This blog will recount only facts, no opinions. It will provide links to Sarah Palin's activities on a daily basis, and the news reports on those activities. As the Presidential race heats up, the activies of all Presidential candidates will also be detailed here.

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Sarah Palin PAC amps up cash haul

Where in the world are all these donators getting their money? And why give to Sarah Palin who is not a politician, just a commentator?

From Politico: Sarah Palin PAC amps up cash haul
Sarah Palin’s political action committee picked up its fundraising pace, raising nearly $780,000 over the past three months, according to a report filed Friday evening with the Federal Election Commission.

The second-quarter report is an uptick in fundraising from the $388,000 Sarah Palin PAC raised during the first three months of 2012. Palin spent nearly $580,000 over the past three months, including cutting three checks to GOP candidates. Palin contributed $5,000 to tea party favorite Richard Mourdock before he ousted veteran Sen. Richard Lugar (R-Ind.) in the primary. Palin also contributed$5,000 a piece to Nebraska Senate candidate Deb Fischer and Texas Senate candidate Ted Cruz.

The former Republican vice presidential candidate had been a fundraising powerhouse, but has struggled to keep pace after she decided not to get into the 2012 presidential race. Palin has just over $1.1 million cash on hand, according to the report.

Much of the money Palin spent went to consultants, speech writers and direct mail. Palin’s PAC doled out more than $115,000 to consultants for fundraising and compliance, research, coalitions and logistics. She also spent big on direct mail and postage, spending more than $360,000.




 

Friday, July 13, 2012

Sarah Palin: Condoleezza Rice would be ‘wonderful’

Condoleeza Rice might me wonderful - but she has said she doesn't want the job. She's not a politician.

From Politico:  Sarah Palin: Condoleezza Rice would be ‘wonderful’
Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, the last GOP running mate, predicted former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice would make a “wonderful” vice president for Mitt Romney.
“I think that Condoleezza Rice would be a wonderful vice president, and she certainly has much more experience than our sitting president does today,” Palin said Thursday night on Fox News’s “On the Record with Greta Van Susteren.”

Palin was reacting to increased speculation Rice would be Romney’s vice presidential pick, driven by conservative commentators Matt Drudge and Rush Limbaugh, both of whom have touted Rice in recent days.

Palin, who opposes abortion rights, wasn’t concerned about Rice’s own views on abortion.
“I would certainly prefer a presidential and vice presidential candidate who had that respect for all innocent, precious purposeful human life and showed that respect via being a pro-life candidate,” she said. “We need to remember, though, that it’s not the vice president that would legislate abortion, and that would be Congress’s role. And we’ll keep that in mind.

For her part, Rice has said in the past she has zero interest in elective politics.


 

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

BELLEVILLE: Patriots in the Park event to feature guest speaker Sarah Palin

From the View:  BELLEVILLE: Patriots in the Park event to feature guest speaker Sarah Palin

Former vice president candidate and Alaskan Governor Sarah Palin will be making a stop in Belleville July 14 as a part of Patriots in the Park, hosted by Americans For Prosperity Michigan.

George Blichar, Americans For Prosperity Michigan communications associate, said the event is a kind of grassroots outreach program.

Patriots in the Park, which will be held at the Wayne County Fairgrounds, will feature several speakers in addition to Palin including Sen. Patrick Colbeck, Troy Mayor Janice Daniels and area Tea Party leaders.

Blichar said Palin was reached out to because of her values and notoriety.

"She is just a very prominent name, and people tend to respond to that," he said. "She's always been a great supporter of limited government and free market and freedom. We really appreciate the types of speeches she's given."

The Patriots in the Park event is meant to start a dialogue about current social, political and economic issues affecting the United States, Blichar said.

"It's just kind of grassroots outreach essentially," he said. "We like to out on events so people can come together and network. None of this really works if people aren't talking about it. It gets people riled up."

Americans For Prosperity is partnering with the Willow Run Tea Party Caucus to put on the event.

The website for the event describes it as featuring "great speakers and entertainment for the whole family as we meet friends to talk about many of the issues facing our nation. With socialized health care, high gas prices, record debt, high unemployment, and a host of other issues, we've really got our work cut out for us."

Americans For Prosperity, Blichar said, is a grassroots organization that focuses on free market and limited government. The Michigan chapter has 75,000 members, and is financed through member contributions.

Blichar said he hopes the event stirs conversation and action.

"I hope they come away with a better sense of just where we stand as a country and whether or not they want to get involved with something bigger than themselves," he said. "I just hope people have a great time, I hope they have great conversations."

Patriots in the Park will take place noon to 6 p.m. on July 14 at the Wayne County Fairgrounds in Belleville. Tickets are free, but those wishing to attend are asked to pre-register online.

 

Sarah Palin: Mitt Romney needs to set ‘hair on fire’

From Politico.com:  Sarah Palin: Mitt Romney needs to set ‘hair on fire’

Sarah Palin warned Tuesday that Mitt Romney must do more to energize conservatives before Election Day, saying the Republican presidential candidate should light the base’s “hair on fire.”

“Romney, he has said before that he doesn’t want to have to light his hair on fire. Well, there are a lot of his base supporters, independents who are saying, ‘Well, light our hair on fire, then! Remind us how important it is that we get engaged in this presidential election because it is the election of our lifetime,’” Palin told Sean Hannity of Fox News.

She was referring to Romney’s remarks in February that he’s not interested in saying “outrageous” and “accusatory” statements just for the sake of shoring up support. “You know I’m not willing to light my hair on fire to try and get support,” he had said.

But Palin insisted Tuesday that an electrified base would be key to a Romney victory in the fall.
“We saw in the 2010 electoral victory and we saw in the Wisconsin recall victory … that the base, the independents, the tea party patriots, need to be energized and get out to vote,” the former Alaska governor said. “Otherwise, the right is not going to be able to get in there, into the White House and reverse the course that Barack Obama has put us on, towards bankruptcy and insolvency.”

Known to accuse journalists of having a liberal slant, Palin also said media “manipulation” would continue to pose as an uphill battle for Romney.

“Four years ago, Sean, they chose their one and they did all that they could to usher him into the White House. We are going to see the same tactic this is go around,” she said. “The filter that the media has is something that a politician, a candidate, has to be extremely astute in — kind of decimating that filter and getting through it so that the public has the correct information.”

The ex-vice presidential candidate also weighed in on the GOP nominee’s options for a running mate, referring to Sens. Rob Portman and Marco Rubio and Rep. Paul Ryan as “all good choices.”

She suggested that Romney will want to play it safe by picking someone who is more of a “known commodity” than she was in 2008, “so that the media doesn’t do what the media did to me — making things up and kind of thrashing somebody’s reputation and record in order to distract from what the election really was supposed to be about.”




 

Monday, July 9, 2012

Study shows Palin treated differently by media to Biden as VP candidate in 2008

From Newstrack India:  Study shows Palin treated differently by media to Biden as VP candidate in 2008

Washington, July 8 (ANI): When it comes to assessing the 2008 vice presidential candidates, news coverage of Sarah Palin, then the Republican Governor of Alaska, not only significantly outweighed Joe Biden, then a U.S. senator from Delaware, but was also different in substance, according to a new study.

According to the study of media coverage of the vice presidential candidates, coverage of Palin included references to her family, physical appearance and social issues, particularly in newspapers and by political blogs, while coverage of Biden dealt more with foreign policy and the economy.

News coverage mentioning the candidates was gleaned from the New York Times, the Washington Post and USA Today; transcripts from the three major broadcast networks' evening broadcasts, as well as the equivalent periods on CNN and Fox News; and entries on nearly 400 political blogs.
The research showed that the vice presidential race in 2008 was in itself unique because of the attention it received.

In addition, the authors said, the race was especially novel because of Palin's selection as the first woman on a Republican presidential ticket.

The high level of interest in her candidacy was reflected in the volume of coverage that went her way.
The authors found that the average number of stories a day in overall coverage was 36 for Palin, compared with 14.9 for Biden.

On television, Palin was the subject of 8.8 stories a day compared with 4.6 for Biden; in newspapers, it was 15 compared with 8.2 stories a day, and on political blogs, 14.2 compared with 3.2 stories a day.

"Each of these differences could have had important influences on public opinion formation and the public's voting decisions in this particular race," the authors write.

"If future research finds similar differences in coverage in other races, the implications could significantly affect the election process, particularly for female candidates," they added. (ANI)

 

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Is Sarah Palin haunting Mitt Romney?

From the Capitol Column:  Is Sarah Palin haunting Mitt Romney?

The heightened attention on presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney’s vice presidential running mate selection begs the question of whether or not Mr. Romney’s campaign team and the Republican party in general is still haunted by the 2008 selection of former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin as then presidential nominee John McCain’s vice presidential candidate.

Many Republicans still blame the selection of Mrs. Palin as the primary reason why they lost the 2008 election to President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden. Originally, when Mrs. Palin was selected it was seen as a  game changer for Mr. McCain, as voters were intrigued by the first Republican woman nominated for the vice presidency, however she quickly became a burden for Mr. McCain after it was evident in interviews and speeches that she simply was not prepared to be vice president and ultimately president if something happened to Mr. McCain.

Now, in 2012 Mr. Romney faces a similar situation that Mr. McCain faced, as he is a well-rehearsed moderate Republican and rather bland candidate going up against the nation’s first black president who is still very well-liked among American voters despite the poor state of the U.S. economy.

Therefore, if Mr. Romney were to select a female or a minority VP running mate, it will likely be seen as a repeat or even a gimmick by American voters and maybe even some fellow Republicans who are still haunted themselves by the lackluster performance of Mrs. Palin in 2008.

“It’s very difficult, just one election cycle out, not to compare a female candidate to Sarah Palin,” said Jennifer L. Lawless, a political science professor at American University in an interview with MSN Money.  “So even if you were to identify somebody who was incredibly well credentialed, the likelihood of both voters and the media assessing that woman relative to Sarah Palin would be a liability for Romney.”

Earlier this week during an interview with CBS, Mr. Romney’s wife Ann said that she likes the option of selecting a female vice presidential running mate but that whoever does get selected needs to have the credentials and “someone that obviously can do the job but will be able to carry through with some of the other responsibilities.”

Some possible female Republicans that could be better selections than was Mrs. Palin in 2008 are former Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice, an African-American female who served during the Bush administration and has plenty of foreign policy experience and New Mexico Governor Susana Martinez who is the nation’s first female Hispanic governor and would likely give Mr. Romney a boost in support among Hispanic voters who currently overwhelmingly support his opponent.

Mr. Romney and his campaign team have specifically stated whether they are considering a female candidate, but it will be interesting to see who they do select and whether they choose another female candidate that evokes memories of Mrs. Palin from 2008.


 

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Mitt Romney vice presidential contender Kelly Ayotte may resemble Sarah Palin, but the New Hampshire senator has earned a serious reputation

From NY Daily News:  Mitt Romney vice presidential contender Kelly Ayotte may resemble Sarah Palin, but the New Hampshire senator has earned a serious reputation 

When Mitt Romney marched in a small town Fourth of July parade on Wednesday, many eyes turned from the tanned candidate to the less familiar woman at his side: vice presidential contender Kelly Ayotte.
The pretty 44-year-old brunette may resemble Sarah Palin, but the New Hampshire senator has earned a serious reputation as a former prosecutor and member of the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Dressed casually in a sleeveless button-down shirt and khaki shorts, Ayotte stopped with Romney for lemonade along the parade route and helped him work the crowd at the Wolfeboro, N.H., celebration.
AYOTTE 1

Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call via AP

Sen. Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H., leaves a Senate Republicans' policy lunch in November.

The veepstakes speculation has largely focused on men, including Sens. Rob Portman of Ohio and Marco Rubio of Florida, but Romney’s decision to have Ayotte by his side on the Fourth of July raises speculation that she’s rising higher on his short list.
Romney was spotted meeting with the head of his VP search, Beth Myers, and other top aides at his N.H. lakefront compound Tuesday.
AYOTTE 3

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Freshman Sen. Kelly Ayotte delivers remarks during a news conference in January.

Ayotte would check several of the boxes considered most desirable in a running mate.
She has broadened her national-security resume on the Armed Services Committee and is married to an Iraq war veteran.
AYOTTE 4

Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call via AP

Sens. Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H., and John Hoeven, R-N.D., talk before a news conference.

And the mother of two young kids could help Romney with women.
The freshman senator’s chief drawback are fears that she would be compared to Palin.
AYOTTE 5

TED ALJIBE/AFP/Getty Images

Sen. John McCain speaks while fellow senators Joseph Lieberman, Sheldon Whitehouse and Kelly Ayotte listen during a press conference in January.

An “informal Romney adviser” was quoted by MSNBC as saying that Palin may have “poisoned the well” for all potential female running mates this year.
AYOTTE 2

Charles Dharapak/AP

Mitt Romney stands on the bed of a pickup truck with wife Ann Romney and Sen. Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H., on Wednesday.

Romney also made news along the parade route Wednesday when he directly contradicted a top senior aide by declaring the individual mandate in President Obama’s health care law to be a tax rather than a penalty.
The move aligns himself with Republicans who want to label health reform as a tax hike, but opens him up to criticism over the similar mandate he supported in Massachusetts

 

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Sarah Palin Takes Down Bob Beckel on Obamacare Death Panels

From LifeNews:  Sarah Palin Takes Down Bob Beckel on Obamacare Death Panels

A video making the rounds of the Internet this morning shows former vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin taking on Democratic strategist Bob Beckel on the issue of “death panels” in Obamacare following the Supreme Court’s decision to uphold it.


The law drew strong opposition from the pro-life community not only over abortion but because the legislation also promotes rationing of medical care that could lead to involuntarily denying lifesaving treatment.

Under the enacted law, federal tax-based subsidies will begin in 2014 to subsidize millions of private insurance plans that will cover abortion-on-demand, including some plans (“multi-state plans”) that will be administered by the federal government. Under another provision of the law, the federal government could even order many plans that do not receive federal subsidies to cover abortion as a “preventive” service.  The law also created an array of other mechanisms and funding pipelines by which access to and subsidies for abortion can be expanded if President Obama wins a second term.

Moreover, few Americans realize that under ObamaCare, private citizens’ right to spend their own money to save the lives of their own families will be subject to drastic restriction. And the INdependent Payment Advisory Board has prompted concerns that Americans will have their treatment options limited.

Three years ago Sarah Palin made waves with charges that the Obamacare health care bill would lead to “death panels” that would mea rationing medical treatment and lifesaving medical care for patients.
In August 2009, Palin posted a well-received note on Facebook saying she worries the health care bill will be paid for on the backs of the elderly and disabled, who could be pushed into euthanasia and assisted suicide via rationing of medical treatment.

“And who will suffer the most when they ration care? The sick, the elderly, and the disabled, of course,” she said.

“The America I know and love is not one in which my parents or my baby with Down Syndrome will have to stand in front of Obama’s ‘death panel’ so his bureaucrats can decide, based on a subjective judgment of their ‘level of productivity in society’ whether they are worthy of health care,” Palin said then. “Such a system is downright evil.”

The Obama administration, joined by liberal groups and Internet activists, attacked Palin for the comments and claimed the bill did not contain such concerns.

Before the Supreme Court’s Obamacare ruling, the former Alaska governor and vice-presidential nominee came back with another scathing rebuke of the “death panels.”



 

Sarah Palin believes SCOTUS ruling will incite the country to action

From Newsroom Jersey:  Sarah Palin believes SCOTUS ruling will incite the country to action

COMMENTARY
On her facebook Thursday, a post by Sarah Palin began, "Thank you SCOTUS." At first I thought that it meant that the former governor turned entertainment personality (or Bizarro Ronald Reagen) had misread the decision laid down by the Supreme Court, which upheld the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010. I was surprised. Read the next sentence, though, and you'll see that it was just Palin being Palin.
"This Obamacare ruling," she wrote, "fires up the troops as America’s eyes are opened! Thank God."
She really does have that military sense of optimism. Even a defeat, however crushing, is just an opportunity to strike back harder. Fire up the troops! indeed and march them straight up Capitol Hill right through the legislature and bash down the doors to the justices' chambers and tell those stuffy old bastards what's what! The highest court in the land is no match for the fury a free people.

Of course, its just a metaphor, but it's so striking to see such passionate good vx evil hostility toward authority from the right.

Palin goes on to slam the reform law as nothing more than a huge tax on all Americans.

"Obama promised the American people this wasn’t a tax and that he’d never raise taxes on anyone making less than $250,000. We now see that this is the largest tax increase in history. It will slam every business owner and every one of the 50% of Americans who currently pay their taxes ... SCOTUS now rules this is a tax? Well, Congress has the ability to create taxes – and also has the ability to rescind them ... This is the most brazen and sweeping new tax and government overreach imposed on us. We the People did not ask for this tax, we do not want this tax, and we can’t afford this tax."

Tax, tax, tax, tax, tax. The tax in the law is a penalty on those who can afford and choose not to buy health insurance. When those people get sick or injured, it will increase the premiums of the people who bought insurance.

The SCOTUS case was not about whether or not the legislature can raise taxes; that was the War of Independence. The case was to decide whether the legislature could force people to buy health insurance. They have ruled that it can.

Of course, none of this matters to Sarah Palin. Though she was once a politician, Palin quit that job once she became famous because she believed she could better serve her country on Facebook and FOX News. Now instead of offering constructive solutions, all Palin has to do is "fire up the troops" and continue to fight the good fight.

"We will not retreat on this," she writes. "A newly elected legislative branch is key to defending our Republic and fundamentally restoring all that is good in America."
What exactly is this "good" to Sarah Palin? She'll say "freedom." I think it's fame, attention, and her "troops."

 

Monday, July 2, 2012

Bristol Palin's Lifetime show banished to late slot after failing to attract viewers

I wasn't interested in Bristol Palin's life to begin with...but Dance Moms? Women pressuring their little girls to dress like adult sluts?

From Daily Mail:  Bristol Palin's Lifetime show banished to late slot after failing to attract viewers 

Bristol Palin's five minutes of fame appeared to be up after her much-hyped reality show was dropped from its prime-time slot and replaced with re-runs.

The first four episodes of Bristol Palin: Life's A Tripp, featuring the daughter of former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, attracted less than 750,000 viewers.

Executives at the Lifetime channel pulled the reality series from its 10pm slot on Tuesdays and banished it to 11pm.


The show was expected to perform better since it aired after the hugely popular series Dance Moms.

The decision means the reality show will almost certainly not be picked up for a second series - and spells the end of Bristol's TV career.

The show featured 22-year-old Bristol and her three-year-old son, Tripp and centered on their new life in a Los Angeles mansion after moving from the family home in Alaska.

But viewers were not taken by the series with critics saying Palin simply sat by her swimming pool moaning about the problems of being a single mother.

The show was mired in controversy when Palin's Dancing With The Stars co-star Kyle Massey and his brother Chris filed a lawsuit against producers, claiming that they came up with the show's premise and were slated to star opposite Palin.
Palin is also being sued for defamation by a man who got into a spat with her at a bar after insulting her mother.
Stephen Hanks filed a lawsuit claiming he did not sign a release form agreeing to appear on television.
Alternative schedule: Palin's failed show will be replaced by Dance Moms


Bristol became a household name when she was 18 years old and gave birth to Tripp out of wedlock.

Her pregnancy came as her mother Sarah stood as the Republican vice presidential candidate in 2008.

She went on to appear on Dancing With The Stars and the reality series called Sarah Palin's Alaska.



 

Sunday, July 1, 2012

On facts, lies and Sarah Palin

From Chicago Tribune, an op ed :  On facts, lies and Sarah Palin

"The America I know and love is not one in which my parents or my baby with Down syndrome will have to stand in front of Obama's 'death panel' so his bureaucrats can decide, based on a subjective judgment of their 'level of productivity in society,' whether they are worthy of health care."
Sarah Palin, Aug. 7, 2009
The death panels are back.
  • Leonard Pitts
  • Leonard Pitts
Sarah Palin's vision of a dystopian society in which the elderly and infirm would be required to justify their continued existence before a jury of federal functionaries has been widely ridiculed since she first posted it on Facebook three years ago. It was designated "Lie of the Year" by Politifact, the nonpartisan fact-checking website, something that would have mortified and humiliated anyone who was capable of those feelings.
Last week, Palin doubled down. "Though I was called a liar for calling it like it is," she posted, "many of these accusers finally saw that Obamacare did in fact create a panel of faceless bureaucrats who have the power to make life-and-death decisions about health care funding." Note that that's not actually the claim she made in 2009. Of course, Obamacare, aka the Affordable Care Act, was upheld by theU.S. Supreme Court on Thursday, which must gratify Team Obama.

But we are not here to discuss that. Neither are we here to litigate Palin's claim about "death panels." That you could fertilize the Great Lawn of Central Park with that lie has been well established. No, we are only here to ask whether that matters, given the increasingly obvious impotence of fact.

Not long ago, if you told a whopper like Palin's and it was as thoroughly debunked as hers was, that would have ended the discussion. These days, it is barely even part of the discussion. These days, facts seem overmatched by falsehood, too slow to catch them, too weak to stop them.

Indeed, falsehoods are harder to kill than a Hollywood zombie. Run them through with fact, and still they shamble forward, fueled by echo chamber media, ideological tribalism, cognitive dissonance, a certain imperviousness to shame, and an understanding that a lie repeated long enough, loudly enough, becomes, in the minds of those who need to believe it, truth.

That is the lesson of the birthers and truthers, of Sen. Jon Kyl's "not intended to be a factual statement" about Planned Parenthood, of Glenn Beck's claim that conservatives founded the Civil Rights Movement, and of pretty much every word Michele Bachmann says. It seems that not only are facts no longer important, but they are not even the point.

Rather, the point is the construction and maintenance of an alternate narrative designed to enhance and exploit the receiver's fears, his or her sense of prerogatives, entitlement, propriety and morality under siege from outside forces.

This is the state of American political discourse, particularly on the political right, where a sense of dislocation, disaffection and general been-done-wrongness has become sine qua non, coin of the realm, lingua franca of the true believers — and of their true belief in the desperate need to turn back the unrighteous Other and his unwelcome change.

To score Palin for being unfactual, then, is to bring boxing gloves to a knife fight. The death panels are not about fact. They are about fear and the shameless manipulation thereof for political gain.

The result of which is that Americans increasingly occupy two realities, one based on the conviction that facts matter, the other on the notion that facts are only what you need them to be in a given moment. That ought to give all of us pause because it leads somewhere we should not want to go. When two realities divide one people, the outcome seems obvious.

They cannot remain one people.