Palin's Speech Seen as Hit on Perry 'Career Politician'
Saturday, 03 Sep 2011 08:14 PM
By Dave Eberhart
A crowd of 2,000 in Indianola, Iowa, braved torrential rain to hear former
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin blast “corporate crony capitalism” and the “permanent
political class” in her speech to the Tea Party of America.
It was no
mystery that the barbs were aimed at Texas Gov. Rick Perry, a Republican
presidential candidate who has spent most of his career in office and who is
perennially dogged by charges of rewarding his financial supporters.

Perry
is considered the latest frontrunner for the GOP nomination.
“You know
that it’s not enough to just change up the uniform,” Palin shouted out. “If we
don’t change the team and the game plan, we won’t save our
country.”
Recently, Palin aides have been debunking rumors that she was
ready to climb on Perry’s rumbling bandwagon and endorse him. In Indianola, she
hammered home her camp’s message, telling the crowd that it was not good enough
to replace Obama with any business-as-usual Republican
administration.
“You must vet a candidate’s record,” Palin said. “You
must know their ability to successfully reform and actually fix problems that
they are going to claim that they inherited.”
Even as she got into the
meat of her own proposals for creating jobs, including the elimination of all
federal corporate income taxes, she seemed to take a sideswipe at Perry,
demanding that the cozy relationship between political contributions and
government favors must be brought to light and eliminated.
Later on the
rope line while signing T-shirts and hats and smiling at chants from the crowd
to “Run, Sarah, run,” Palin said, “We need to make sure all our GOP candidates
are fighting corporate capitalism and aren’t participating in it. We have a
great opportunity to finally knock it down.”
Steadfast, Palin would not
answer shouted questions as to whether she was directing her remarks at
Perry.
“I want all of our GOP candidates to take the opportunity to kill
corporate capitalism that is leading to this cronyism that is killing our
economy,” Palin retorted at one point. “They all have an opportunity to speak
out against it. That’s what I want them to do.”
One recent poll concluded
that 74 percent of voters think Palin should not run, while 71 percent of GOP
voters think the same, but the stalwart Palin was having none of it when
confronted with the numbers.
"Polls? Nah . . . They’re for strippers and
cross country skiers," Palin shot back.
Next on the Palin agenda: taking
her “One Nation Bus Tour” on to New Hampshire, the venue of the kick-off
presidential primary election.
Read more on Newsmax.com:
Palin's
Speech Seen as Hit on Perry 'Career Politician'
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John Fund: Why Sarah Palin Is Not Running
Friday, 02 Sep 2011 08:45 AM
By John Fund
Sarah Palin will swoop into Iowa and New Hampshire to speak at tea party rallies
this Labor Day weekend, whipping up talk she will announce her candidacy for
president. After all, Sept. 3 marked the third anniversary of her acceptance
speech for vice president at the Republican National Convention — a speech that
established her as both a conservative icon and a magnet for
criticism.
Her supporters certainly are encouraging talk she will be a
2012 candidate. Peter Singleton, her Iowa political organizer, told National
Review’s Robert Costa last month: “I believe she will run. Labor Day will kick
off the Republican campaign for the nomination. She is going to make a major,
major speech.”
But Team Palin is extremely sensitive about anyone else
who speculates about what she’s up to. Karl Rove, President George W. Bush’s
political strategist, told Fox News last month that he thought Palin’s schedule
in Iowa meant she would announce her candidacy this weekend.
That
prompted this riposte from Team Palin on the website of her PAC: “Any
professional pundit claiming to have ‘inside information’ regarding Governor
Palin’s personal decision is not only wrong but their comments are specifically
intended to mislead the American public.”
At the risk of being accused of
misleading people, let me state that Sarah Palin isn’t running for president.
No, I don’t have “inside information,” other than that Sarah Palin has
had the time of her life playing the media and political class like a fiddle by
making them respond to her every Twitter twitch. She has gotten a platform for
her views at places ranging from Iowa to the World Economic Forum in South Korea
next month. The consternation she’s caused is sweet revenge or someone who will
use her tea party speeches this weekend to express her disdain for how the media
and the political class have let this country down.
But her ability to
make reporters and pundits dance to her tune is ending. She clearly isn’t
prepared to announce this weekend. When asked recently in Iowa if she would be
ready to join the race by Labor Day, Palin said, "I doubt it."
Even in an
era of social media and online organizing, Palin hasn’t assembled an
organization likely to secure her the nomination. “She seems to lack the ability
to trust folks to delegate responsibility and as such we've seen a long series
of scheduling SNAFUs," notes Politico's Ken Vogel. While most of the confusion
wasn’t her fault, witness the on-again, off-again stories about whether she
would indeed speak at the Iowa Tea Party rally this weekend.
Her delay in
deciding about running also has caused some of her supporters to drift away. She
polls only 8 percent among Republicans in the latest Fox News poll. Surely, her
support would climb if she actually entered the race but she faces another
obstacle. Many Republicans just don't believe she is qualified to be president
or think she is damaged goods in a general election. The Fox poll found a full
71 percent of Republicans and 66 percent of tea party supporters don’t want her
to run.
Sarah Palin is only 47 years old, a full 15 years younger than
Hillary Clinton was when she ran in 2008 and more than two decades younger than
Ronald Reagan was when he mounted his successful campaign for president. She
knows she has small children to raise and that her own mistakes and relentless
media hostility have damaged her brand as a presidential candidate. But she also
knows that attention spans are short, America is full of political careers that
have been resurrected and she has lots of time to outwait her
critics.
Let’s also take Sarah Palin at her word. Last year, she told
Greta van Susteren of Fox News that the major reason she might run would be “if
nobody else were to step up with the solutions that are needed” to set the
country right. “But I also know that anybody — anybody — can make a huge
difference in this country, without a title, without an office, just being out
there as an advocate for solutions that can work to get the country on the right
track. And that’s where I am now.”
Doesn’t that pretty much describe what
Sarah Palin has been doing the past year, fueled with celebrity-infused
brio?
So if Sarah Palin isn’t running for president, what will she do in
2012? Even as a non-candidate, she has the potential to shake up the GOP race.
In a recent slickly produced video producer by Team Palin that chronicles her
bus tour of Iowa, Palin shakes hands with a girl in an “Americans for Rick
Perry” T-shirt and then poses for a photo with the girl and her fellow Perry
supporters.
“Given the elaborate editing that went into this production,
is it likely that Palin would have approved a visual nod to Perry as a mere
coincidence?” asks blogger Robert Stacy McCain, a keen-eyed Palin watcher. “I
don’t think so.”
Indeed, Republican governors tell me that Palin and
Perry clearly bonded when they attended meetings as fellow governors from 2007
to 2009. “As executives of the two biggest energy-producing states in the
country they had a lot in common and were simpatico on issues,” one governor
told me last week. “You could also say they are both larger-than-life
personalities who no doubt learned from each other in the publicity
department.”
Rick Perry already has vaulted — at least temporarily — to
the front of the GOP presidential pack, leading Mitt Romney by 29- 22 percent in
the latest Fox News poll that has Palin at 8 percent. If Sarah Palin decides
that 2012 isn’t her year to run, as I firmly believe is the case, what sweeter
revenge could she have on her media adversaries than to give early backing to a
kindred conservative spirit who then went on to win the GOP nomination and
indeed the presidency?
That’s why I believe Sarah Palin isn’t running,
and why she ultimately will endorse Rick Perry. And if her bet pays off and
Perry becomes president, don’t be surprised if the next secretary of Energy is a
certain former Alaska governor who has an aggressive agenda to open up America’s
energy resources. Such a platform also would be an effective launching pad for
her to start refurbishing her political and policy image.
Sarah Palin may
yet have the last political laugh over her doubters.
John Fund
is a contributing editor to the American Spectator.
Read
more on Newsmax.com:
John
Fund: Why Sarah Palin Is Not Running
Important: Do You Support Pres.
Obama's Re-Election?
Vote
Here Now!
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