The only question is whether Palin’s husband will be called to testify before the November election or afterwards. Alasaka will get more attention in the next seven weeks than anytime in its history.
By Gene Johnson (Associated Press)
ANCHORAGE, Sept. 12—Alaska lawmakers voted Friday to subpoena the husband of Gov. Sarah Palin, the Republican vice presidential candidate, after an investigator called Todd Palin “a central figure” regarding the governor’s dismissal of the state’s director of public safety.
I watched large portion of Sarah Palin’s speech last week while waiting at the airport for my delayed plane. The first couple of minutes after I tuned in she seemed a bit wooden. But then she loosened up and launched into the good lines crafted by very skilled speech writers. The Republicans want to pull off what Bush junior did four years ago: to convince the voting public they would be more secure under him than under the Democratic candidate, which of course was a complete fantasy. Palin’s performance was universally hailed as a great performance and a new media star was born and McCain weak speech made him into the sideshow. After Palin’s speech, McCain came out onto the stage. I had never seen his fully body live. His upper body was very stiff, and he looked a bit like a Robot waving his hands, perhaps a consequence of his injuries in Vietnam. Palin’s youth made him look ever older. As Frank Rich points out in the article below she offers a great distraction from the weakness of John McCain as the Republican presidential nominee. It is too early to tell how she will play out over the next 2 months. Eight years ago I was a fan of McCain. The evidence starts to get stronger by the day that he is temperamentally not fit to be president.
Continue ReadingHaving search the internet, it is not clear to me that Sarah Palin has received a full vetting. McCain is making a big gamble. In two months we will know whether the move was brilliant or stupid. Here is the best background article on the nomination.
The story behind the Palin surprise
By: Jonathan Martin (Politico.com)
John McCain on Friday announced a running mate whom he met only six months ago and with whom he spoke just once on the phone about the position before offering it in person earlier this week.
Continue ReadingWhat a finale! A few days ago after Hillary Clinton gave her magnificent speech, I worried that Obama speech would appear anticlimatic. But he outperformed everyone else at the Cconvention and reminded us why he is the person to lead America forward. Even readers of the Wall Street Journal agreed that he gave a fantastic speech. Click on “More” to see details of the reader poll.
You read watch or read the most highly watched convention speech on NYtimes.com.
You can see the introductory film preceding the speech on Youtube.com
and read Andrew Sullivan’s reaction.
This is the first time that I have watched more than a few minutes of the Democratic Convention. I am driven by the curiosity of a theatre critic: How is the event staged? What is the party doing to avoid disaster in November? Will Hillary or Bill be the spoilers there are rumored to be? If this is not the year to beat Republicans, when will there ever be a a chance again? I just watched Bill Clinton’s speech. It was good but Hillary’s speech yesterday was even stronger. Joe Biden’s speech was very different. He took on John McCain the most and his style was very different. It was powerful stuff. Then came the surprise visitor: Barak Obama. Effortlessly he got he took control of the crowd after two masterful orators. Unlike the Republican commentator Peggy Noonan (click on more), I think the event tomorrow night in the stadium will be a big success. Obama has the magic touch.
Continue ReadingI just watched Hillary Clinton’s speech. For me it was the best performance to date at the convention. The will be a tough act for Barak Obama to follow in two days.
Full text of her speech: I am honored to be here tonight. A proud mother. A proud Democrat. A proud American. And a proud supporter of Barack Obama. My friends, it is time to take back the country we love. Whether you voted for me, or voted for Barack, the time is now to unite as a single party with a single purpose. We are on the same team, and none of us can sit on the sidelines.
This is a fight for the future. And it
Andrew Sullivan sums up what we can expect of the next weeks until the November election.
The phoney war is over as the US presidential candidates square up for the most compelling contest in a generation. The eagerly anticipated text message arrived on millions of mobile phones yesterday at 3am. With it, many Americans who had registered to be updated with details of Barack Obama
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