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To: achilles2000

“That is not the same as being the most popular governor in America generally - I don’t even think there is polling on that.”


Of course not, that would be stupid, the most popular Governor in America means within their state, the highest approval, for instance Mitt Romney left office with 34% approval.

I can’t help that you didn’t know who Palin was but I did and she was high on the list of possible veeps.

Here is a freeper thread on her as veep, from 2007. http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/1888693/posts?page=46#46

Here is where she was on intrade.
INTRADE STATUS AUGUST 1, 2008-”GOP Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, currently tied for third among possible Vice Presidential running mates for John McCain on Intrade”

Here is the Weekly standard take on her in 2007.
The Most Popular Governor
Alaska’s Sarah Palin is the GOP’s newest star.
BY Fred Barnes WEEKLY STANDARD
July 16, 2007, Vol. 12, No. 41
“The wipeout in the 2006 election left Republicans in such a state of dejection that they’ve overlooked the one shining victory in which a Republican star was born. The triumph came in Alaska where Sarah Palin, a politician of eye-popping integrity, was elected governor. She is now the most popular governor in America, with an approval rating in the 90s, and probably the most popular public official in any state.

Her rise is a great (and rare) story of how adherence to principle—especially to transparency and accountability in government—can produce political success. And by the way, Palin is a conservative who only last month vetoed 13 percent of the state’s proposed budget for capital projects. The cuts, the Anchorage Daily News said, “may be the biggest single-year line-item veto total in state history.”

As recently as last year, Palin (pronounced pale-in) was a political outcast. She resigned in January 2004 as head of the Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission after complaining to the office of Governor Frank Murkowski and to state Attorney General Gregg Renkes about ethical violations by another commissioner, Randy Ruedrich, who was also Republican state chairman.

State law barred Palin from speaking out publicly about ethical violations and corruption. But she was vindicated later in 2004 when Ruedrich, who’d been reconfirmed as state chairman, agreed to pay a $12,000 fine for breaking state ethics laws. She became a hero in the eyes of the public and the press, and the bane of Republican leaders.”
In 2006, she didn’t hesitate. She ran against Gov. Murkowski, who was seeking a second term despite sagging poll ratings, in the Republican primary. In a three-way race, Palin captured 51 percent and won in a landslide. She defeated former Democratic governor Tony Knowles in the general election, 49 percent to 41 percent. She was one of the few Republicans anywhere in the country to perform above expectations in 2006, an overwhelmingly Democratic year. Palin is unabashedly pro life.

With her emphasis on ethics and openness in government, “it turned out Palin caught the temper of the times perfectly,” wrote Tom Kizzia of the Anchorage Daily News. She was also lucky. News broke of an FBI investigation of corruption by legislators between the primary and general elections. So far, three legislators have been indicted.

In the roughly three years since she quit as the state’s chief regulator of the oil industry, Palin has crushed the Republican hierarchy (virtually all male) and nearly every other foe or critic. Political analysts in Alaska refer to the “body count” of Palin’s rivals. “The landscape is littered with the bodies of those who crossed Sarah,” says pollster Dave Dittman, who worked for her gubernatorial campaign. It includes Ruedrich, Renkes, Murkowski, gubernatorial contenders John Binkley and Andrew Halcro, the three big oil companies in Alaska, and a section of the Daily News called “Voice of the Times,” which was highly critical of Palin and is now defunct.
http://www.weeklystandard.com/content/public/articles/000/000/013/851orcjq.asp?pg=1


30 posted on 08/18/2010 10:02:04 PM PDT by ansel12
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To: ansel12

What makes you popular in Alaska will make you very unpopular in other places - California, New York, Massachusetts, Oregon, and Washington, just to name a few.

No one can “unify” the country because we have become several very different groups of people. The real issue is whether someone conservative can win in 2012. Maybe she can - I don’t see anyone else.

As for being well known, Palin was hardly known as anything more than a name outside of ALaska in 2008 before McCain added her to the ticket. Very few people expected a rookie governor from Alaska to be chosen.


36 posted on 08/19/2010 7:56:15 AM PDT by achilles2000 ("I'll agree to save the whales as long as we can deport the liberals")
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