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Newsweek Chap 5: Obama Sweats the Clintons, McCain Gambles on Palin

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RamboLiberal Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-06-08 04:45 PM
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Newsweek Chap 5: Obama Sweats the Clintons, McCain Gambles on Palin
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But McCain didn't want the safe choice. A top adviser would later recall that telling McCain that Pawlenty was "safe" was "like guaranteeing" that McCain would not pick him. Prodded by Schmidt and Rick Davis, McCain began asking about Palin, a first-term governor who had shaken up the Alaska political establishment by taking on her own party elders, who was fearless and defiant, who was … a little bit like McCain. He had called her that Sunday morning while she was attending the Alaska State Fair. It was a quick phone call, only about five minutes, and Palin had trouble hearing McCain over the noisy crowd. But McCain was intrigued. He told Salter and Schmidt to fly her down to Arizona and take a close look.

Schmidt and Salter met with her as soon as she arrived in Flagstaff on Wednesday. The three talked late into the night. Schmidt and Salter probed and pressed and looked for gaps between her views and McCain's. Palin shrugged off substantive differences. "What's the big darn deal?" she asked, smiling and, in her frontier-girl way, half defying, half flirting with her interrogators. With her flat accent and folksy charm, Palin was refreshingly down to earth, thought Salter. Salter had been wary; he had favored Pawlenty, who exuded a warm Midwestern solidity. Schmidt was pro-Palin from the beginning. He saw her potential as a conservative populist, the kind of throw-'em-red-meat, bash-the-elites politician who thrilled the Republican base that Karl Rove had so carefully nurtured through the Bush years. By picking Palin, Schmidt argued, McCain could snatch the "change" mantle away from Obama. Not for the first time, Salter came around to Schmidt's way of thinking. In the home of one of Cindy McCain's business associates, the two men tried to impress on Palin just how grueling the coming months could be. She did not seem intimidated—in the least. She was up front about her family, telling the McCain aides that her 17-year-old unmarried daughter Bristol was pregnant.

Palin stayed in Flagstaff on Wednesday night. Early on Thursday morning, Schmidt and Salter drove her to the cabin in Sedona, where she met for about an hour with McCain and chatted briefly with Cindy. Afterward, McCain and his wife took a walk along a creek running through the property. McCain consulted one last time with Schmidt and Salter. Palin would be a brave pick and she was a straight shooter, the two advisers counseled McCain. But she had no foreign-policy experience and was brand new to the national stage. McCain did not take long to decide. By 11 on that Thursday morning, he had asked Palin to join his ticket. Palin did not hesitate an instant to say yes.

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The Palin pick had the feel of a guerrilla raid, a covert operation. Salter, Schmidt and Governor Palin had checked in to the hotel under false names, pretending they were in town for a family reunion. The pirate ship was back! Muzzled and ordered to behave like a regular politician (run negative ads, avoid reporters, just read from the damn teleprompter), McCain had rebelled in his way by picking a fellow subversive—a sassy, shoot-from-the-hip, self-styled hockey mom who had shown those Big Oil boys a thing or two up in Alaska. It was romantic but also a bit impulsive. McCain's vetting operation had relied heavily on Internet searches for background checks. Davis had kept his eye on Palin for months, but it does not appear that the campaign did extensive interviewing and digging in Alaska. Some of McCain's aides were a little nervous about the Hail Mary quality of McCain's choice. As the GOP candidate introduced his running mate to the world on the morning of Friday, Aug. 29, from a high-school gym in Dayton, Ohio, one of his aides, watching from backstage, muttered, "We just threw long."

Other campaign advisers were gleeful as the pundits scrambled to make sense of it all. Some reporters did not even know how to pronounce Palin's name. But on Saturday night, a couple of reporters began asking questions about Bristol. Some had caught a glimpse of her, and explained to a campaign aide that she looked, well, pregnant. The aide denied any knowledge, but Schmidt tapped one of McCain's friends, Steve Duprey, to go have an awkward conversation with Palin. Told of the reporters' nosing around, she looked out the window briefly and replied, "We have a strong family. We've been dealing with this already. We're gonna tell Bristol. We'll be fine. Let's move on. What else do you have?"

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At the convention in St. Paul, Palin was completely unfazed by the boys'-club fraternity she had just joined. One night, Schmidt and Salter went to her hotel room to brief her. After a minute, Palin sailed into the room wearing nothing but a towel, with another on her wet hair. She told them to chat with her laconic husband, Todd. "I'll be just a minute," she said. Salter tried to strike up a conversation. He knew that Todd was half native Alaskan and a championship snow-machine racer.

"So what's the difference between a snowmobile and a snow machine, anyway?" Salter asked. "They're the same thing," Todd replied. "Right, so why not call it a snowmobile?" Salter joshed. "Because it's a snow machine," came the reply.

http://www.newsweek.com/id/167905/page/1
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polichick Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-06-08 04:53 PM
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1. Oh, that Tawd!
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-06-08 05:00 PM
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2. I tried reading the 1st installment and realized shortly therein,
realized that I would be reading the following installments.
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-06-08 06:13 PM
Response to Reply #2
5. I meant, I would NOT be reading the additional installments!
oops!
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proud2BlibKansan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-06-08 06:05 PM
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3. Wow a fascinating read!
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ErinBerin84 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-06-08 06:11 PM
Response to Original message
4. I disagree with Newsweek's characterization
of Obama's convention speech as mostly the typical promises by a Democrat and not very inspirational...I thought it was great! Anywho, Lindsey Graham liked to give Piper Palin soda to get her "hopped up", and Tim Kaine was the easiest to vet and as clean as a piece of paper. I love that one Obama person said "game over" (meaning, good for Obama) when Palin was selected, and that Axelrod (was that who it was? I read the piece earlier) was insulted when one person suggested that Palin might be as good as Obama.
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-06-08 06:20 PM
Response to Reply #4
6. I do too. It's an Obama hit piece, set up under the guise of
taking similar potshots at the GOP ticket (although the GOP part is true).

They are not slick by 1/2.

Guess at some point, once we are lulled into thinking that this series is great (because of the hit on Palin), we are supposed to believe what they will write about the Obama campaign.

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ErinBerin84 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-06-08 06:22 PM
Response to Reply #6
7. some of this leaked info
seems to be aides trying to make McCain look good and only Palin bad...like saying he rushed "back to Washington" because he has a "romantic streak". WTF?
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-06-08 06:23 PM
Response to Reply #7
8. Newsweek is not impressive.....
Evans and Meacham are definite suspects in shoveling Propaganda.
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