Thursday, November 6, 2008

What Did Palin Not Know and When Didn't She Know It?

What went on behind the scenes in the John McCain-Sarah Palin campaign?

It's time for the blame game. The finger-pointing has begun. The usual suspects, those unnamed sources, are talking.

The Los Angeles Times breathlessly reports the dirt.

Now it can be revealed, Fox News Channel reporter Carl Cameron just told network anchor Shepard Smith.

There WAS tension between John McCain staff members and Sarah Palin (as other news outlets previously reported), and part of it stemmed from some rather glaring gaps in what the governor of Alaska knew about the rest of the world.

Cameron, the Fox beat reporter for the Republican presidential ticket, said he had been told by unnamed sources -- and on the condition he not report the details during the campaign -- that Palin could not name all of the countries that are part of the North American Free Trade Agreement.

He did not mention which one (or ones) she whiffed on, but there are only three: Canada, the U.S. and Mexico.

Nor, according to Cameron, was Palin aware that Africa is a continent. (Perhaps she was hamstrung by the fact that no part of that land mass can be viewed from her homestate.)

How snarky!
...Cameron also related that the anonymous McCain aides were frustrated that Palin blew off their suggestions that she put in a little prep time before her interview with CBS journalist Katie Couric. That sit-down in late September, it will be recalled, did not go so well for Palin.

Unnamed sources. Anonymous McCain aides.

This is sleazy.

If people are going to make these sort of accusations against Sarah Palin, they should have the courage to come forward.



_____________

The New York Times continues its assault on John McCain and Sarah Palin.

Smearmeister Elisabeth Bumiller delights in detailing "Internal Battles Divided McCain and Palin Camps."

As a top adviser in Senator John McCain’s now-imploded campaign tells the story, it was bad enough that Gov. Sarah Palin of Alaska unwittingly scheduled, and then took, a prank telephone call from a Canadian comedian posing as the president of France. Far worse, the adviser said, she failed to inform her ticketmate about her rogue diplomacy.

As a senior adviser in the Palin campaign tells the story, the charge is absurd. The call had been on Ms. Palin’s schedule for three days and she should not have been faulted if the McCain campaign was too clueless to notice.

Whatever the truth, one thing is certain. Ms. Palin, who laughingly told the prankster that she could be president “maybe in eight years,” was the catalyst for a civil war between her campaign and Mr. McCain’s that raged from mid-September up until moments before Mr. McCain’s concession speech on Tuesday night. By then, Ms. Palin was in only infrequent contact with Mr. McCain, top advisers said.

“I think it was a difficult relationship,” said one top McCain campaign official, who, like almost all others interviewed, asked to remain anonymous. “McCain talked to her occasionally.”

But Mr. McCain’s advisers also described him as admiring of Ms. Palin’s political skills. He was aware of the infighting, they said, but it is unclear how much he was inclined or able to stop it.

The tensions and their increasingly public airing provide a revealing coda to the ill-fated McCain-Palin ticket, hinting at the mounting turmoil of a campaign that was described even by many Republicans as incoherent, negative and badly run.

For her part, Ms. Palin told reporters in Arizona on Wednesday morning that “there is absolutely no diva in me.”

Later in the day, she refused to address the strife within the campaigns. “I have absolutely no intention of engaging in any of the negativity because this has been all positive for me,” she said, adding that it was time to savor President-elect Barack Obama’s victory and “not let the pettiness or maybe internal workings of a campaign erode any of the recognition of this historic moment.”

...The tensions were described in interviews with top aides to the two campaigns who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they did not want to be seen as disloyal to Mr. McCain’s effort at a difficult time.

Finger-pointing at the end of a losing campaign is traditional and to a large degree predictable, as Mr. McCain himself acknowledged in a prescient interview in July.

...The disputes between the campaigns centered in large part on the Republican National Committee’s $150,000 wardrobe for Ms. Palin and her family, but also on what McCain advisers considered Ms. Palin’s lack of preparation for her disastrous interview with Katie Couric of CBS News and her refusal to take advice from Mr. McCain’s campaign.

But behind those episodes may be a greater subtext: anger within the McCain camp that Ms. Palin harbored political ambitions beyond 2008.

Newsweek piles on:
NEWSWEEK has also learned that Palin's shopping spree at high-end department stores was more extensive than previously reported. While publicly supporting Palin, McCain's top advisers privately fumed at what they regarded as her outrageous profligacy. One senior aide said that Nicolle Wallace had told Palin to buy three suits for the convention and hire a stylist. But instead, the vice presidential nominee began buying for herself and her family—clothes and accessories from top stores such as Saks Fifth Avenue and Neiman Marcus. According to two knowledgeable sources, a vast majority of the clothes were bought by a wealthy donor, who was shocked when he got the bill. Palin also used low-level staffers to buy some of the clothes on their credit cards. The McCain campaign found out last week when the aides sought reimbursement. One aide estimated that she spent "tens of thousands" more than the reported $150,000, and that $20,000 to $40,000 went to buy clothes for her husband. Some articles of clothing have apparently been lost. An angry aide characterized the shopping spree as "Wasilla hillbillies looting Neiman Marcus from coast to coast," and said the truth will eventually come out when the Republican Party audits its books.

A Palin aide said: "Governor Palin was not directing staffers to put anything on their personal credit cards, and anything that staffers put on their credit cards has been reimbursed, like an expense. Nasty and false accusations following a defeat say more about the person who made them than they do about Governor Palin."

McCain himself rarely spoke to Palin during the campaign, and aides kept him in the dark about the details of her spending on clothes because they were sure he would be offended. Palin asked to speak along with McCain at his Arizona concession speech Tuesday night, but campaign strategist Steve Schmidt vetoed the request.

"Wasilla hillbillies looting Neiman Marcus from coast to coast"?

That is ugly.

Where would McCain's campaign have been without Sarah Palin?

McCain would have lost as badly as Walter Mondale did to Ronald Reagan.

It's disgusting that these COWARDLY unnamed aides are trashing Palin.

McCain should tell them to lay off now. He should stand up for her. Palin saved McCain from a landslide of historic proportions. The unnamed aides should be thanking her for that.

5 comments:

Isobel Rowan said...

Wow, the MSM really is afraid of her, if they've already started smearing Palin for 2012.

Anonymous said...

Seeing as how Carl Cameron is a Republican, I don't think he is afraid of her. It is McCains staffers who have been bashing her recently, to no end, and it prooves as everything comes out that she is an idiot, and does not belong as the Governor. If she dosn't know NAFTA or that Africa is a continent, and has so many issues with federal and state government she is just not qualified. She does not understand things, and argued that South Africa was part of the country. She isn't qualified. She was a bad choice for McCain, 60% of the country thought she was stupid, 36% of Republicans said so. She is not the hero of a party, she is an unqualified pain in the ass who should never have been picked, and I for one hope to never hear from her again.

Anonymous said...

An example of why the education system in this country is flawed. You spend all of your time worried about taxes, abortion, and the gays. I worry about education, and how stupid a generation we will raise if we don't educate them. Public Schools should be cathedrals. Vouchers do not work, and never will. Change is coming, and you won't like it becuase its good for America, and in your mind only good for America is when a republican does something. You hate america.

Mary said...

Obviously, Palin needs to be taken out.

I guess the Leftists didn't like seeing the tens of thousands she drew to rallies.

She's a threat so she has to be destroyed.

As far as the unnamed McCain aides go, they may harbor hard feelings due to McCain's loss and not want her to benefit.

Anonymous said...

I hope they keep it up. Finally the MSM will go broke and be out of our hair.

Besides Obama will have his own press machine running very shortly. Maybe he'll continue to have his own TV station. Mr. Orwell, here we come1