View Full Version : CNN's failed attempt at Palin pwnership
Needa Pass Rush
10-22-2008, 09:29 PM
Journalism meets partisan bias. :thumbsup:
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Needa Pass Rush
10-22-2008, 09:31 PM
October 22, 2008, 4:00 a.m.
How Palin Governed
Behind all the criticism and controversy, what really happened.
By Byron York
Editor’s note: Byron York’s recent article in National Review on Sarah Palin’s time as governor of Alaska became a campaign issue Tuesday when CNN’s Drew Griffin distorted its meaning in a high-profile interview with Palin. CNN’s problems aside, what was the story really about? And what did it say about Palin's readiness for office? Now, for the first time, York’s article is available on the web.
Watching press coverage of the Republican candidate for vice president, it’s sometimes hard to decide whether Sarah Palin is incompetent, stupid, unqualified, corrupt, backward, or — or, well, all of the above. Palin, the governor of Alaska, has faced more criticism than any vice-presidential candidate since 1988, when Democrats and the press tore into Dan Quayle. In fact, Palin may have it even worse than Quayle, since she’s taking flak not only from Democrats and the press but from some conservative opinion leaders as well.
After John McCain unexpectedly chose Palin as his running mate, reporters raced to Alaska to look into her family life, including her teenage daughter’s pregnancy; into her per diem expense requests; into her controversial firing of the state’s public-safety commissioner; into her husband’s role as informal adviser; into the gifts she received; and into much more. Those investigations have yielded hundreds of stories. But Palin’s time in the governor’s office hasn’t been all, or even mostly, family drama and minor controversy. She was also, lest we forget, the state’s chief executive. So, what did she do every day? How deeply involved was she in the workings of government? What were her priorities?
And also: Before Palin moved into the governor’s office, she was mayor of Wasilla, Alaska, population 7,028. How did she adjust to a big new job? Was she up to it? What was her learning curve? Discovering how she made that transition could tell us how she might handle becoming vice president.
Yes, there are legitimate concerns about Palin’s lack of experience. Who wouldn’t, at the very least, wish that she had more time in the governor’s office on her résumé? But a look at Palin’s 20 months in power, along with interviews with people who worked with her, shows her to be a serious executive, a governor who picked important things to do and got them done — and who didn’t just stumble into an 80 percent job-approval rating.
THE PALIN PIPELINE
The top issue of the 2006 Alaska governor’s race was whether, and how, to build a pipeline to bring the estimated 35 trillion cubic feet of natural gas under Alaska’s North Slope to market. Palin’s Republican predecessor, Frank Murkowski — a man who had spent nearly 22 years in the U.S. Senate before becoming governor — wanted to make a deal with three big oil companies, Exxon Mobil, BP, and Conoco Phillips.
A lot of critics, including Palin, thought Murkowski’s proposed deal gave too much to the companies. For one thing, it called for Alaska to relinquish its right to tax the pipeline, and instead agree to a series of payments from the oil companies — payments that would be locked in for as long as 45 years. In addition, the deal would have rewritten leases and other regulatory devices that the state normally controls. It was an unprecedented proposal, representing sweeping changes from the traditional way of doing business — and not to the state’s advantage.
Palin defeated Murkowski in the primary, and went on to win the governorship, on a platform of throwing out the old deal and starting fresh. Once in office, she was deeply involved in making that happen. “She had four principles she wanted to bring to the process,” says Joe Balash, who served as Palin’s special assistant for energy issues. “One, to have competition. Two, to have clear and objective measures of progress, because with a massive project like that it’s going to be years before any dirt turns. Three, there had to be a commitment to expansion [the pipeline would have to be big enough to handle more gas in the future]. And four, it had to be done without surrendering the state’s sovereignty.”
It was a big, and extraordinarily complex, task. There was no consensus on how it should be done. But Palin, by all accounts, assembled a first-rate group of people to come up with what eventually became a proposal to grant a license to the company TransCanada to build the pipeline. “I give her credit for hiring good people,” says Beth Kerttula, the Democratic minority leader in the Alaska house of representatives who worked with Palin on oil and gas issues and has lately emerged as one of Palin’s leading critics. “She had a strong team.”
There were times during the negotiations when it appeared Palin’s proposal would fall through, perhaps not even getting to a vote in the legislature. Associates say she was determined to prevent that. “She went literally from office to office asking that, regardless of how people intended to vote, that they permit a vote to take place,” Balash recalls. “If she hadn’t made those visits, it in all likelihood would never have come to a vote.”
And when she made those visits, she scored points with legislators of both parties. “On the issues where I worked with her, she listened, and in the long run, she even overrode her own team on things that House Democrats thought were important,” Kerttula recalls. Last summer, Palin’s strategy led to victory, when Alaska’s house and senate approved the TransCanada proposal.
Noting that Palin had also, in 2007, won a fight to raise taxes on the energy companies, the Anchorage Daily News reported that the pipeline deal “sealed the popular Republican governor’s second major victory in two years against not only her opponents in the Legislature but also major oil companies Palin sometimes has poked publicly.” Her approval rating soared.
RUFFLING A TON OF FEATHERS
Palin’s other top priority was an overhaul of the state’s ethics laws. It became something of a signature issue for her. In 2003, after she served as mayor of Wasilla and had run unsuccessfully for lieutenant governor, she was appointed to chair the state Oil and Gas Conservation Commission. While there, she became convinced that fellow commissioner Randy Ruedrich, the head of the Alaska Republican party, was conducting party business on the commission’s time. Palin filed an ethics complaint against Ruedrich, leading to a long and contentious investigation. In 2004, Ruedrich admitted guilt and agreed to pay a $12,000 fine, which was the largest such punishment ever in Alaska.
Palin’s actions associated her with ethics and reform in the minds of many Alaskans, and it paid off when she ran for governor. In addition to the Ruedrich matter, the state faced several other high-profile government-corruption cases, and it was not terribly unusual to find state lawmakers who had consulting contracts with companies that had business before the legislature. “As a candidate, she owned the ethics issue,” says John Bitney, who was Palin’s top adviser on ethics. “It was who she was. And it was pretty clear that there was a political groundswell to make changes.”
Once in office, Palin asked a prominent former legislator, Ethan Berkowitz, and a former U.S. attorney, Wev Shea, to write a position paper on ethics. The move did not endear her to Republicans in the legislature, because Berkowitz was a Democrat, and Shea was a vocal critic of Republicans (though a Republican himself). “She ruffled a ton of feathers,” says Paulette Simpson, a Palin ally who is president of the Alaska Federation of Republican Women. “That didn’t get her off on a good footing with Republicans.”
Her proposals included the electronic filing of campaign-finance reports, tougher conflict-of-interest laws, more restrictions on gifts from lobbyists, a more extensive ban on lobbying by just-departed officials, a ban on lobbying by spouses of legislators, and several other measures. Her plan was just one of several competing proposals in the legislature, and, according to Bitney, she showed a pragmatic desire to get the reforms done even if her bill was not the one that passed.
As it turned out, Palin’s bill did win approval, and the new ethics rules were signed into law, with bipartisan support, in July 2007. Democrats attributed some of her success to luck — “She came in at a time when basically the timing was right,” says Beth Kerttula — but the fact is the new, inexperienced governor had won another major victory.
KILLER SHRUBS AND ZAMBONI BLADES
There’s no doubt that energy and ethics have dominated Palin’s time as governor. But she has made her mark in other ways as well. One of her favorites — she has talked about it quite a bit since she began the race for vice president — is her decision, in May of this year, to veto $268 million in proposed spending, which she described as money for “things like dealing with killer shrubs and Zamboni blades that are not the state’s highest priority at the time.”
And then there was the time earlier this year when she fought to cut Alaska’s business-licensing fee from $100 to $50 a year. (It had risen from $25 to $100 during the Murkowski administration.) Frustrated by the legislature’s inaction, Palin went to Alaska’s department of commerce and got the e-mail addresses of 23,000 business owners in the state. She then sent them a message, saying the $100 fee “has caused a hardship for those who are helping grow our economy, especially people who operate home-based and part-time businesses.” Legislators were angry — some accused Palin of inappropriate lobbying — but she won the day, and the fee was cut.
Of course, there are lots of other issues that governors deal with — health care, social services, transportation, and others — and on some of them Palin has yet to make a significant mark. She is also facing a serious scandal, the so-called Troopergate affair, concerning her firing of public-safety commissioner Walt Monegan. The controversy stems from Palin’s allegedly pressuring Monegan to fire state trooper Mike Wooten, who had been involved in an ugly divorce from Palin’s sister and who had allegedly threatened members of Palin’s family. When Wooten wasn’t fired, Palin removed Monegan, which led to bipartisan calls for an investigation. (Palin told ABC news Monegan was dismissed for poor job performance.) The legislature began one over the summer, and a number of Palin’s allies and opponents say it would likely have been handled quickly and without any great controversy — until Palin was picked for the Republican ticket. Now it’s war, and Palin faces accusations of stonewalling.
Still, it’s fair to say that overall, Palin’s time in office, from her swearing-in until the moment John McCain picked her to be his running mate, has been a success. And from her handling of the issues she has tackled, it’s possible to see a pattern in the way she approaches governing.
First, she hires well. “There was a pretty good team of people assembled right away to come in and start with her big-picture principles and develop a process and legislation to carry that out,” says Joe Balash. “I would say that her management style is to give her staff, her cabinet, a pretty long leash, but with very high expectations — and she’s not afraid to tell you that you didn’t get it right.”
Second, she is involved with details on some big things, but not on everything. “When it comes to issues that she cares about, that she knows the public cares about, she’s got all kinds of time and prioritizes things in a big way,” says one insider who has worked with her and asked not to be named. “For the mundane tasks of government . . . say, regulations for the Kenai River, she instead looks for recommendations from her cabinet and the regulatory agencies, but she’s not going to get in and argue specific details.”
Third, she is dead set on fulfilling campaign promises. “There was this absolute expectation that if it was an issue that had been talked about during the campaign and there was a particular commitment that she had made, then we had to live up to it, no matter how difficult,” says Balash, “because her big thing was restoring the confidence of the public in state government.”
It should be noted that none of that makes Palin unerringly conservative. Yes, she calls herself a conservative, and she seems dedicated to reducing the size and cost of government when she can, but she’s also perfectly happy to raise taxes on a big, unpopular (oil) company, if that’s what voters want. Her conservatism comes with a substantial portion of populism.
Still, Palin’s record in office has quieted many of those who said she simply did not have the experience or ability to serve as governor. “She’s been in office for two years now and has been fairly successful,” says Gene Therriault, a Republican state senator and an ally of Palin’s, “which either belies the argument that she was not prepared or is an argument for the fact that she is a quick study.”
L.A. BRONCOS FAN
10-22-2008, 09:35 PM
Hilarious!
Do you really want to go down in Orange Mane history as the last Palin apologist standing?
L.A. BRONCOS FAN
10-22-2008, 09:37 PM
Commenting on a new joint interview with John McCain and Sarah Palin, NBC News Political Director Chuck Todd described the Republican ticket as lacking cohesion, chemistry, and (he hinted) trust. Todd, who was remarking on the interview conducted by NBC's Brian Williams (he was in the room), speculated that the candidates had come to the realization that "they are losing" the campaign, and guessed that McCain may have begun to hold his vice presidential choice responsible for his dwindling White House chances. (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/10/22/chuck-todd-on-mccain-pali_n_137014.html)
Needa Pass Rush
10-22-2008, 09:50 PM
Hilarious!
Do you really want to go down in Orange Mane history as the last Palin apologist standing?
Did you see an apology in there anywhere?
Paladin
10-22-2008, 09:59 PM
Nah. Just stupid....
TexanBob
10-22-2008, 09:59 PM
Journalism meets partisan bias?
At places like CNN, they are practically married. At the very least, they are fuchking like rabbits.
The media should just dress in short pleated skirts with fuzzy sweaters that have a bright "DNC" on the front and wave pon pons all day. They are as vapid and clueless as they are partisan. Only willful dupes fail to see it.
Bronco Bob
10-22-2008, 10:01 PM
Journalism meets partisan bias?
At places like CNN, they are practically married. At the very least, they are fuchking like rabbits.
The media should just dress in short pleated skirts with fuzzy sweaters that have a bright "DNC" on the front and wave pon pons all day. They are as vapid and clueless as they are partisan. Only willful dupes fail to see it.
And substitute DNC for RNC and you are describing Fox News.
Paladin
10-22-2008, 10:01 PM
Sort of like Faux news?
L.A. BRONCOS FAN
10-22-2008, 10:03 PM
Did you see an apology in there anywhere?
Um, your thread title? :wave:
L.A. BRONCOS FAN
10-22-2008, 10:08 PM
Journalism meets partisan bias?
At places like CNN, they are practically married. At the very least, they are fuchking like rabbits.
The media should just dress in short pleated skirts with fuzzy sweaters that have a bright "DNC" on the front and wave pon pons all day. They are as vapid and clueless as they are partisan. Only willful dupes fail to see it.
Ha ha ha! :laugh:
Don't you just love the way the republi-cons start screaming "liberal bias" whenever the media simply reports the truth or the facts about their corrupt, failed party?
If you listen to people like TexanBob, the GOP's downward spiral is all the "liberal" media's fault - it has absolutely nothing to do with the actions of republicans themselves.
Needa Pass Rush
10-22-2008, 10:10 PM
Um, wait...I'll make something up? :wave:
Ha!
L.A. BRONCOS FAN
10-22-2008, 10:15 PM
Um, wait...I'll make something up?
Riiiiiight - what was I thinking?
No one in his right mind would conclude you were a Palin apologist. :welcome:
OrangeDoofus
10-22-2008, 10:22 PM
I think it's more likely he was just too lazy to read the whole article once he found his "zinger" quote to ask Palin about. If you're trying to figure out whether someone is evil or just lazy, smart money is always on lazy.
I laughed at the part where the anchor asked Kasich the first question backwards and he corrected her, cause he knew what the talking point was supposed to be.
gunns
10-22-2008, 10:26 PM
Journalism meets partisan bias?
At places like CNN, they are practically married. At the very least, they are fuchking like rabbits.
The media should just dress in short pleated skirts with fuzzy sweaters that have a bright "DNC" on the front and wave pon pons all day. They are as vapid and clueless as they are partisan. Only willful dupes fail to see it.
Maybe most networks, media, can see the stupidity, and if the reports of what is going on hurts, maybe that's a clue to you. But this far into the whole thing maybe it's best for you to stick to Fox's clueless subjectivity.
Rigs11
10-22-2008, 10:58 PM
boo freaking hoo. Gawd you rightards are a bunch of whiners. The media is too hard on poor sarah..waaa..waaa. And you want to vote her in to be second in command?When she can't even handle the media?
Bronco Bob
10-22-2008, 11:01 PM
boo freaking hoo. Gawd you rightards are a bunch of whiners. The media is too hard on poor sarah..waaa..waaa. And you want to vote her in to be second in command?When she can't even handle the media?
Palin can't even handle Katie Couric and the right wingers think Palin
can stand up to a tough old bastard like Putin?
snowspot66
10-23-2008, 05:44 AM
Ex KGB meets Hockey Mom!
News at 11!
Rohirrim
10-23-2008, 05:47 AM
If you can't stand the heat, stay out of the kitchen.
L.A. BRONCOS FAN
10-23-2008, 05:51 AM
The Sarah Palin pick receiving brutal criticism -- from GOP-leaning papers that endorsed George W. Bush 10/23 (http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003876408)
enjolras
10-23-2008, 08:13 AM
Isn't CNN the station of Glen Beck?
Rohirrim
10-23-2008, 08:17 AM
I caught a little of the interview where McCain and Palin are sitting there talking to Brian Williams. McCain looks like he can't stand Palin. Talk about awkward. A couple of times he looked like he would reach over there and throttle her. Every time he looks at her, he has that look in his eye that says, "You cost me the presidency, bitch."
TailgateNut
10-23-2008, 09:06 AM
Journalism meets partisan bias. :thumbsup:
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Waaah, waaah, waaaah. Comedy central fodder, is all that one can find when looking at her resume', her history, and listening to her speak.
She a ****ing JOKE!
Thank you GOP for shoving her down McStains throat.
DenverBrit
10-23-2008, 09:12 AM
Palin was a cynical 'hail Mary' attempt that failed.
Surely no one really thinks she is qualified to be VP or President.
For those who do, you're sheep, following the 'party' line and over-taxing your last remaining brain cell.
Mr.Meanie
10-23-2008, 09:23 AM
Isn't CNN the station of Glen Beck?
and Nancy Grace?
Rohirrim
10-23-2008, 09:42 AM
I'm still surprised that McCain fired all the people who have been with him for years and hired all the Bush people who slimed him in 2000. They're the ones who saddled him with Palin. They're the ones who tried to change his packaging and then realized, too late, that it was a monumentally stupid thing to do. If McCain had just run as the person he was in 2000 and put Lieberman on the ticket, he would be much closer now. Where would the base go? To Obama? Instead of the "Choice/Life" argument, he could have emphasized the national security argument. The economic thing would have hurt him, but Palin is the friggin anchor on his campaign. No way out now.
Journalism meets partisan bias?
At places like CNN, they are practically married. At the very least, they are fuchking like rabbits.
The media should just dress in short pleated skirts with fuzzy sweaters that have a bright "DNC" on the front and wave pon pons all day. They are as vapid and clueless as they are partisan. Only willful dupes fail to see it.
You really think CNN is in the bag for Obama when they spent the first 3/4ths of this race ignoring the multiple gaffes and questionable ties of McCain while still talking about when McCain might bring up Rezko and Wright?
Or when they were complicit in the pulling of wool over the eyes of most viewers when the race "tightened up" thanks to the MSM wide switch from registered voter polls to likely voter polls, without giving a clear disclaimer? Likely voter models that grossly underestimate the youth and minority votes based on 20 year old elections, and ignore the huge jump in turnout among those groups in 2004, 2006, and in the 2008 primaries?
I guess they're just a bunch of cheerleaders huh?
Fact is, the MSM will lie and spin as much as they have to in order to keep this race close enough to maximize ratings and increase ad revenues. The only one that isn't a complete ratings whore is Fox News, sadly enough, because Rupert Murdock puts party before money, and both well before country.
Rohirrim
10-23-2008, 10:12 AM
You really think CNN is in the bag for Obama when they spent the first 3/4ths of this race ignoring the multiple gaffes and questionable ties of McCain while still talking about when McCain might bring up Rezko and Wright?
Or when they were complicit in the pulling of wool over the eyes of most viewers when the race "tightened up" thanks to the MSM wide switch from registered voter polls to likely voter polls, without giving a clear disclaimer? Likely voter models that grossly underestimate the youth and minority votes based on 20 year old elections, and ignore the huge jump in turnout among those groups in 2004, 2006, and in the 2008 primaries?
I guess they're just a bunch of cheerleaders huh?
Fact is, the MSM will lie and spin as much as they have to in order to keep this race close enough to maximize ratings and increase ad revenues. The only one that isn't a complete ratings whore is Fox News, sadly enough, because Rupert Murdock puts party before money, and both well before country.
Murdoch is an Aussie. I doubt he gives a damn about the USA.
Bronco Yoda
10-23-2008, 02:37 PM
I'm still surprised that McCain fired all the people who have been with him for years and hired all the Bush people who slimed him in 2000. They're the ones who saddled him with Palin. They're the ones who tried to change his packaging and then realized, too late, that it was a monumentally stupid thing to do. If McCain had just run as the person he was in 2000 and put Lieberman on the ticket, he would be much closer now. Where would the base go? To Obama? Instead of the "Choice/Life" argument, he could have emphasized the national security argument. The economic thing would have hurt him, but Palin is the friggin anchor on his campaign. No way out now.
I couldn't agree more. It was a huge mistake and sellout to play to the far rightwings when instead he should have been focusing on the middle and Independents in general. That's who would have won it for him. Energizing the base was so overrated.
This desperate attempt to lure the female vote backfired big time. The main demographic she 'energized' was the young mid western male pubescent crowd who isn't known for voting anyway.
I still can't believe that McCain went for the 'Hot-for-teacher' strategy as his best hope to win the White House.
