Sarah Palin VP Speech - She is like a fire cracker to McCain dead rallies.

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If you step back to look at it more objectively then you would see it. Right now you are too Obama centric. You have no idea what this is doing for the Republican base. The party was dead. McCain was luke warm to the base. Lots of folks were dishearten and didn't know whether they would vote or not. Those kinds of cheers you heard is not the typical McCain rally cheers. People are excited about the election now.

Obama missed that great opportunity to have locked down the race when he (being too anti-Bush) failed to recognized that he should have said he would consider drilling as means to help lower high gas cost. It was what the country and the world wanted to hear at the time. But because Bush said it it and he wanted to stay on the anti-Bush campaign where Bush is never right and bash anything that Bush supports. He made McCain jump on it first. Then had to back track.
 
. . . You have no idea what this is doing for the Republican base. The party was dead. McCain was luke warm to the base. Lots of folks were dishearten and didn't know whether they would vote or not. Those kinds of cheers you heard is not the typical McCain rally cheers. People are excited about the election now.

Obama missed that great opportunity to have locked down the race when he (being too anti-Bush) failed to recognized that he should have said he would consider drilling as means to help lower high gas cost. It was what the country and the world wanted to hear at the time. But because Bush said it it and he wanted to stay on the anti-Bush campaign where Bush is never right and bash anything that Bush supports. He made McCain jump on it first. Then had to back track.

"But Republican officials remained nervous about how the choice was playing in the country as a whole. Some new polls showed Democratic nominee Sen. Barack Obama gaining a big lead in recent days following his party's convention last week.

A USA Today poll taken over the weekend found Sen. Obama leading Sen. John McCain 50%-43% among registered voters, up from a four-point lead before the Democratic convention. A Diageo/Hotline poll gave Sen. Obama an 11-point edge, up from four points earlier in August.

Even some voters who were initially enthusiastic about the Palin pick seemed more circumspect after the new revelations. Christina Hewitt, a mother of three in St. Charles, Mo., attended a rally Sunday in O'Fallon, Mo., and screamed support for Gov. Palin. Two days later, her excitement had ebbed. "It is a little bit shocking because I'm pretty conservative so it was hard to swallow," Ms. Hewitt said. She said she still supports the McCain-Palin ticket."​


Excerpted from:

GOP Tightens Image Control As Palin Prepares for Debut

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122039868736392867.html?mod=hps_us_whats_news
 
<font size="6"><center>
GOP Tightens Image Control </font size><font size="5">
As Palin Prepares for Debut</font size></center>



P1-AM782_PALIN_NS_20080902185817.jpg

Republican vice-presidential candidate Sarah
Palin, with her husband, Todd, waves to the
crowd during a campaign rally Sunday in
O'Fallon, Mo.

Wall Street Journal
By LAURA MECKLER,
MONICA LANGLEY and
ELIZABETH HOLMES
September 3, 2008; Page A1


ST. PAUL, Minn. -- The McCain campaign scrambled to take control of the public debate over vice-presidential pick Sarah Palin, canceling her public appearances and teaming her with high-powered Republican operatives as she prepared for a speech Wednesday night that will be her first, and perhaps most important, chance to define herself to the American public.

Campaign officials were heartened by the strong support the Alaska governor continued to receive in the halls of their nominating convention here, a day after the revelation that her 17-year-old unmarried daughter, Bristol, was pregnant.

Gov. Palin and her husband "have embraced the grandchild about to be born," Gary Bauer, a social conservative activist and onetime presidential candidate, told the Texas delegation. "They already are teaching America a lesson about the sanctity of life," he added, as the delegates jumped to their feet in applause.

But Republican officials remained nervous about how the choice was playing in the country as a whole. Some new polls showed Democratic nominee Sen. Barack Obama gaining a big lead in recent days following his party's convention last week.

A USA Today poll taken over the weekend found Sen. Obama leading Sen. John McCain 50%-43% among registered voters, up from a four-point lead before the Democratic convention. A Diageo/Hotline poll gave Sen. Obama an 11-point edge, up from four points earlier in August.

Even some voters who were initially enthusiastic about the Palin pick seemed more circumspect after the new revelations. Christina Hewitt, a mother of three in St. Charles, Mo., attended a rally Sunday in O'Fallon, Mo., and screamed support for Gov. Palin. Two days later, her excitement had ebbed. "It is a little bit shocking because I'm pretty conservative so it was hard to swallow," Ms. Hewitt said. She said she still supports the McCain-Palin ticket.

While vice-presidential candidates traditionally act as the chief attackers of the opponents, Gov. Palin's speech will focus on her personal narrative and legislative record, not on criticizing the Democratic ticket, said a senior McCain adviser. She is expected to highlight her focus on ethics issues in Alaska and other accomplishments, while reaching out to Democrats who voted for Sen. Hillary Clinton in the primaries.

Although there has been extensive coverage of Gov. Palin in the four days since she was named, the campaign sees her speech as an opportunity for her to describe herself in her own terms. The adviser said he would be shocked if she spoke about her daughter's pregnancy, noting that the campaign considers that issue off-limits. Her whole family is expected to attend, including Bristol and her boyfriend, Levi Johnston.

The speech is "a chance for her to actually get out and tell her story and for people to see beyond some of the media fog that's existed in the last 48 hours," said McCain campaign manager Rick Davis.

Gov. Palin flew to Minnesota Sunday night with former presidential candidates Mitt Romney and Mike Huckabee. She made minimal small talk, sitting behind the prominent pair of former fellow Republican governors and opting to study her notes, read her BlackBerry and whisper with her staff.

In Minnesota she has stayed out of the public eye, a contrast with Democratic vice-presidential pick Sen. Joe Biden, who milled about the convention in Denver last week. Gov. Palin refused media interviews and canceled plans to appear at the Republican National Coalition for Life Tuesday.

She spent Tuesday in her hotel suite meeting with campaign aides and working on her speech. She had private sessions with Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman and members of the pro-Israel group AIPAC, said people familiar with her schedule. An AIPAC spokesman said Gov. Palin told its members she would "work to expand and deepen the strategic partnership between the U.S. and Israel."


Meeting With Advisers

Gov. Palin met with the campaign's top political advisers, including Mr. Davis, senior strategist Steve Schmidt and Mark Salter, Sen. McCain's closest aide. The campaign released a photo of her sitting with Laura Bush and Cindy McCain, the wife of her running mate, but didn't provide any other details.

She has been cramming on Sen. McCain's positions in preparation for a debate against Sen. Biden, who has been involved in national and international affairs for over three decades. She met with Douglas Holtz-Eakin, who handles domestic policy for the McCain campaign, and Randy Scheunemann, who directs foreign policy.

"She has to familiarize herself with every position John McCain has held over a number of years. That takes work and briefing," one McCain aide said.

Some have wondered publicly if Sen. McCain properly vetted his choice. At a stop in Philadelphia, he said: "The vetting process was completely thorough and I'm grateful for the results." Later, in Cleveland, he said: "I just want to repeat again how excited I am to have Sarah Palin...as my running mate. America's excited and they're going to be even more excited once they see her tomorrow night."

McCain aides and Republican leaders have increasingly tried to dismiss critical reports of Gov. Palin's life by blaming unfair, biased media coverage. They set about telling her story in their own words Tuesday with a video emailed to supporters, called "Introducing Gov. Sarah Palin." The 60-second spot used her speech from Friday's announcement and headlines praising her as a "maverick" and a "reformer."

Before her speech, the convention will be shown a video about her made by Sen. McCain's creative director, Fred Davis, narrated by actor Jon Voight.


Key Hires

Wednesday's speech is being written by Matthew Scully, a former George W. Bush speechwriter. He first met Gov. Palin Thursday night at a hotel in Middleton, Ohio, where she was in seclusion until last Friday's announcement. The pair spent several hours working on her remarks for that day, an adviser said, and they hit it off. As soon as that was done, Mr. Scully turned his attention to the convention address.

He's one of a number of high Republican operatives working to shore up Gov. Palin's public standing. Another key hire: Tucker Eskew, who was an aide to a G.O.P. governor in South Carolina and then an adviser in the Bush administration. Last Friday, Mr. Schmidt, the strategist, asked Mr. Eskew to become "counselor" to Gov. Palin, advising her on policy and communications and traveling with her.

In Alaska, the McCain campaign has tried to control the flow of information as liberal bloggers and the media mine her past. A team of public-relations aides has settled into the state and asked Gov. Palin's friends and family to avoid speaking to the media. In a conference call with friends and local activists on Monday, the campaign suggested that media requests be funneled through the campaign to make sure "we said supportive things," according to one participant.

The Xcel arena, the convention site, will be packed with 20,000 people. The largest indoor venue in Alaska holds about 8,000, said James W. Muller, political science chairman at the University of Alaska, Anchorage.

He expects her to combine the formal rhetoric befitting the occasion with the more casual style she is known for locally. "She is used to doing politics one on one and with small groups and with people she, in many cases, may already know," Mr. Muller said. "It's very personal."

Beginning next week, Gov. Palin will travel to battleground states, starting with Florida, a McCain aide said, and including a heavy dose of visits to rural areas. She has 16 fund-raisers scheduled for this month in swing states.

Democrats say some of their early polls since the selection suggest that Gov. Palin enjoys limited appeal beyond the Republican base and evangelicals who appreciate her positions opposing abortion and gay marriage.

Write to Laura Meckler at laura.meckler@wsj.com, Monica Langley at monica.langley@wsj.com and Elizabeth Holmes at elizabeth.holmes@wsj.com

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122039868736392867.html?mod=hps_us_whats_news
 
I can't wait till Palin debates Biden.

He's going to make her seem like the true rookie she is before the American people.
 
I can't wait till Palin debates Biden.

He's going to make her seem like the true rookie she is before the American people.

I dunno. Can she be sufficiently prepped to get through the debate? Maybe; depends too on the questions asked. I believe, however, that Joe will have his hands full (if she is in fact the VP nominee -- many seem to believe otherwise). He will have to be extremely careful not to look like he is taking advantage or coming off sexist -- not an easy task when you're trying to spank that ass at the same time. Its going to take some finesse and guile.

QueEx
 
I dunno. Can she be sufficiently prepped to get through the debate? Maybe; depends too on the questions asked. I believe, however, that Joe will have his hands full (if she is in fact the VP nominee -- many seem to believe otherwise). He will have to be extremely careful not to look like he is taking advantage or coming off sexist -- not an easy task when you're trying to spank that ass at the same time. Its going to take some finesse and guile.

QueEx

Finesses and guile are not natural for Joe (we all know his "articulate" remark about Obama) but at the very least, Biden simply needs to play up his connection with Hillary and his agreement with her on many of the same policies to assure the women that he's not attacking Palin as woman but more of her against her policies.

I too, don't underestimate Sarah Palin. She's the new celerity of the the Republican party. If the scandals die-down, she'd be a powerful campaign personality - after all, how else does a Mayor of town of 7,000 all of the suddenly become Governor of the State.

Is she Republican Obama in terms of energizing the Republican base? I think so.
 
People keep looking at the small town thing too much. The state is a rich state and deal with some powerful corporations and lobbyist. She gets to fight real battles in her state. Fighting environmentalist and oil companies or playing referee is not easy fights.
 
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man everytime i watch this, I have to snap myself back out of a daydream, how in the fuck did he do that!? is there a youtube video of this?

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If you step back to look at it more objectively then you would see it. Right now you are too Obama centric. You have no idea what this is doing for the Republican base. The party was dead. McCain was luke warm to the base. Lots of folks were dishearten and didn't know whether they would vote or not. Those kinds of cheers you heard is not the typical McCain rally cheers. People are excited about the election now.

Obama missed that great opportunity to have locked down the race when he (being too anti-Bush) failed to recognized that he should have said he would consider drilling as means to help lower high gas cost. It was what the country and the world wanted to hear at the time. But because Bush said it it and he wanted to stay on the anti-Bush campaign where Bush is never right and bash anything that Bush supports. He made McCain jump on it first. Then had to back track.

You have to understand that the left only looks at Bush as the republican party. Bush is public enemy number 1. McCain just took middle America with this VP pick. You should hear the women "both black and white" talking about this Palin like she is the new oprah. Obama missed a huge opportunity to win a landslide. He basically left 18 million votes for McCain to steal away, and he cannot blame anyone but himself. I say this once, and again, if Obama wants to win, he needs to start explaining what his plans are. Bottom line!!!
 
You have to understand that the left only looks at Bush as the republican party. Bush is public enemy number 1. McCain just took middle America with this VP pick. You should hear the women "both black and white" talking about this Palin like she is the new oprah. Obama missed a huge opportunity to win a landslide. He basically left 18 million votes for McCain to steal away, and he cannot blame anyone but himself. I say this once, and again, if Obama wants to win, he needs to start explaining what his plans are. Bottom line!!!

actinanass lives in a republican bubble world.
 
her speech was more like a stand up comedian act

i guess if thats what it takes to get the right fired up so be it

for every action there is a equal and opposite one...and it seems like the democrats are just as fired up...if not more
 
If you step back to look at it more objectively then you would see it. Right now you are too Obama centric. You have no idea what this is doing for the Republican base. The party was dead. McCain was luke warm to the base. Lots of folks were dishearten and didn't know whether they would vote or not. Those kinds of cheers you heard is not the typical McCain rally cheers. People are excited about the election now.

Obama missed that great opportunity to have locked down the race when he (being too anti-Bush) failed to recognized that he should have said he would consider drilling as means to help lower high gas cost. It was what the country and the world wanted to hear at the time. But because Bush said it it and he wanted to stay on the anti-Bush campaign where Bush is never right and bash anything that Bush supports. He made McCain jump on it first. Then had to back track.

Obama did vote on it...PRESENT! LOL! Obama Centrics fail to recognized that she paid every resident in Alaska 1200.00 from the annual revenue from oil. They also fail to see that Barack has always walked on eggshells because he never wanted to hurt "HIS" career. He is a great speaker, I give him that, but I know many pastors also that speak well but deliver nothing but "HOPE". You can believe by November Obama will find a way to say he has always wanted to "support" drilling, he will do anything to help HIS career.:rolleyes:
 
John McCain can't hide his Sarah Palin problem

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John McCain can't hide his Sarah Palin problem
Monday, September 29th 2008, 1:30 AM


Snyder/Reuters

John McCain gives a thumbs up as he walks into his campaign headquarters in Arlington, Va., on Sunday.

Kaczmarek/AP

Sarah Palin with daughter Willow in Philadelphia.
John McCain "suspended" his campaign last week because he said he needed to fly down to Washington and save a failing economy all by himself. McCain was doing the opposite, of course, wasn't suspending anything, just campaigning harder than ever, trying to figure out a way to bail out his own campaign.

RELATED: MCCAIN A CRITIC OF PALIN'S ATTACKERS
And this was only the second great publicity stunt of McCain's campaign, the latest detour from what stopped being the Straight Talk Express long ago. The first was the selection of Gov. Sarah Palin as his running mate, one that seemed like a much better idea a month ago.

RELATED: TINA FEY PLAYS SARAH - AGAIN
Palin was always a form of sleight of hand with McCain - check her out, not me! - even if it was hailed as genius by people who would have treated her like the Rev. Jeremiah Wright if Barack Obama had selected her. Oh, sure. Think about the reaction if Obama had selected anybody remotely like Palin. The party at Rush Limbaugh's house would have gone on longer than Mardi Gras.

RELATED: REPUBLICANS WANT PALIN OFF TICKET
Except now McCain can't hide Palin anymore. He couldn't hide her from Katie Couric last week and he can't hide her on Thursday night at the vice presidential debate, even if the bar for Palin will be set lower than the curb in St. Louis.

So now all those who didn't see the Couric interview will be able to decide if the selection of Palin was "genius," as some called it at the time, or the action of a man who will clearly do or say anything now to save his last chance at the presidency.

Here is some of Couric's interview with the woman McCain believes is the best choice to be vice president at the most perilous time in the history of this country, one he actually referred to as a political "soul mate":

Couric: You've cited Alaska's proximity to Russia as part of your foreign policy experience. What did you mean by that?

Palin: That Alaska has a very narrow maritime border between a foreign country, Russia, and, on our other side, the land boundary that we have with Canada.

Couric: Well, explain to me why that enhances your foreign policy credentials.

Palin: Well, it certainly does, because our, our next-door neighbors are foreign countries, there in the state that I'm executive of.

Couric: Have you ever been involved in any negotiations, for example, with the Russians?

Palin: We have trade missions back and forth, we do. It's very important when you consider even national security issues with Russia. As [Russian Prime Minister Vladimir] Putin rears his ugly head and comes into the air space of the United States, where do they go? It's Alaska. It's just right over the border. It is from Alaska that we send those out to make sure an eye is being kept on this very powerful nation, Russia, because they are right there, they are right next to our state.

And John McCain spent Friday night hammering away at his opponent's lack of experience and his naivete. When Couric switched gears and began talking about the economy, she asked Palin for "specific examples in [McCain's] 26 years of pushing for more regulations."

Sarah Palin said, "I'll try to find you some and I'll bring 'em to you."

She was never supposed to be in this position. Only now she isin this position because McCain apparently thought he could fool enough people into thinking this was another example of some kind of rogue Republican, the maverick that only he can possibly believe he still is. But then McCain clearly thought he could get over last week with this notion that he was putting country first by getting himself some face time at what was then a stalled bailout plan.

In the first days and weeks after the Republican National Convention, there was this giddiness over Palin. She could even draw big crowds at a time when McCain felt he could not do that on his own. And apparently all these flacks and handlers thought they could run her for vice president and do everything except let her talk, let her answer questions that wouldn't stump kids in civics class.

All that is gone now, except forall the die-hards who think that it doesn't matter what she thinks or what McCain thinks as long as they're not Obama.

There will be those who declare her a winner on Thursday night in St. Louis if she remains standing. Sen. Joe Biden will be called out for bullying her or patronizing her if he comes close to breaking arbitrary rules that would never be set up for a male candidate running against him. It won't change what she is and has been from the start, which means a prop.

She will leave the stage Thursday night, having hurt McCain as much as she helped him at the beginning. Then the stage will belong to McCain and Obama, and they will talk about the economy and how they plan to fix it, and McCain will continue to talk about his experience and being a war hero, and Obama will try to show he is smart enough to have a real foreign policy and tough enough to enforce it.

And then the campaign will finally become what it has really been about all along: race. It will be about how many people are going to vote for the black guy on Nov. 4. Palin can't save McCain and neither can publicity stunts. Maybe race can still drag him across the finish line.

mlupica@nydailynews.comhttp://assets.nydailynews.com/img/2008/09/29/amd_mccain-thumbsup.jpg[/img]
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Sarah Palin VP Speech - She is like a fire cracker to McCain dead rallies.

Did you speak too soon ???

Reports now say public perceptions of Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin have fallen dramatically since she emerged on the national political scene at the GOP convention.

First, it was Colin Powell saying she wasn't ready; but today another noted Republican is setting the record straight. Now, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, McCain´s California Campaign Chairman,:eek: is echoing Powell´s concerns about Palin´s readiness, or lack thereof, to be president.

And then, theres that little "Mutiny" going on within the McCain camp. Top Republican lieutenants who have been toiling with John McCain to put him in the White House are starting to turn on each other as they calculate that every last wheel has come off their campaign wagon and there is no putting them back on again --

On top of that -- even as John McCain and Sarah Palin scramble to close the gap in the final days of the 2008 election, stirrings of a Sarah Palin insurgency are complicating the campaign's already-tense internal dynamics:
"Four Republicans close to Palin said she has decided increasingly to disregard the advice of the former Bush aides tasked to handle her, creating occasionally tense situations as she travels the country with them. Those Palin supporters, inside the campaign and out, said Palin blames her handlers for a botched rollout and a tarnished public image — even as others in McCain's camp blame the pick of the relatively inexperienced Alaska governor, and her public performance, for McCain's decline."​


<font size="3">You might want to re-assess the Palin situation ???</font size>

QueEx
 
<font size="6"><center>
GOP Tightens Image Control </font size><font size="5">
As Palin Prepares for Debut</font size></center>



P1-AM782_PALIN_NS_20080902185817.jpg

Republican vice-presidential candidate Sarah
Palin, with her husband, Todd, waves to the
crowd during a campaign rally Sunday in
O'Fallon, Mo.

Wall Street Journal
By LAURA MECKLER,
MONICA LANGLEY and
ELIZABETH HOLMES
September 3, 2008; Page A1


<center><font size="4">. . .</font size></center>

Before her speech, the convention will be shown a video about her made by Sen. McCain's creative director, Fred Davis, narrated by actor Jon Voight.


Jon Voight Gushes About Palin

P o l i t i c o
By KARIN TANABE
December 6, 2010


Actor and self-proclaimed “constitutional conservative” Jon Voight may just have earned himself a nod in Sarah Palin’s next book. The actor did a Q-and-A with the Anchorage Daily News on Sunday (he is currently in the state shooting “an Anchorage-based, supernatural thriller” with the working title “Ghost Vision”) and called the ex-governor “very smart.”

The actor (and father of Angelina Jolie) said he counted himself among Palin’s many fans. “I think she's a remarkable person.” He even added a message for the Alaskan people: “I think you should be very proud of her. She certainly represents the spirit of the Alaskan.”

Voight waved off Palin’s naysayers, saying the negative reactions she evokes from some people only makes him like her more. “It's quite transparent that they're just bad-intentioned folks trying to bring down this very nice gal,” said Voight of the anti-Palin camp.

Voight confirmed that he’d be excited to vote for Palin if she decides to run for president, and said that her decision to leave the Alaska governorship mid-term didn’t bother him.

“Some people have said that they were upset with her for leaving the governorship when she did. I disagree with those people. I think she saved Alaska with that move. She had capable people who were going to take over ... She was being attacked, she was being prevented from governing,” said the actor who also had nothing nice to say about the government in Washington but called the Constitution “a magnificent document.”



http://www.politico.com/click/stories/1012/jon_voight_gushes_about_palin_.html
__________________________________________________


See also:
"The R.N.C. says that “the Democratic Party is dedicated to restructuring American society along socialist ideals.” And when Jon Voight, the actor, told the audience at a Republican fund-raiser this week that the president is a “false prophet” and that “we and we alone are the right frame of mind to free this nation from this Obama oppression,” Mitch McConnell, the Senate minority leader, thanked him, saying that he “really enjoyed” the remarks. Homeland Security Report Warns Of Rising Right-Wing Extremism and Jon Voight blasts President Obama





It may be but a small gesture in protest, but not a dime of my money
will ever knowingly pay to view a Voight, made, inspired, etc., production.

QueEx
 
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