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by TheGalvestonSurge from Chincoteague, VA

Last Post 19 days, 13 hours Ago


McCain taps Sarah Palin to be first ever female Republican VP nominee

 

DAYTON, Ohio –  John McCain will introduce Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin to be his vice presidential running mate at an event here at noon Friday, senior campaign sources confirmed to FOX News.

Palin emerged earlier in the day as the hot name in the VP sweepstakes after reports circulated that two short-listers — Mitt Romney and Tim Pawlenty — were out of the running.

Adding fuel to the Palin candidacy was a report that a charter aircraft from Anchorage owned by a McCain supporter had arrived at a small airport outside Dayton, Ohio, where McCain has scheduled a noon ET rally to announce his choice.

FOX News reported the jet flew to Flagstaff, Ariz., on Thursday before heading landing in Middletown, Ohio.

Palin is considered a rising star in the Republican Party. She is the state’s first female governor, the mother of five — and at 44 is its youngest chief executive.

FOX News confirmed Thursday that McCain had made his selection and would appear with his pick at the Dayton rally.

Born in Idaho, Palin moved to Alaska with her parents, to Charles and Sally Heath, when she was 3 months old.

She grew up in Wasilla, just outside of Anchorage, and played on the Wasilla state championship girls’ basketball team. She was crowned Miss Wasilla in 1984 and was a runner-up in the Miss Alaska pageant.

Palin studied journalism and political science at the University of Idaho and graduated in 1987. She eloped with her high school boyfriend,  Todd Palin, in 1988 to save money on an expensive wedding. She helped out in her husband’s family commercial fishing business and appeared occasionally as a television sportscaster.

Palin won a seat on the Wasilla City Council in 1992 as a new face and a new voice, and by opposing tax increases. Four years later she was elected mayor at 32 by knocking off a three-term incumbent. At the end of her second term, party leaders encouraged her to enter the 2002 race for the Republican nomination for lieutenant governor. Against veteran legislators with far more experience, Palin finished second by fewer than 2,000 votes, making a name for herself in statewide politics. She was elected Alaska’s youngest and first woman governor in 2006.

Sarah and Todd Palin have five children: boys Track, 19, and Trig, 4 months, and daughters Bristol, 17, Willow, 13, and Piper, 7. Track Palin joined the Army last September and will deploy to Iraq on Sept. 11. Palin gave birth to Trig, who has Down syndrome, in April and returned to work three days later.

Palin will be the second female vice presidential candidate from a major political party. The first was New York Rep. Geraldine Ferrarro, who was Walter Mondale’s Democratic running mate in 1984

 

 

WOW!  What a great pick.  Palin will tap into the Clinton backers that have been spoken about so much but more importantly she'll also simply attract moderate females.  Her record is short but impressive as she has carried a near 90% approval rating as Alaska's Governor.  Anyone wondering about how McCain could possibly steal Obama's post speech thunder can wonder no more.

"On April 18, 2008, Palin gave birth to her second son, Trig Paxson Van Palin, who has Down syndrome.[8] She returned to the office three days after giving birth.[9] Palin refused to let the results of prenatal genetic testing change her decision to have the baby. "I'm looking at him right now, and I see perfection," Palin said. "Yeah, he has an extra chromosome. I keep thinking, in our world, what is normal and what is perfect?"[9]"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarah_Palin

 

 

18 Comments |  Add a Comment

Member Comments Total Comments: 18
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ibejim read my blog view my photos
Aug 29, 2008 | 12:39 PM

Seems like a good choice to me. I still think that there some moderate Democrats (yeah, there a still a few left) who aren't sure just what they are going to get from Obama. I agree, she could help swing them.

She, like McCain, has a history of crossing party lines in the name of compromise.

snobunny read my blog view my photos
Aug 29, 2008 | 1:04 PM

Palin gave a great acceptance speech. I think she is a fabulous choice.

Did I really hear Oblahblah correctly... did he criticize her lack of experience??? By doing so, doesn't that shine an even greater light on his own lack of experience?

ibejim read my blog view my photos
Aug 29, 2008 | 1:20 PM

Bunny, you are way to logical, lol.

In a good way, of course. :)

snobunny read my blog view my photos
Aug 29, 2008 | 1:36 PM

I was more than a bit 'burnt out' with this election and it's players, but I am now eagerly awaiting the debate between Palin and Biden.

Pop me some popcorn, it's gonna be a good show.

stylegal read my blog view my photos
Aug 29, 2008 | 1:41 PM

I listened to her acceptance speech and she is very articulate (funny Biden said that about Obama - "He's articulate and clean")
I also like that out of all four running, (McCain, Obama, Biden and Palin) she is the only one with executive experience in running the State of Alaska

Both McCain and Palin have class. First off, McCain waited and did not have an attacked ad last night on Obama (and there is plenty he could have said about that "Rock Star" set up), but he warmly congratulated him.
And today when Sarah Palan was making her speech, she paid homage to first Geraldine Ferraro and her VP candidacy, and to Hillary Clinton and her run in the primary. She also had noted on Hillary's supporters and their "18 million cracks" in the glass ceiling and said we can now shatter that ceiling.

Kudos to both McCain and Palin

snobunny read my blog view my photos
Aug 29, 2008 | 1:50 PM

It just dawned on me who Palin reminds me of... Tina Fey. LOL Mind you, this is only a physical resemblance, and not a bad one... both women are very attractice.

TheGalvestonSurge read my blog view my photos
Aug 29, 2008 | 2:47 PM

The Tina Faye comparison struck me as well but Tina is a major lefty. Sarah was the runner up for Miss Alaska years ago so she should do well with the 18-30 male group as well :)

One thing I will say regarding the 'experience issue' that the Democrats predictably brought up. Palin has made more trips to Iraq over the past 5 years than Obama. She also deals with Russia regularly on Alaskan/Russian fishing issues so she is quite accustomed to dealing with a country that will unquestionably be a major concern over the next few years.
She attracts the base roots of the Republican party while also appealing to the notorious soccer mom votes that won Bush his last presidency.

One thing I love about her is that unlike Hillary, Sarah doesn't speak with that typical Politician monotone cadence. She sounds natural and that translates to sincerity for most listeners.
She also has a reputation as being tough as nails which Biden may find out the hard way.
I honestly love this pick.

One other thing. She was the Ethics Commissioner of the Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission which means she has more insight to energy issues than all three candidates.
Again, great choice. A bit of a risk, but well worth it in my mind.

movealready read my blog
Aug 29, 2008 | 3:23 PM

heck she does well with the 40-45 men group, and probably more tha a few women in the same age bracket.

crlewis77 read my blog view my photos
Sep 2, 2008 | 2:25 AM

LOL Palin???... You guys are quite quiet about your Experience Issue... LOL I wish you all well.....The proof is in the Puddin... Great Job....

crlewis77 read my blog view my photos
Sep 2, 2008 | 2:30 AM

ST. PAUL, Minn. - John McCain's running mate, Sarah Palin, said Monday her 17-year-old unmarried daughter was five months pregnant, the latest in a string of disclosures that left the McCain campaign defending the thoroughness of its background check of the little-known Alaska governor.



It was also revealed Monday that an attorney had been hired to represent Palin in a state ethics probe The man who led McCain's vice presidential search team said he thought everything that came up as a possible red flag during the background check had now been made public.

"I think so," Arthur B. Culvahouse Jr. told The Associated Press. "Yes. I think so. Correct."

snobunny read my blog view my photos
Sep 2, 2008 | 7:50 AM

OK... let me ask this, which is more important, a presidential candidate with less experience or a VICE presidential candidate with less experience? Thats kind of a no-brainer, isn't it?

What is laughable is that the democrats, who have been trying to get the country to ignore a lack of experience in its presidential candidate are now shining a light on the republicans vice presidential canidate and her 'lack of experience'. Which is it, demys... are we going to argue experience acrossed the board or ignore it altogether?

TheGalvestonSurge read my blog view my photos
Sep 2, 2008 | 9:41 AM

"LOL Palin???... You guys are quite quiet about your Experience Issue... LOL I wish you all well.....The proof is in the Puddin... Great Job"

Really? So you feel that Obama, who has never run anything in his life, and has a whopping 140 total working days in the Senate, has more 'experience' than Palin?
Which would you rather have, the teacher leading the apprentice or the apprentice stumbling in front of the teacher?
Senator McCain was aware of both, Mrs Palins daughter and the issue with the Alaskan state trooper. Keep digging. These things pale in comparison to William Ayres & Antoin "Tony" Rezko.

I think in the end, it's killing a lot of Dems that the racist card has dissipated since the sexist card is now available.

ibejim read my blog view my photos
Sep 2, 2008 | 10:24 AM

140 working days in the senate and 130 'present' votes. What has Obama ever done besides co-sign a few bills? At least a Governor has to make executive decisions, and is responsible for the welfare of a state. The most important 'energy' state in the union, I might add.

I agree with Geraldine Ferraro...."What she has to learn, she will learn quickly". Can we say the same for Obama, after all the flip flopping and broken promises?

Surge, If the dems are going to bring children into the fray, then, by all means, bring up Obama's association with Ayres and Rezko.

Judging by what I have read on these political blogs this morning, the lib's are REALLY reaching now. Feeling a little heat, I guess?

TheGalvestonSurge read my blog view my photos
Sep 2, 2008 | 10:53 AM

I think it's definitely desperation Jim. The speech that was supposed to move millions ended up being a 12 hour news story that got burried with a surprise pick. That speech was supposed to be their battle cry, 38 million watched, but by 9pm the next evening, they were only talking about Palin.
The whole campaign for Obama is predicated on convincing voters he is all about 'change'. Now it's he and 35 year vet Joe Biden, two guys that notoriously vote the party line, against McCain and Palin, two people with a reputation for being mavericks.

dprin339 read my blog view my photos
Sep 2, 2008 | 12:03 PM

hi guys, it's been awhile huh?

btw, that crlewis77 person showed up in cleveland awhile back. definitely NOT a proponent of free speech & political discourse. if you comment on one of his pages, you get deleted if you aren't just another obamatron...........just a heads up

i also believe Palin was a good choice. and that desperation you are smelling? it smells to high heaven in cleveland. LOL

the biggest problem for her will be the same one Cindy McCain has..........she's smart, beautiful, wealthy, moral & WHITE. it's that simple, it's jealousy.

TheGalvestonSurge read my blog view my photos
Sep 2, 2008 | 12:18 PM

Hello Dprin. I have my suspicions that crlewis77 is an 'alternate user'. In other words you may have read his posts under a different name in the past. We seem to get a lot of those. I have commented on his blog and noticed that I had a terrible time getting the post to even show up. I've yet to see him offer anything specific to any argument other than accusing folks of racism and referring to Obama as already elected.

snobunny read my blog view my photos
Sep 2, 2008 | 1:04 PM

I have been catching myself up with these political blogs and many Obama supporters speak of a 'new America'... where is this place? Has a new country been discovered, or are they referring to this America? From my vantage point this America is pretty good just the way she is... who needs a new one?

TheGalvestonSurge read my blog view my photos
Sep 2, 2008 | 1:18 PM

"Change" is an easy manipulative word that the Democrats have discovered over the last few years. It's like a cheap advertisement. What people need to really do is look at the issues and determine if what they are being offered is really change. The bigger question is, "is change always good?".
Obama's voting record is very telling. He's not offering change in the sense that people are expecting. It's not a new type of Washington he offers. It's simply the OTHER type of Washington. No senator voted his party line more than Obama (hence the most liberal senator in US name).

I'm not rich, not even close but I am educated enough to recognize that Obama's proposed 'change' will be devestating to anyone who invests in their own future. His capital gains and dividend taxes will kill people who have invested in stocks therefore robbing common citizens of their nestegg. His proposed windfall taxes on big oil will force them to cut into dividend checks (that will be taxed higher) which go to the tens of millions of investors in this country all the while forcing big companies to hire less. He claims such money will go to government programs. That may be 'change', but it's not good change, that's redistribution of wealth...aka Marxism.

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