she just wussed out when stuff started getting tough and she actually had to work at her job instead of just gloating in her power.

#7

Posted: Sun Jul 05, 2009 7:04 pm
by SirNitram
Given she's started issuing legal threats for reporting on rumours about her, I think she's just a standard-issue paranoid psycho-conservative. Remember always her ties to seperatists.

#8

Posted: Sun Jul 05, 2009 7:10 pm
by General Havoc
Honestly? I think it actually might be that she doesn't want to go through it anymore.

I mean I could easily be wrong and I know the cynical answer is likely correct here, but the way I see it, Palin stepped into a situation that she simply never imagined existed before. I think she was hopelessly naive when she ran for vice president, and didn't really understand the full glare of the attention one would receive as a national political figure. Her speech about resigning was rambling and semi-coherent at best. I think she may actually be simply trying to bow out.

Who knows.

#9

Posted: Sun Jul 05, 2009 8:32 pm
by Derek Thunder
To elaborate, it's difficult to really say why this occurred. I somehow doubt it's about her family; she did parade them out and make them a centerpiece of her political persona. I'm also not sure that the presidency is her immediate goal. I suppose it really depends on how the pro-Palin grassroots reacts in the next six months or so. I mean, yeah, beltway conservatives are writing her off already, but those same beltway conservatives thought Giuliani and/or Romney would sail to the nomination. Plus, William Kristol likes her, and that guy is like the hydra of conservative politics; call him out on one of his BS statements and two more will pop out in its place (while maintaining his credibility with the movement).

Personally, I think she's trying to get the national media off of her back so she can contest the senate seat currently held by Lisa Murkowski in the fall of 2010. Murkowski is reasonably popular, but she's never been able to truly escape from the fact that she was appointed by her father, and she's not the most conservative senator; Palin could easily run to the right of her and probably win a primary.

From that senate seat, who knows. Perhaps she'll wait until 2016, build up some credibility like Hillary Clinton. Then again, senators with less experience have had more success, so 2012 isn't out of the question.

#10

Posted: Mon Jul 06, 2009 6:22 am
by The Minx
The FBI claims that they are not investigating her:

Link
(CNN) -- The FBI, in a rare response to rampant rumors on the Internet, said it is not investigating Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin on public corruption charges.

"Normally, we don't confirm or deny those kind of allegations out there. But, by not doing so, it just casts her in a very bad light," said FBI Special Agent Eric Gonzalez, who confirmed for CNN the statement he made to the Anchorage Daily News. "There is just no truth to those rumors out there in the blogosphere."

Gonzalez told The Los Angeles Times that there was "no wiggle room" in his comments for any kind of inquiry.

The speculation began almost immediately after Palin's unexpected announcement on Friday that she would step down as Alaska's chief executive with 18 months left in her term.

Palin, who was John McCain's surprise vice presidential candidate in the 2008 election, said she already knew she would not seek a second term and decided against being a lame duck governor for the next 18 months.

She also said too much time and taxpayer expense were going toward fighting ethics investigations, and that the mainstream media were continuing with unfair attacks on her and her family.

Some analysts think Palin will seek the 2012 Republican presidential nomination, and that her resignation is intended to free her to prepare.

Immediate reaction to Palin's resignation among fellow conservatives was not positive.

Karl Rove, the "architect" of George W. Bush's successful presidential campaigns, said the resignation left many of Palin's fellow Republicans "a little perplexed."

"It's a risky strategy," Rove told "Fox News Sunday."

"Astounding," was the pronouncement by Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, and conservative columnist George Will said Palin was declaring herself a quitter.

"The one that rings most hollow is she doesn't want to put Alaska through the terror of [her] being a lame-duck governor," Will told the ABC program "This Week." "If she is just weary of it, one can understand that. Still, she made a contract with them [voters] to serve out her term. And she said, in her own words, she now is a quitter."

"How sad that Washington and the media will never understand; it's about country," Palin said in a statement attributed to her on her Facebook page.

"And though it's honorable for countless others to leave their positions for a higher calling and without finishing a term, of course we know by now, for some reason a different standard applies for the decisions I make. But every American understands what it takes to make a decision because it's right for all, including your family."
So it might well be a burnout.

#11

Posted: Tue Jul 07, 2009 5:41 am
by The Minx
Bit more.

I added annotations, because she really annoys me that much. :smile:

Palin: 'I am not a quitter; I am a fighter'

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (CNN) -- Sarah Palin's not a quitter, she wants the public to know.

"I am not a quitter. I am a fighter," Palin told CNN on Monday while on a family fishing trip, on the heels of her Friday bombshell announcement that she was resigning as Alaska's governor.

Palin did her interview standing on the shores of Dillingham, Alaska, wearing hip waders. She granted 10-minute interviews to CNN and three other news networks Monday.

She resigned because of the tremendous pressure, time and financial burden of a litany of ethics complaints in the past several months, she said. The complaints were without merit and took away from the job she wanted to do for Alaskans, Palin said.
Um, she claims to be a fighter not a quitter and yet she, well, quit her job - because of the pressure, time and financial burden of attacks made against her? Huh?

The decision to resign a year and a half before her term ends, and her rambling, often-disjointed resignation speech Friday, fueled days of debate among political analysts.

Speculation has run rampant that Palin, the Republican vice presidential candidate in 2008, will seek the presidency in 2012.

When pressed about her future, Palin would say only that she would work in public service. She did not rule out a run for the White House or any other political office.
Not much chance of that now, is there. The fact that she's not ruling it out probably means she's hoping for a shot at it. But honestly, how does she think Bush had it over the eight years he was in office? He was called a retard, he was called the worst president in history, he was accused of dictatorial leanings, he was blamed for the death of thousands... In the end he had the support of virtually no one, and yet he stuck to his guns. Say what you will about Bush, but at least he was a fighter, not a quitter. What comparable accusations were made against Palin over only two and a half years? Corruption charges? That some of her kids were not the fist dude's kids?

Palin is to leave the governor's office in late July.

The days since her resignation had been exhilarating and she loved being in Dillingham, a town of only a few thousand people and no cell phone service, Palin said.

On Monday, her personal lawyer also spoke about her resignation.

No legal "bombshell" or personal scandal lies behind Palin's resignation, but off-color jokes by talk-show host David Letterman contributed to her decision to step down, Thomas Van Flein said.

The governor needed a break after being "on duty now for two and a half years solid," he said.
Then perhaps she should take a vacation, right? Instead of quitting.

And, wait, it was because of David Letterman she quit?

Image
So weak!

"There is no bombshell. There is no shoe to drop. There are no investigations of any type that I'm aware of -- no IRS audit, no federal investigation, no state investigation," Van Flein told CNN. "There is no legal reason in terms of a legal problem that compelled the governor to resign."

Friday was "deliberately chosen" for the announcement because of its proximity to the July Fourth holiday, Van Flein said: "She declared her independence from politics as usual."

Palin reiterated that statement in her interview.
:roll: Wow. That was corny.

And she "declared her independence" from politics as usual means she still hopes to work in politics of some sort. Right?

Did she seriously think the attacks would lessen because of this decision? Or is she simply hungering to be the center of attention again, in any way she can?

Rep. Les Gara, an Anchorage Democrat and a frequent Palin critic, said everyone was "wildly surprised" by Palin's announcement.

"A lot of us were pretty disappointed in the concept that she can't finish out a governor's term," Gara said. Palin's resignation speech was "kind of similar to everything that has gone wrong since the governor has gotten back from her vice presidential campaign," Gara said.

"When she came into office, everything was about openness and transparency, and now everything's about excuses," he said.

But Rep. Jay Ramras, a Fairbanks Republican who leads the state House Judiciary Committee, said when it comes to public opinion, "The concrete hasn't set up yet."

"Those that seem to have responsibilities to manage businesses that manage people seem to be much less tolerant of what she did," Ramras said after attending Independence Day events over the weekend. Those people consider her "a quitter," he said.

"And then there's another group, where Gov. Palin has been successful in being able to imply -- and certainly these people have inferred -- that she was a victim."
A victim of what? Political snipes?

The 45-year-old governor had faced intense scrutiny since Sen. John McCain picked her out of relative obscurity to be his running mate last year. Though her acceptance speech drew rave reviews, her subsequent shaky performance in network news interviews, the drama surrounding her 18-year-old daughter's pregnancy and two ethics probes into her earlier firing of the state's public safety director dogged her throughout the rest of the campaign.

"In my opinion, she was the national campaign for Republicans last fall," Van Flein said. "I know John McCain was the candidate, but the decision was really about Sarah Palin and could she take on Obama. That was a lot of weight on her shoulders to carry that campaign, and they almost pulled it off."
The election results say otherwise. :smile:

Besides, there is a segment of the population who will never vote for anything but their own party.

As Election Day neared with McCain trailing in the polls, campaign aides began sniping at Palin as a "diva" who ignored top advisers and lacked "fundamental understanding" of key issues in the race. The McCain-Palin ticket ultimately lost to Democrats Barack Obama and Joe Biden last November.

Van Flein also said Palin would remain involved in public service, with no other decisions made at this point. But Gara said it was clear to him that Palin has her eye on another bid for national office.

"We can all guess," he said. "My guess is the governor wants to be president, and that's what she should have said at her press conference."

Palin thought she would stop being a "lightning rod" once she returned to Alaska, but "it never really did simmer down," Van Flein said. Ethics complaints from critics led to her paying back taxes on state per diem funds she received while living at her home in Wasilla, outside Anchorage; another investigation led to her paying about $8,100 in travel expenses for her children.

Van Flein said the state's ethics process, which Palin signed into law, has been "abused" to harass her and may lead Alaskans to ignore more serious allegations. And he said Letterman's early June joke about one of her daughters being "knocked up" by New York Yankees outfielder Alex Rodriguez "demonstrated to her that there's some sort of disconnect here."

"When people don't accept normal bounds of decency making jokes like that about children, maybe this is not good for the state right now," Van Flein said. "And maybe somebody else who is not the subject, and whose family is not the subject of this scrutiny, can move the state forward."

Letterman said the joke was aimed at Palin's older daughter, Bristol, who had a son with her high-school boyfriend in December. However, Palin was in New York traveling with her 14-year-old daughter Willow at the time, and she accused Letterman of making jokes about sex with an underage girl.

The CBS "Late Show" host ultimately apologized, saying "If you have to explain the joke, it's not a very good joke."

Despite leaving office about two-thirds of the way through her term, Palin "is not a quitter," Van Flein said. He added that she "already accomplished her major goals," including winning legislative approval for a massive natural gas pipeline.

But Ramras, who calls himself "a pro-development, conservative Republican," called that assertion "crazy." Though the pipeline project won approval in the state Legislature, Alaska has yet to establish a "durable and predictable" financial structure that will get producers to commit to the plan.

"Anyone who thinks we've started anything is delusional. ... What she did was she created a Gordian knot and then handed it off to someone else," he said.
Thankfully, there are enough sensible republicans who are willing to voice off aobut how full of it she is.

#12

Posted: Sun Jul 12, 2009 12:20 pm
by Mayabird
Update
Palin says she's not leaving politics

1 hour ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin says she is not only staying in politics once she leaves the governor's office later this month, she's jumping right back into the national fray.

Palin tells the Washington Times for a Sunday story that she is eager to campaign for Republicans and independents and even Democrats who share her views on limited government, national defense and energy independence.

Palin says that Americans are so tired of partisan politics that not even her 20-year-old son is a Republican. Like his father, he is registered as "nonpartisan" in Alaska.

Palin announced last week that she will leave the governor's office a year and a half before her first term is to end. She tells the Washington Times that she and her family had been thinking about her stepping down for months.

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
Yeah, the Washington Times is the Moonie rag, but I'm a little curious if there are any hints in the article that she somehow still thinks she could be President when she couldn't handle being a pissant governor. Or if she's just going to ruin other people's campaigns for the rest of her life.