"We have asked her to address US foreign policy, to discuss her views on governance, healthcare, and of course, China," Jonathan Slone, chief executive officer of the Asia-focused brokerage, said in an interview with AFP.After the 2008 GOP vice presidential candidate told CLSA that she would have to adjust her speech if reporters were present, Slone said CLSA decided to close Palin's session to the media:
Palin was chosen to speak since she's a possible Republican candidate in the next US presidential election and because of her influential role in politics, he said.
"We are very pleased with her attitude towards us. Sarah could have come here and made a media circus," he said.Stone said that keynote speeches at the annual CLSA event have been closed to the media in previous years for the same reason.
"But we said to her, 'Look, we want you to give the most information to our clients. Do you feel comfortable doing that with the press around?'
"She said, 'If I do that with the press in the room, I will have to say different things.'"
Former President Bill Clinton, former Vice President Al Gore and ex-Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan have delivered CLSA keynote addresses in past years.
Our take: We strongly suspect that former Governor Palin told the organizers that she wouldn't criticize the Obama administration on foreign soil with the media in the room. She knows they would have reported that she "criticized her country" on foreign soil. So the CLSA people closed the session to reporters to allow her to speak freely.
Criticizing the U.S. on foreign soil is just fine with the Democrat-Media Complex as long as it's a lefty such as Jimmy Carter or some Hollywood moron doing it and a Republican is president. But if a conservative tried to do the same thing with a leftist Democrat in the White House, the press would treat it as the most heinous act of treason since Benedict Arnold switched sides in the Revolutionary War.
Update: At The Hill's Blog Briefing Room, Eric Zimmermann suggests "Palin... may be trying to beef up her foreign policy bona fides in preparation for a 2012 presidential campaign."
- JP