Showing posts with label jonathan strong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jonathan strong. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Bachus likely to regret blaming GOP Senate losses on Sarah Palin

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The Daily Caller's Jonathan Strong, citing an email from Gov. Palin, explains why U.S. Congressman Spencer Bachus of Alabama may already be regretting his comments to a local newspaper that "Palin cost us control of the Senate." Bachus, you see, is currently engaged in a battle for chairmanship of the House financial services committee with Rep. Ed Royce of California:
Palin’s comments are important because they could provide a major boost to Royce, who is campaigning against Bachus in part by arguing his record is more conservative.

Referring to Bachus’s votes for government bailouts for Wall Street and the “Cash for Clunkers” program, which Palin called “the Bachus bigger government agenda,” Palin told The Daily Caller via e-mail, “No wonder he’s not thrilled with people like me, Mitt Romney, Mike Huckabee and all the others who also endorsed commonsense conservative candidates.”

Palin’s involvement in the race, even while tangential, could be crucial given that many of the 80-some conservative freshman lawmakers coming to Washington are Tea Party-backed or otherwise aggressive conservatives.

[More]
Gov. Palin's characterization of Bachus is backed up by his voting record. While Royce voted against the Troubled Asset Relief Program, Bachus voted for TARP twice. Royce also voted against the “Cash for Clunkers” program, while Bachus voted for it.

- JP

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Reading too much into the Palin - Steele connection?

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At The Daily Caller, Jonathan Strong asks, "Is there an emerging Palin-Steele alliance?"
First, she appeared on a RNC fundraising mailer in July. Then she gave a shout-out to Steele on Fox News, painting him as more in tune with the conservative base than other members of the GOP establishment. “More power to Michael Steele,” she said.

Then, the RNC announced Palin would be headlining two fundraising “rallies” with Steele in October.

Meanwhile, Steele has made several overtures to conservatives, including warmly embracing Delaware Senate candidate Christine O’Donnell when the rest of the GOP establishment was still bellyaching over what some believe is a lost Senate seat.

Steele has also praised Tea Party activists on his national “Fire Pelosi” bus tour. At the launch event for the bus tour were two Tea Party favorites: Reps. Michelle Bachmann of Minnesota and Joe Wilson of South Carolina.

[...]

Some of Steele’s critics are fearful of a Palin-Steele alliance. One RNC member, an influential Steele opponent, said Palin could give Steele credibility with conservative activists, which could go a long way towards absolving Steele of what critics say are his many, many sins as RNC chair.

Some take this line of thinking further, suspecting that Palin might work to get Steele reelected as RNC chair, believing he could be a useful ally if she were to run for president in 2012.
We're not sure how strong of an "alliance" the two may have forged, but Gov. Palin and Chairman Steele are certainly old friends, and they share a mutual respect. Also, the relationship between the two is hardly "emerging." It goes back possibly as far as the RNC Convention in 2008, when Steele delivered a stem winder of a speech that was lavish in its praise for the soon to be confirmed vice presidential candidate. In April of 2009, Steele introduced the governor at a Right to Life event in Evansville, Indiana. In his words of introduction, the chairman confessed that while the world eagerly waited for John McCain to name his running mate in the closing days of August, 2008, Steele was hoping that Sarah Palin would be McCain's choice.

Since then, the two have gone to bat for each other. When some Republicans took the Democrats' side on Gov. Palin's characterization of rationing under ObamaCare as "death panels" in August of 2009, Steele stood up for her. When leftist journo Andrea Mitchell slammed Sarah in November of the same year for having resigned her office four months earlier, Steele defended her decision and told the lamestream media to "give the woman a break."

When Steele came under fire in January of this year for his remark that the GOP "wasn't ready to lead," Sarah Palin went on Fox News in prime time to voice her agreement with the chairman and to applaud him for taking on the party establishment. She also sent Steele an email message to offer her encouragement. In April, after she had asked the RNC to stop advertising that she would attend an RNC fundraiser, she was asked -- again in prime time on Fox News -- if there was a split between her and Steele. The governor's reply was unequivocal:
"I support Michael Steele. I am glad that he is the leader of the party, administratively. If those within the party are choosing to go in different directions, his term is up in eight months, and they can vote somebody else in. I think he's doing a great job. Michael Steele is an outsider. The machine, I think, is tough to penetrate. I know that Michele [Bachmann] and I both have kind of felt that in our careers. I think it's been good to have an independent outsider trying to create some change in the Republican Party."
So the mutual respect and admiration shared by Gov. Palin and Chairman Steele is not a recent phenomenon. Each has come to the other's defense when the other has come under attack, and if some pundits want to read more into that than meets the eye, let them. We happen to think that they simply and quite genuinely like each other, a bond strengthened by the fact that various members of their own party's establishment have at times treated both like red headed stepchildren. They have both had to fight to achieve their current stations in politics -- nothing was handed to either one on a silver platter. And they see eye to eye on many of the political issues that matter. For the time being, that should be plenty enough to explain their enduring friendship.

- JP

Thursday, July 22, 2010

The DC: Sarah Palin strikes back at Journolist’s ’sick puppies’

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Sarah Palin responded Thursday to the latest batch of JournoList emails uncovered by The Daily Caller. This group of messages were posted to the list on the same day that the McCain campaign introduced her as their candidate's choice to be the GOP's vice presidential candidate in 2008. Gov. Palin spoke out against the “sick puppies” in the media who so viciously attacked her immediately after McCain introduced her to the nation at a rally in Dayton, Ohio.

The governor's first remarks about the latest JournoList revelations were made exclusively to The Daily Caller:
She said the media became a key reason she decided not to finish out her term as governor and faults, in part, the McCain campaign for failing to vigorously defend her.

[...]

Palin said she sensed the vitriol coming from campaign reporters at the time.

“It was too obvious to me, my family, my administration and anyone else who knew me (and my record) that we were in a defenseless position the minute I gave my acceptance speech and the hordes of Obama’s opposition researchers-slash ‘reporters’ had descended upon Alaska,” Palin told The DC.

[...]

“To not have had the McCain campaign staff defend my record was an insurmountable challenge, because once a bell is rung, it’s impossible to un-ring,” Palin said.

[...]

“It didn’t help, either, that the hours and hours of interviews with the likes of Katie Couric resulted in a few minutes here and there of selected snippets of my annoyed answers. (I naively had not believed at the time of some of the badgering questions [for example, questioning my pro-life position] that the editing process would fulfill their biased purpose),” Palin said.

Palin says the feeding frenzy culture of the media galvanized her political opponents in Alaska. “The media incentivized political opponents to file false ethics charges and expensive, wasteful, frivolous lawsuits against me, my family and my staff, in an obvious attempt to destroy us,” Palin said.

When those lawsuits — which Palin said she won, but the media didn’t cover — caused legal costs in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, Palin had finally had it, she said.
The DC's Jonathan Strong talked with "Fox & Friends" about today's batch of JournoList emails:



More here.

- JP