Sarah Palin Pokes Fun at Herself
December 6, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment

Sarah Palin took on the Washington press, her former running mate, and herself with political one-liners at the Gridiron Club winter meeting.
Referring to her foreign policy comment about seeing Russia from Alaska, the former vice presidential candidate got laughs when she said that coming down from her Washington hotel room, she “could see the Russian Embassy.”
Palin also joked that before settling on “Going Rogue,” she originally thought of titling her book “How To Look Like a Million Bucks For Only $150,000,” in a reference to campaign spending on her wardrobe.
There was also a barb for Sen. John McCain’s presidential campaign staff, which has criticized her. Palin’s been on a book tour and told the audience the view is “much better from inside the bus than under it.”
As for her media hosts, she said she was glad to appear before a group of intellectuals, “or as I like to call it, a death panel.”
Fact Checks on Palins New Book
November 19, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment

The differences in statements and fact in her book are not as contradictory as most people would have expected. Though there are some caveats.
Fact-checking Sarah Palin
Here are some of former vice presidential candidate and Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin’s claims in “Going Rogue,” her new book released this week:
Frugal Governor
Palin: Says she made frugality a point when traveling on state business as Alaska governor, asking “only” for reasonably priced rooms and not “often” going for the “high-end, robe-and-slippers” hotels.
Facts: Although travel records show she usually opted for less-pricey hotels while governor, Palin and daughter Bristol stayed five days and four nights at the $707.29-per-night Essex House luxury hotel (robes and slippers come standard) overlooking New York City’s Central Park for a five-hour women’s leadership conference in October 2007. With airfare, the cost to Alaska was well over $3,000.
Campaign Donors
Palin: Boasts that she ran her campaign for governor on small donations, mostly from first-time givers, and turned back large checks from big donors if her campaign perceived a conflict of interest.
Facts: Of the roughly $1.3 million she raised for her primary and general election campaigns for governor, more than half came from people and political action committees giving at least $500. She accepted $1,000 each from a state senator and his wife, and $30 from a state representative in the weeks after the two Republican lawmakers’ offices were raided by the FBI as part of an investigation into a powerful Alaska oil-field services company.
Federal Bailouts
Palin: Rails against taxpayer-financed bailouts, which she attributes to President Obama. She recounts telling daughter Bristol that to succeed in business, “you’ll have to be brave enough to fail.”
Facts: Palin blurs the lines between Obama’s stimulus plan – a $787 billion package of tax cuts, state aid, social programs and government contracts – and the federal bailout that Republican presidential candidate John McCain voted for and President George W. Bush signed.
Conflicts of Interest
Palin: Writes about a city councilman in Wasilla, Alaska, who owned a garbage truck company and tried to push through an ordinance requiring residents of new subdivisions to pay for trash removal instead of taking it to the dump for free – this to illustrate her stance against conflicts of interest as a public servant.
Facts: As Wasilla mayor, Palin pressed for a zoning exception so she could sell her family’s $327,000 house, then did not keep a promise to remove a potential fire hazard on the property. She asked the City Council to loosen rules for snowmobile races when she and her husband owned a snowmobile store. But she stepped away from the table in 1997 when the council considered a grant for the Iron Dog snowmobile race in which her husband competes.
Climate Change
Palin: Says Obama has admitted that the climate change policy he seeks will cause people’s electricity bills to “skyrocket.”
Facts: She correctly quotes a comment attributed to Obama in January 2008, when he told San Francisco Chronicle editors that under his cap-and-trade climate proposal, “electricity rates would necessarily skyrocket” as utilities are forced to retrofit coal-burning power plants to reduce carbon dioxide emissions. Obama now argues that climate legislation can blunt the cost to consumers.
