Rather than Vetting Palin, McCain Will Orchestrate a Cover-Up of Her Abuse of Power

"I make [decisions] as quickly as I can, quicker than the other fellow, if I can. Often my haste is a mistake, but I live with the consequences without complaint." — John McCain

It’s bad enough that a presidential ticket claiming to run on reform is now orchestrating a cover-up of an apparent abuse of power. What’s really stunning is that they’re conducting this cover-up in lieu of actually vetting Sarah Palin.

The Cover-Up

As you’ve no doubt seen, Isikoff and Hosenball report that the McCain campaign is attempting to turn the bipartisan investigation into TrooperGate into a whitewash.

Key Alaska allies of John McCain are trying to derail a politically charged investigation into Gov. Sarah Palin’s firing of her public safety commissioner in order to prevent a so-called "October surprise" that would produce embarrassing information about the vice presidential candidate on the eve of the election.

In a move endorsed by the McCain campaign Friday, John Coghill, the GOP chairman of the state House Rules Committee, wrote a letter seeking a meeting of Alaska’s bipartisan Legislative Council in order to remove the Democratic state senator in charge of the so-called "troopergate" investigation.

[snip]

Coghill, who told NEWSWEEK that he has the backing of Republican Speaker of the House John Harris in his effort to remove French, suggested Friday that the investigation into Palin’s firing of Monegan should be shut down entirely. "If this has been botched up the way it has, there’s a question as to whether it should continue," Coghill told NEWSWEEK. 

[snip]

Coghill told NEWSWEEK that he decided to write his letter to strip French of his position on his own-without any coaxing by McCain campaign officials.

But a top McCain campaign official acknowledged that the GOP lawyer had given the campaign a "heads up" about his letter and that the McCain campaign approved of the effort to remove French.

"An investigation that was supposed to be non-partisan has become a political circus and has gotten out of control," said Taylor Griffin, a top communications aide dispatched from McCain campaign headquarters to Alaska this week to monitor the investigation and related matters.

And, as I pointed out the other day, since Palin got named the VP candidate, seven people have not so mysteriously changed their minds about cooperating with the investigation; there will be a vote among the Republican-dominated committee conducting the investigation on Tuesday to decide whether or not to subpoena these seven witnesses.

So Palin is chosen–with the McCain team at least sort of knowing about Palin’s potential abuse of power problem in TrooperGate–and all of a sudden the investigation into that potential abuse of power faces all sorts of new hurdles and, with the Republican majority involved, potentially its shuttering. This is, undoubtedly, another reason they’ve sent Palin to hole up in Alaska, to try to influence the outcome of this proceeding. (I’m trying to figure out whether those she’s trying to influence are from the same VECO/Stevens wing of the uber-corrupt Alaska Republican Party that she claims to have such independence from.) And the people who are obstructing this investigation are all up-front: they’re altering the course of the investigation because Palin is now a candidate to be VP.

What They’re Hiding

Before the fate of the national Republican Party depended on it, Governor Palin had happily agreed to cooperate with the probe and insisted she had never asked Walt Monegan, the guy she eventually fired, into firing her ex-brother-in-law Mike Wooten.

To tell you that, truth is, that no pressure was ever put on anybody to fire anybody. 

[snip]

We never had a conversation on whether trooper Wooten should be a trooper or not.

That was before several things happened. First, in mid-August a tape of a conversation between Palin aide Frank Bailey and Monegan came out–it revealed Bailey did pressure Monegan to fire Wooten. And then, a few weeks after that, Palin got picked as John McCain’s running mate. Shortly thereafter, Walt Monegan showed the WaPo emails written from Governor Palin’s personal Yaho account complaining about Wooten.  

"This trooper is still out on the street, in fact he’s been promoted," said a Feb. 7, 2007, e-mail sent from Palin’s personal Yahoo account and written to give Monegan permission to speak on a violent-crime bill before the state legislature.

"It was a joke, the whole year long ‘investigation’ of him," the e-mail said. "This is the same trooper who’s out there today telling people the new administration is going to destroy the trooper organization, and that he’d ‘never work for that b****’, Palin’.)"

It’s not clear whether the investigation will conclude that Sarah Palin had a direct role in pressuring Monegan before she fired him. But two things are clear. First, she lied about hers–and her husband’s–non-involvement in pressuring Monegan. And, just as troubling, Todd Palin was intimately involved, both in direct conversations with Monegan and getting cc’ed on emails discussing the issue. (The WaPo reports that Todd regularly gets cc’ed on his wife’s emails and sits in on state meetings.)

In fact, in response to a complaint filed by Wooten’s union charging the Governor improperly circulated the contents of Wooten’s personnel file, Palin pointed to her husband’s involvement as a purportedly legitimate alternative source of the information on Wooten–an explanation refuted by another taped phone conversation.

The McCain/Palin campaign, in a response to NBC News, provided a family twist to the story, saying the governor’s husband – Todd Palin – was the source of that information to Bailey. They say the information came from divorce proceedings, and that Gov. Palin never improperly accessed any records.

But whether or not the inquiry will find that Palin abused their power, there is ample evidence that people were pressuring Monegan–on her orders–to fire Wooten. And that her husband was deeply involved in this and other personnel issues for the state.

And much of this evidence was available before McCain picked Palin as his running-mate.

Perhaps the McCain camp wasn’t aware of how much damning evidence there was against Palin, but on this issue (unlike, say, her fondness for earmarks), it appears that they knew the outlines and didn’t care. Rather than let clear evidence of a Rovian abuse of power disqualify Palin, the McCain campaign picked her anyway and instead implemented a cover-up.

Lies and Cover-Up as Governing Strategy

And so, Palin’s selection followed by the cover-up says more than just that McCain will make rash, dangerous decisions because he hasn’t done his homework. It also suggests how he would "live with the consequences" of those ill-thought out decisions if he were President. He’d lie and obstruct his way out of them.

I guess that shouldn’t be a surprise. That’s not much different than the way the Administration has covered for its poor decision to invade Iraq, to make up stories about ties between Iraq and Al Qaeda, to sponsor whitewash investigations about the intelligence leading to Iraq, to even impede the investigations into the corrupt execution of the Iraq war. And it’s similar to the way McCain got out of his own biggest ethical morasse in the Keating scandal–to PR his way out of his own failures.

But the Iraq parallel demonstrates the problem with such a governing strategy: no matter how you try to spin it, such ill thought out decisions can results in thousands of deaths, not to mention the financial bankrupting of the country.

McCain’s campaign has just exacerbated their failure to vet, it seems, by embracing a strategy of lies and cover-up.

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  1. MarieRoget says:

    Somebody on the Dem campaign side, a lot of somebodies actually, need to immediately start shouting “COVERUP!” on this, or it will successfully be buried by the thousand busy shovels of the John Bush/Sarah Palin final push.

    • Arbusto says:

      Further, the DNC and Obama camp should take a page from the Bushco/Rove play book and send agents provocateurs to Alaska to push for an unbiased committee. They won’t though; the pussies!

  2. wavpeac says:

    Coercion and threats
    name calling
    minimiize, deny and blame
    treating people as objects-Male Privilege (using children, women and minorities)
    King of the castle (this is my country, I am the boss, I can do what i want-I make the rules…cause I am the ruler)
    Using finances (taking your money, hiding the money, lying about the money to keep you under control).

    These are the peices of the pie on the power wheel. This is part of the Duluth model in domestic violence. THis is the behavior of a batterer outside of the violence, it correlates with violence because the violence is the period at the end of the sentence. This is the “how”.

    Does it sound familiar to you. The only solution is accountability. That’s it. YOu cannot fight a batterer and win. If you haven’t tried, give it a shot. The denial is strong. They cannot and will not see this pattern. The only solution is consequences for the behavior.

    http://www.batteredmen.com/pcwheel.htm

    • libbyliberal says:

      Power and control addiction! Establishes traumatic bonding. Stockholm syndrome. Fight, flight, freeze in others. Will explore your link. Thanks.

  3. jdmckay says:

    Perhaps the McCain camp wasn’t aware of how much damning evidence there was against Palin, but on this issue (unlike, say, her fondness for earmarks), it appears that they knew the outlines and didn’t care.

    That’s my take.

    They made an appearance here yesterday. There was a large “greeting” at the airport and they put 6k people in the convention center. Our “paper of record” front paged the event, calling it a “rock star” atmosphere. The FP article included a flattering photo of both of ‘em w/McCain shaking hands in the audience and signing autographs. This puff piece author, Jeff Jones, is this paper’s “political writer” and regularly omits facts unfavorable to GOP’ers. F:ex, he had an interview w/Heather Wilson after FISA passed in which she praised that thing, called it a “huge victory for America” and patted herself on the back for getting it through. There was, however, no mention of anything else FISA’ish and this paper had glossed the whole thing over for months… in other words it’s routine practice at this paper to support the GOP.

    Michelle Obama was here 2 days ago, and this paper printed nothing.

    There has been no mention in this paper of her documented contradictions (lies): eg. her “I said thanks but no thanks” thingie in particular, and her NG distortions.

    Just trying to give a little on-the-ground observation of what’s happening down here in the “west”. And along those lines, for those who haven’t seen it, the Daily Show’s on the scene reporting from Repub convention… investigating the meaning of “small town values”.

    • otchmoson says:

      Small town values . . . what a wonderful-sounding phrase. Were you was surprised as I at the inability to truly address the ‘wonderfulness’ of small town values. Seems the best thing that can be said is they’re “awesome.”

  4. bellesouth says:

    So, McCain/Palin start off their campaign with obstruction of justice. They won’t let Palin speak. If she is not ready for prime-time, she is definitely not ready to be vice-president to a 72 year old man with melanoma and weakened body due to being a POW who could very conceivably die within the next 4 years. NOT Good.

    • Leen says:

      Thanks EW.

      bellesouth…That is unless the majority of people in this nation want more of what we have had the last seven and a half years.

      Sarah is such a “reformer”. What a “maverick”

  5. QuickSilver says:

    I’m fascinated by Sarah Palin’s connection to the Greenberg Traurig lobbyist, Steve Silver, one of many GOP lobbyists who helped “win” Wasilla some $27 million in earmarks while Palin was mayor.

    Given McCain’s role in reviewing some 750,000 pages of Abramoff material — deep-sixed to the archives and now under lock-and-key for 50 years — I have to wonder if Palin was already a known quantity to McCain, that he knew at the very least she could “play ball” in the GOP kleptocracy. Was that the true extent of Palin’s vetting? Was it, I wonder, all McCain needed to know?

    Before he covered up the Abramoff matter in the Senate, McCain is widely said to have mined the material for dirt he could use against potential GOP rivals for the 2008 nomination. Does he have the dirt on Sarah Palin, too? If he’s ever worried about Palin chafing in her subordinate role as VP, I should think it useful to hold something over her. (And from what I’ve heard from folks in Washington, it sure seems to be McCain’s M.O.)

  6. Ishmael says:

    Isn’t it a bit “presumptuous” for Sarah Palin to think that she is qualified to be President? Isn’t it a bit “presumptuous”, dare I say “uppity”, for the unelected, unsworn, and even more unqualified Todd Palin to sit in on government business with Governor Sarah?

  7. skdadl says:

    Rather than let clear evidence of a Rovian abuse of power disqualify Palin, the McCain campaign picked her anyway

    Which makes me wonder whether they didn’t consider Sarah’s abuses actual qualifications for the job. Or as QuickSilver says @ 8, at the very least they recognized that she could play ball in the GOP kleptocracy.

    Maybe, as they say, it’s a feature, not a bug.

  8. Tross says:

    There’s no reason for them NOT to start off like this. This is the way Bush started off — amid a sea of controversy.

    Keep us chasing scandal after scandal, while they continue to obstruct their way through the pillage of the country. If a few of their brethren go down, so be it. Wingnut Welfare will pick them back up, dust them off, and dispatch them to the airwaves to assist those still “on the inside” of gov’t.

    Talk about Groundhog Day.

  9. PJEvans says:

    It’s interesting that nearly the first thing a Republican says publicly about this investigation is that the legislator who is supposedly running it – French? – is ‘politicizing’ it. And that it’s ‘inappropriate’ for them to be investigating Palin’s activities as Governor (and maybe earlier).

    Straight out of the Bush/Cheney/Rove playbook.
    I hope they don’t stop investigating her. She needs to be treated as she wishes to treat others.

  10. Ishmael says:

    ….now I’m on the Matt Cassell bandwagon – a 50 yard pass to Randy Moss from the endzone!

    Here endeth the NE-KC liveblog…

  11. FormerFed says:

    Folks, we must not be so naive as to think that McCain is any different from the Bushies. He will do and/or say anything in his quest for the WH. He is surrounded by the same neo-cons and repugs that have been in power the last eight years.

    These people are nasty, lying, low-down cheats and they will not let go of their power easily.

  12. behindthefall says:

    Why is The Daily Show better at oppo research than the entire Democratic Party?

    They’re better at finding the telling clip. Their juxtapositions of contradictory clips are funny and telling because they are demonstrably true, but just an opposing opinion.

    The Obama/Biden campaign had better start asking themselves why they are not as effective as late night TV and do something to fix the situation.

    IMHO. Clip libraries: the best way to expose a coverup.

  13. wwiii says:

    If I recall, GWB and Shooter had five arrests between them from their younger, wilder days. Not to mention W’s time doing community service for, um, whatever, as well as his memory (and record) loss re his time in TANG. And yet half the voters in the ‘00 and ‘04 elections said that was fine by them.

    The minders have become so confident in their abilities to blunt the effect of negative material that having a scandal or three on the books is just no big deal. When you add to that the ability of those same manipulators to make a real war hero’s heroism a strike against him, why should someone like McCain care what Palin’s actual record is? (In any event, I’m sure Nancy Pelosi will be happy to introduce an emergency bill to grant Palin retroactive immunity if things really blow up.)

    And this is all being done–once again–in plain sight.

  14. TheraP says:

    Honestly, the level of McCain/Palin hypocrisy is beyond anything imaginable here. Karl Rove never pretended to be a saint. I’ll give him that. But these two pretend sainthood while lying through their teeth!

  15. yellowsnapdragon says:

    The only difference between Bush/Cheney and McCain/Palin? Lipstick. Accountability in Alaska, please.

  16. barne says:

    Every corrupt pol and business person in AK, and it sounds like there are a few, will be trying to milk Troopergate. I don’t think we should count on truth emerging on this one, folks.

    Imagine the gold rush that’s on right now! People jumping into 4×4s and planes, racing all over AK for face-to-face meetings that can’t be recorded. It would make a great film.

  17. xargaw says:

    Let’s face it. This election is going to come down to one thing. Whoever runs the best campaign will win. Until the Obama/Biden and their surrogates start calling out the GOP for their bald faced lies (as Rachael Maddow did the other night) the GOP will control the message. The GOP has learned that all you have to do is say something and repeat it often and it becomes accepted as truth. If the DEMs don’t start screaming liar liar liar and set the record straight they will loose. The GOP are expert framers. If the DEMs don’t learn the game NOW, they will loose. The public is largely ignorant. If McCain says he is has integrity and puts country first, the believe him. Most people don’t have a clue how he votes or what his policies are.

  18. ratfood says:

    Palin’s lack of cooperation with the investigation, especially under the tutelage of the McCain team is a little too complex an issue to conform to the soundbite requirements of a presidential campaign. That is unfortunate, because it suggests that if elected, McCain is likely to demonstrate the same contempt for Congressional oversight as the Bush Administration, which is an excellent reason to vote for Barack Obama.

  19. foothillsmike says:

    Rethuglicans with experience in vetting = 0
    Rethuglicans with experience in covering up and obfuscating = 92,872,641

  20. alank says:

    McCain is getting Georgia wrong, but then so is Biden, and most of the media. He’s bound to to make bad decisions in a number of ways of considerable consequence wrt the country, that appears to be a certainty.

  21. i4u2bi says:

    The corporate media won’t be happy just to not ask the right questions or not investigate the Republican criminals…they feel the need to willingly help destroy democracy. The corporate media want to be on the front lines fighting with the fascists against freedom and democratic values…the fourth estate is now the ‘Fourth Reich’.

    ourth Reicht

  22. wigwam says:

    If Palin is elected vice president, that pittbull-with-lipstick will be one beat of a 73-year-old heart from the dooms-day button.

  23. Beerfart Liberal says:

    I’ve said right from the beginning this is the most important thing with her. Lying about the bridge; accepting pork/feedback and saying “we did well” were usable as nice little tweaks. The knocked up daughter? Who cares? But stonewalling an investigation fits right into the Democrats main theme — more of the same. An executive stonewalling an investigation by the legislative branch? can you say Bush-Cheney-Rove? More of the same.

    When this lady does meet the media, it’ll probably FOX softballs. And she needs to bone up for that??

  24. cinnamonape says:

    Word is that Joe Lie has already introduced Palin to the top muckety-mucks of AIPAC. Seems that her “dominionist” preachers words had them a bit concerned…so they needed to be appeased. Sarah has an Israeli flag in the window of her Governor’s Office…all is well!

    And apparently they’ve sent an “insider” on Russian (and South Caucuses err Caucusus) foreign policy up to Alaska to school her on the region. Steve Beigun was not only a member of Bush’s NSC but has served as an advisor to Bob Dole, Jesse Helms, and Bill “Golf with Abramoff” Frist since the Reagan years. Stephen Beigun

    So much for that operation to separate the conjoined “Maverick” twins!

    I guess being Alaska C-in-C facing off the Russians across the Bering Straits wasn’t enough experience so they sent in a Bushbot pro! She might have said something like

    “Well, like Georgia, we Alaskans were once under the boot heel of the Russian despots…and thanks to the Alaska First! movement we broke free and joined with this great confederation…the United States! John McCain understands freedom…he was a POW, y’know! I support Georgia becoming a State, part of NATO!”

    Sarah is supposed to make her first appearance next week before the fawning National Press in a one-on-one interview with ABC’s psycophantic Charlie “Don’t Cut My Capital Gains” Gibson.

  25. cinnamonape says:

    This is, undoubtedly, another reason they’ve sent Palin to hole up in Alaska, to try to influence the outcome of this proceeding. (I’m trying to figure out whether those she’s trying to influence are from the same VECO/Stevens wing of the uber-corrupt Alaska Republican Party that she claims to have such independence from.) And the people who are obstructing this investigation are all up-front: they’re altering the course of the investigation because Palin is now a candidate to be VP.

    I was for VECO before I was against them.
    Palin Accepted VECO Contributions in Unsuccessful run for Lt. Governor

  26. NorskeFlamethrower says:

    1,758 DAYZ AND THE KILLIN’ GOEZ ON AND ON AND…

    Citizen emptywheel and the Firepup Freedom Fighters:

    Thank you for the update on the continuing scandal surrounding Sarah Palin and her catapulting into the nomination for VP. But I am concerned that this is designed to be a giant distraction from the real issues of the campaign, keepin’ the light on McCrazy and his “team” and off of the issues of the campaign and blurring a good look at the contrasts of personality and character of the two presidential candidates. Bad publicity is much better’n no publicity as long as it doesn’t reflect directly on the candidate in this case John McCrazy.

    In addition, the focus on “who did what to whom and for how much” is a distraction from the real opportunity here which is a look at the workings of a completely corporately owned state and how the implementation of a police state in Alaska follows the blueprint of the fascist takeover of the federal government from 2001-2008. Indeed, what has happened in Alaska since the unholy alliance between corporate oil and the fascist religious pseudo-evangelicals, mirrors the unholy alliance of the guns and steel oligarchy in Wiemar Germany with the lunatic fringe under Hitler.

    I am afraid that the entire Palin mess is nuthin’ but a distraction from how institutions in our political society have been corrupted and then applied toward implementing a terror state…and the institution most responsible for the degree of success of this fascist takeover is our system of justice, either by it’s corrupted failures or it’s absence.

    Make no mistake about it folks, this election and the conditions in which we find ourselves follow the script of 1932-33 Germany…fascism is here and it won’t defer to sompthin’ as mundane as a “free” election.

    KEEP THE FAITH WITH OUR HISTORY AND PASS THE AMMUNITION, THERE IS NO MIDDLE GROUND!!!

    • Leen says:

      Real “reformers”. Real “mavericks”. Mavericks and Reformers support “obstruction of justice”

      Man oh man Rove and his team can spin it

  27. cinnamonape says:

    ew~ Did you catch this one?

    Mayor Palin mismanaged purchase of land for pet project

    Not only has this whole Arena project for Wasilla been an expensive White Elephant…but, after the courts decided that the City didn’t have title, she took the land from the owner using IMMINENT DOMAIN!

    So despite the fact that there were other alternatives for building this non-essential “pet project” of an obsessed “Hockey Mom”, Ms. Pitbull decided to forcibly take the land from the owner.

    I wonder how that will play to all those folks that have been out signing anti- “Imminent Domain” petitions across the country?

      • cinnamonape says:

        Damn, and I know that it’s Eminent (as in “your eminence”), too (”imminent” means “approaching in time”)! I just spent time down at R5 Records…so that must be the reason for the brain infarction.

  28. GilpinGuy says:

    Of course there will be a whitewash. The only question is whether Democrats will be blamed for the victimization of Sarah Palin. Expect the outrage to be built to a raging crescendo right around the 1st of November. Oh could those terrible Democrats think that Princess Di err Sarah did anything wrong.

  29. mack says:

    Reminds me of the adage
    “It’s easier to ask for forgiveness than permission”
    What else do you expect from the party whores foreign policy credo is
    “Just do it”

  30. wavpeac says:

    Because they have “power” and “money” and “more mojo” they will go to lengths that we cannot imagine and that we will not go. The only option is to obstruct them by using the laws of this land…and or let them go until the consequences of their behavior becomes so obvious that the whole ignorant world finally sees it. Or to do both. I suggest we use the laws to the best of our ability. We use truth because it has power. And we let go when we cannot win or when it becomes too dangerous to hold on.

    save, work hard and hold on for the ride. I think without sounding too pessimistic that the energy flow, the power is still with them.

    I wish it weren’t true…but I can’t see it…they have their claws deeply in almost every area of power.

  31. victoria2dc says:

    Perhaps the McCain camp wasn’t aware of how much damning evidence there was against Palin, but on this issue (unlike, say, her fondness for earmarks), it appears that they knew the outlines and didn’t care. Rather than let clear evidence of a Rovian abuse of power disqualify Palin, the McCain campaign picked her anyway and instead implemented a cover-up.

    EW – they had to under pressure from Dobson and the other right wing church groups. Without her you can be sure that there would have been no deal to get their congretations out to vote.

    Also, nobody that I’ve read has done any investigation on the “oil and gas” meeting she (and Todd) were attending in TX when her water broke. I heard (and have no substantial evidence) that during that time she was vetted by big oil and that they were questioned about oil policy in the home of a Cheney relative! No idea if it’s true or not, but it makes sense that someone who was about to deliver a child known to be disabled would get on an airplane from Alaska to TX, stay at the meeting while being aware of her water breaking and then not asked to be rushed to a hospital instead of taking another flight back to Alaska.

    I’ve been unable to find the name of this “oil and gas” conference, the date of the conference and who attended. Too bad someone there hasn’t spoken out.

    Anyway, something to think about.

  32. libbyliberal says:

    Thanks. I think of McCain and his flipping around bad behavior to suddenly be ethics champion. Same playbook.

    When you think of 2 years and all that money for impeachment for Clinton, and how Repubs trying to sweep under rug/stonewall … ignore it full steam to election. Hubris.

    Walt Monegan sounds like a decent guy. All she made was that innocent phone call. Like that innocent phone call she made to the librarian. Wish I had been a fly on the wall. “Would it be all right if you removed a few of your books?” I am sure Sarah didn’t see that as upsetting to anyone at all.

  33. lllphd says:

    the question, as ever, remains:

    will they get away with it? will the media let them? will the public swallow it?

    • Leen says:

      The polls show that the public is swallowing “it”. Just wondering for how long. The Dems better come back with remember the last eight years. How McSame has basically obstructed most efforts by the Dems to hold anyone in the Bush administration accountable.

      Still think the Obama campaign should do an add with Bush’s comments calling Dems “the angry left”. Would really like to see an add with seniors in nursing homes who will be voting for Obama Biden as the “angry left” You know those folks who have given up ownership of their homes any savings accounts etc to get long term care “the angry left”. Those folks in the assisted living facilities playing bingo “the angry left” Put Vets from WWII, Korea, Vietnam, Desert Storm who will be voting for Obama Biden as the “angry left”. The thinking Republicans who have abandoned their party as the “angry left”. Hockey and soccer moms “angry left”. Each time there could be a flash of Bush (let’s not let the MSM allow people to forget about him) saying the “angry left”

      the 80% of Americans who believe we have been on the “wrong track” as the “angry left”.

  34. wavpeac says:

    Picture of a seething mcsame…an angry bush, an angry cheney

    One line: THE ANGRY LEFT??? REALLY.

    Mushroom cloud.

    End.

    My undergrad was pr. we need visuals like that and very little words to reach the low information voter. That one could turn a few of them who feed on fear.

  35. Neil says:

    The Palin administration won’t release hundreds of emails from her office, claiming they cover confidential policy matters. Then why do the subject lines refer to a political foe, a journalist, and non-policy topics?

    [snip]

    Palin’s office claimed most of the undisclosed emails were exempt from release because they were covered by the “executive” or “deliberative process” privileges that protect communications between Palin and her aides about policy matters. But the subject lines of some of the withheld emails suggest they were not related to policy matters. Several refer to one of Palin’s political foes, others to a well-known Alaskan journalist. Moreover, some of the withhold emails were CC’ed to Todd Palin, the governor’s husband. Todd Palin—a.k.a. the First Dude—holds no official state position (though he has been a close and influential adviser for Governor Palin). The fact that Palin and her aides shared these emails with a citizen outside the government undercuts the claim that they must be protected under executive privilege. McLeod asks, “What is Sarah Palin hiding?”

    confidential policy!?

    How far off is the ‘classified’, ‘national security’ claim? After all, Alaska is right next to Russia.

    more at Mother Jones.

  36. Neil says:

    In your opinion, which scandal will take the bigger toll on Palin’s credibility and viability as Veep candidate?

    A)Bridge to Nowhere
    B)Troopergate
    C)none of the above
    D)none