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Biden, check. Palin, checkmate.
RedState.com ^ | August 23, 2008 | Josh Painter

Posted on 08/23/2008 2:53:55 PM PDT by Josh Painter

I've already shown how Sarah Palin would be a smart pick by John McCain to be his running mate. In light of recent events, she's looking like a smarter selection .

The announcement made early this morning by the Obama camp that Delaware Senator Joe Biden is Obama's choice to share the Democrat presidential ticket with him sets the stage for McCain to name his own vice presidential nominee. The conventional wisdom seems to be that it will be former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney. Although I think Romney would be a strong selection, the Biden pick would make Gov. Palin an even stronger one.

Within three hours of news of the Biden selection being aired, Team McCain produced and released this hard-hitting ad with video clips of Biden dissing Obama's inexperience and praising his old friend and Senate colleague, John McCain:

There's no shortage of similar clips from the GOP primariy season depicting Romney attacking McCain and McCain returning fire. A Romney pick would guarantee that the Democrats would use it and effectively cancel out the impact of the McCain ad. But Palin wasn't involved in that fight, so there's no such ammunition for the Obama campaign to use against her. McCain's ad could run from now through election day, and the Democrats would be denied the opportunity to reply in kind. Instead, Biden would be forced to explain his criticism of his own running mate.

One of Romney's strongest assets is economics. He was very successful in the private sector and has won acclaim for turning the Winter Olympics in his home state of Utah around. But to most Americans today, "economics" is translated as "oil". The price of gasoline at the pump and food at the grocery store is what's on their minds. The financial markets and corporate arenas where Romney earned his creds might as well be on a distant planet. Sarah Palin knows all about oil. She's an avid proponent of drilling in ANWR and makes a strong case for it.

But Palin is no stooge of Big Oil. She stood up to the oil companies in her state and pushed through a modest 2.5% increase on the state taxes they pay for their access to Alaska's bountiful oil deposits. That raised the tax from 22.5% to 25%, an amount the companies can pay and still enjoy considerable profits. The oil companies and some of her fellow Republicans had fought against the bill, arguing that the extra 2.5% would would put a damper on future Alaskan oil exploration. That has not been the case. Conservatives don't like tax-raising, but Palin justified the increase by pointing out that the previous 22.5% tax was passed in 2006 under suspicious circumstances. Several members of the legislature that set the amount of that tax were convicted or indicted on federal bribery charges related to the bill. Palin also explained that the '06 tax did not perform as advertised, and she offered as evidence an $800 million shortfall in expected revenue. Whether you agree or disagree with Palin's actions, you have to admit that the Democrats can't paint her as being in the pocket of Big Oil.

Gov. Sarah has also pushed through her legislature a gas pipeline project which will bring a fresh supply and lower prices to those of us in the lower 48:

The legislature had been trying for 30 years to authorize something like this and, up until now, had blown it. Palin got it through. Getting it off the ground, the state says, will be the biggest construction project in U.S. history.

Palin considers the $26 billion project her biggest accomplishment as governor. "It was not easy," she told IBD. "Alaska has been hoping and dreaming for a natural gas pipeline for decades. What it took was getting off the dime and creating a competitive market in Alaska."

The 1,715-mile gas line would stretch from Alaska's North Slope to Fairbanks and down to Alberta, Canada. Then it would take existing gas lines to Idaho. In 10 years, Palin says, the lower 48 states would receive 4.5 million cubic feet of natural gas a day. By 2030, according to Energy Department estimates, Alaska's annual natgas production would quintuple to 2 trillion cubic feet.

In light of the inablity of the U.S. Congress to do anything about our energy problem, voters will be favorably impressed with this "can-do" governor and her determination to move the ball downfield on energy. While others talk the problem to death, Sarah Palin has been doing plenty about it.

A McCain-Palin ticket would offer hope to Americans angry over our energy dependence on foreign - and often hostile - sources. It would stand in stark contrast to Obama and Biden, both of whom opposed increased domestic drilling. McCain is for drilling offshore, but has yet to be convinced to embrace drilling in ANWR. Sarah Palin is perhaps the only person who could convince him. McCain-Palin could even adopt the theme used by Sarah in her contest for Alaska's governorship - "Energy for America." It's a good one, and it should resonate with American voters who have been strapped for cash by high pump prices, as well as those concerned about America's energy security. Romney, as good as he is on economic matters, just can't relate to American voters on energy issues the way Palin can.

Biden is going to be Obama's attack dog, a role vice presidential picks are usually given so that the presidential candidate's hands don't have to be washed. Can Sarah Palin stand up to the crusty old Senator in a fight? It would be a mistake to write her off. Alaska is a tough place, and it demands much of those who choose to live there. Palin has taken on her own party by fighting corruption and using the line item veto to cut the budget, angering Democrats and entrenched Republicans alike. In a piece for the Weekly Standard last year, Fred Barnes wrote:

In the roughly three years since she quit as the state's chief regulator of the oil industry, Palin has crushed the Republican hierarchy (virtually all male) and nearly every other foe or critic. Political analysts in Alaska refer to the "body count" of Palin's rivals. "The landscape is littered with the bodies of those who crossed Sarah," says pollster Dave Dittman, who worked for her gubernatorial campaign.

-snip-

Gov. Palin grew up in Wasilla, where as star of her high school basketball team she got the nickname "Sarah Barracuda" for her fierce competitiveness. She led her underdog team to the state basketball championship. Palin also won the Miss Wasilla beauty contest, in which she was named Miss Congeniality, and went on to compete in the Miss Alaska pageant.

Don't let that pretty face fool you. She's tough. I'll wager that because she was tough enough to take on Alaska's corrupt pols, she should have no problem with Biden in the VP debate or with bringing the elite Obama down a peg or two.

Palin has another appeal that Mitt Romney just can't match, and it's through no fault of his. It's a matter of gender. Recent polling shows a problem for Obama:

Perhaps the biggest factor keeping the presidential race close has been Obama’s inability to close the deal with some of Hillary Clinton’s supporters. According to the poll, 52 percent of them say they will vote for Obama, but 21 percent are backing McCain, with an additional 27 percent who are undecided or want to vote for someone else.

What’s more, those who backed Clinton in the primaries — but aren’t supporting Obama right now — tend to view McCain in a better light than Obama and have more confidence in McCain’s ability to be commander-in-chief.

Obama's decision to choose Biden and stiff Hillary has her supporters even angrier right now. By selecting Sarah Palin as his running mate, McCain would show them that he, unlike Obama, doesn't take women's votes for granted.

The Democrats are touting Joe Biden's blue collar roots, which they will exploit to try to continue to define McCain as so out of touch with the average American that "he doesn't even know how many houses he owns" - nevermind that all members of the Senate are rich, and Biden's compound is not your average American crib. They will tell us how he had to take second and third mortgages on his house to send his kids to college, and they will have many more stories of Biden as the average Joe.

If McCain chooses him, Romney will be portrayed by the Dems, rightly or wrongly, as a zillionaire who's out of touch with average Americans. They can't define Palin that way. Her parents were school teachers. Her husband Todd actually worked for a living in a blue-collar production job for BP on the North Slope for 20 years. And he's a commercial fisherman in the summer. Todd is also something of an Alaska sports legend, having won the gruelling 2,000-mile Iron Dog snowmobile race four times. Oh, and he raises the kids while mom is working as Alaska's CEO. The couple's youngest child has Down's Syndrome, a condition the doctors made them aware of before its birth. Yet they never even considered abortion, and they say the baby is "a blessing." The story marks a stunning contrast to the pro-abortion positions of Obama and Biden. Palin is also a lifetime member of the NRA, an organization which has given Biden an F-rating. He even boasted that he wrote the language contained in the assault weapons bill. Romney's record on gun control is shaky, while Palin's is rock solid. America'a 80 million gun owners will love her.

The Palin family is a great story waiting to be told to the lower 48 if McCain is wise enough to pick Sarah. Even the drive-by media will be fascinated by it and eager to tell it. As good as Mitt Romney is as a vice-presidential choice, Palin is even better.

-JP


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Government; Politics/Elections; US: Alaska
KEYWORDS: 2008veep; drilling; energy; lightweight; mccain; oil; palin
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To: All

Perpetual foolishness. Palin brings no Electoral Votes to the table. We have a chance here to flip a marginal blue state in Michigan and shore up Colorado (vulnerable) and Nevada (vulnerable). She can’t do any of that.

Her conservative credentials don’t matter when the middle is what wins, and all politics is local.


81 posted on 08/23/2008 4:34:08 PM PDT by Owen
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To: Josh Painter

How is Palin pollin’, pal?


82 posted on 08/23/2008 4:34:26 PM PDT by Revolting cat! (Are you ready to pray for Teddy?)
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To: big'ol_freeper

Experience is important for any VP. One never knows when the VP might have to step in. We have terrorism, Russia acting up, etc. Can we really afford to take that chance because she’s easy on the eyes? (Yes, I realize she’s a conservative, but her looks seem to be important).


83 posted on 08/23/2008 4:34:39 PM PDT by keepitreal ("I'm Barack Obama and I approve this message. . . until I don't.")
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To: rawhide

” She is not a known national figure, in fact, most people probably have never heard of her “

Not necessarily a BAD thing ...


84 posted on 08/23/2008 4:35:15 PM PDT by sushiman
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To: ASOC
A lot of folks would be glad to see her go.

So what's the deal with her 80% approval rating?

85 posted on 08/23/2008 4:35:21 PM PDT by buccaneer81 (Bob Taft has soiled the family name for the next century.)
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To: Owen
Palin brings no Electoral Votes to the table.

As I said before, she brings exactly the same number Dick Cheney brought.

86 posted on 08/23/2008 4:36:54 PM PDT by buccaneer81 (Bob Taft has soiled the family name for the next century.)
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To: buccaneer81

But Dick Cheney brought a lot of assets to the ticket. He certainly turned out to be a great asset in what ended up being perilous times in our country.


87 posted on 08/23/2008 4:39:28 PM PDT by keepitreal ("I'm Barack Obama and I approve this message. . . until I don't.")
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To: prisoner6
She's pregnant...

What again already??

88 posted on 08/23/2008 4:42:17 PM PDT by Churchillspirit
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To: keepitreal

Palin shores up the conservative Republican base. Romney doesn’t and I’ll be furious if an idiot like Huckabee or a REAL nobody like Pawlenty is chosen.


89 posted on 08/23/2008 4:42:17 PM PDT by buccaneer81 (Bob Taft has soiled the family name for the next century.)
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To: prisoner6
She's pregnant...

What again already??

90 posted on 08/23/2008 4:42:38 PM PDT by Churchillspirit
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To: 668 - Neighbor of the Beast
It was too depressing to repeat; depressing to discover the irrationality and low level to which freepers can descend, trying to argue for an indefensible choice.

The CW is that most people vote for irrational reasons. If that is true, then is it not rational to select a candidate for irrational reasons like: she's an attractive woman and mom who practices what she believes about the sanctity of life? Or that she comes from an energy producing, freedom loving, final frontier state? Or that, as a governor, she has executive experience that the other ticket does not have? You can't get much farther from the Beltway that Alaska.

91 posted on 08/23/2008 4:42:38 PM PDT by Theophilus (Nothing can make Americans safer than to stop aborting them.)
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To: Extremely Extreme Extremist

Palin wreaks of common sense. An attractive package in all ways.


92 posted on 08/23/2008 4:53:01 PM PDT by chiller (www.beheardtoday.com.....check it out....cheap letters to govt. officials...I love it.)
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To: Theophilus
She would be great if McCain was 58 instead of 72...I still like her...She has more experience than all three...She would be ready for Hillary in four years... McCain will be lucky to make it past one term...It will probably be Romney...There is know way we will win in 2012....It will be Hillary???
93 posted on 08/23/2008 4:55:44 PM PDT by Hojczyk
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To: Extremely Extreme Extremist
"This woman has battled crooked pols in both parties for 16 years."

You might want to check the news up here. The Palin administration which touted itself as "open and transparent" is under investigation for abuse of power. The legislature appointed a special prosecutor and has so far has been stonewalled in its attempts to investigate by clintonesque claims of executive privilege. Even the left wing paper in Anchorage is now starting to report this. Oddly I hear she is supposed to talk at the RNC convention on "reform".

94 posted on 08/23/2008 5:07:12 PM PDT by strongbow
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To: Theophilus
The CW is that most people vote for irrational reasons. If that is true, then is it not rational to select a candidate for irrational reasons like: she's an attractive woman

How do you know there aren't more people who will vote against her because she's an attractive woman?

and mom who practices what she believes about the sanctity of life?

There are also people out there who are not pro-life, and people who might think a mom of 5 is not what we need as CinC and leader of the greatest superpower on the planet.

Or that she comes from an energy producing, freedom loving, final frontier state?

How many votes do you figure that wins her? Any?

Or that, as a governor, she has executive experience that the other ticket does not have?

About twenty months of experience. What was she before that, and how much experience in her last position? And how did she leave it?

You can't get much farther from the Beltway than Alaska.

So which is it, you want experience or virginity? Experience, but not with Washington? Why is that good? And if that's good, is lack of experience in the global arena also good? I mean, if it's good that she doesn't know beans about handling Pelosi, is it even better that she hasn't a clue about how to deal with Putin?

95 posted on 08/23/2008 5:08:25 PM PDT by 668 - Neighbor of the Beast (Obama/Biden = OB: It's flushable.)
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To: precisionshootist
Being President is a full time job, a mother has no place in the White House trying to balance family while at the same time do whats necessary to be the leader of the free world, thats insane, especially because McCain is at an age where the stress of the office could take him out at any time.

We need a man as VP unless the woman chosen is on the order of a Maggie Thatcher without young babies to raise. Palin is unknown and doesn't add much luster to a McCain candidacy except maybe to sexist-thinking females.

96 posted on 08/23/2008 5:14:53 PM PDT by whatisthetruth
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To: buccaneer81
"So what's the deal with her 80% approval rating? "

Everyone here was tired of the systemic corruption in Juneau. She rode in on the wave of disgust with indicted legislators and a very unpopular governor. She has been able to maintain that facade and remained very popular thanks to the liberal press and her attack on big business here. She has also raised taxes on the the oil companies to excesses and is now redistributing the excess to the voting public. Each resident (man, woman and child) gets a $1200 energy rebate check this year along with the annual permafund dividend of $2100. If you think $3300/person in your family doesn't help to get the popularity vote then we live in different worlds. Somehow it doesn't sound to conservative to me, and yes my wife and I will be getting $6,600 automatically deposited into our account next month.

97 posted on 08/23/2008 5:23:24 PM PDT by strongbow
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To: All
39% Say Biden the Right Choice, Women Less Enthusiastic

link

On the day that Barack Obama announced Joe Biden as his running mate, 39% of voters said he made the right choice. A Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey found that 25% disagreed and another 35% are not sure. Women are notably less enthusiastic than men—33% of women say Biden was the right choice while 27% disagreed. Men, by a 46% to 24% margin, said that Obama made the right choice.

Not surprisingly, Democrats were more supportive of Obama’s decision than anybody else—52% of those in his party agreed with his pick while 19% disagreed. However, just 43% of Democratic women said the presumptive nominee made the best pick while 23% disagreed.

Premium Members can review full crosstabs and see results by gender, age, ideology, party, income, religious affiliation, and other demographics. Time is running out to save on Premium Memberships. Sign up now and save. Learn More. Those figures are virtually unchanged from a month ago.

Overall, 32% said the selection of Biden made them more likely to vote for Obama and an identical percentage said it made them less likely to do so. Among unaffiliated voters, 25% are more likely to vote for Biden while 33% had the opposite view.

Thirty-nine percent (39%) say Biden is ready to be President while 35% disagree.

Biden is now viewed favorably by 48% of voters and unfavorably by 34%. Those figures reflect a slight improvement from Thursday night polling.

Forty-three percent (43%) now say Biden is politically liberal and 33% say politically moderate. Before he was named as Obama’s running mate, 41% viewed him as liberal and 22% said moderate.

More details will be posted Sunday morning.

98 posted on 08/23/2008 5:25:55 PM PDT by Sunsong
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To: buccaneer81

I think it will be Romney. But how much of an impact will this have? The dems are already trying to say that Biden comes from working class joes (though I’m sure he swimming in money now!) and Romney is rich and wealthy. Hannity wants Romney to be on the ticket (though I don’t understand why he supports the just turned conservatives over established ones; He supported Arnold in the recall here in CA over McClintock and well those of us who live in California know that Arnold’s a Democrat (won’t even call him a RINO).

Romney: Has potential to bring states in play (MI)
Palin, Jindal, Hunter, Thompson all these guys and gals that Freepers have talked about will get the base really behind them but will any of them bring any states in play that may go to Obama.


99 posted on 08/23/2008 5:33:17 PM PDT by ripcasc
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To: precisionshootist; All
“This idea of Palin is absurd.”
BINGO! A VP must be ready to serve as president. America is not ready for a woman to lead this country! Sorry but her gender disqualifies her. That might sound sexist but it’s reality. The libs would like nothing more than for McCain to pick a woman VP.


America COULD be ready for a woman if she were a MARGARET THATCHER type. Short of a woman of that statue I will agree with you.
100 posted on 08/23/2008 5:38:50 PM PDT by truthguy (Good intentions are not enough!)
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