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First Draft of Her Story: Sarah Palin Announces What a Future Presidential Campaign May Look Like
Human Events ^ | September 4, 2011 | Tony Lee

Posted on 09/04/2011 10:15:27 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

Sarah Palin​ did not announce whether she would enter the 2012 presidential contest in a fiery and substantive speech in Iowa on Saturday, but she did make three more significant announcements that, in the long run, will potentially be more important than a potential future announcement date.

First, as part of a five point plan to revive America’s economy, Palin called for the elimination of the federal corporate income tax as a way to “break the back of crony capitalism.” Her reasons for eliminating the federal corporate income tax, though, were more important than the actual proposal because it was a way in which she drew a line to differentiate herself from not only President Barack Obama, but nearly every other GOP presidential candidate, most notably Texas Gov. Rick Perry.

Second, on the three year anniversary of her vice presidential acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention in 2008 when Palin, a reform minded governor who had record approval ratings, invigorated the flailing McCain campaign, Palin cast herself squarely as the anti-McCain. Palin said that she could not understand why some people referred to Tea Partiers as “hobbits,” a clear reference to McCain’s remarks that denigrated a political movement his critics claim he shamelessly, like a typical politician, used to get re-elected only to turn his back on it once he got back to his familiar Washington trappings. Palin has written on her Facebook page that America needs a “do-over” in 2012, and her speech gave more fuel to the thought that Palin believes America should get a 2008 rematch against President Obama with her name on top of the Republican ticket.

Third, her speech was significant because, should she choose to enter the presidential race, it put forth a skillfully crafted blueprint that would allow her to seamlessly run a primary and general election campaign at the same time, much like what then candidate Obama did against Hillary Clinton​ and George W. Bush during the 2008 election cycle.

Here are ten significant themes from her speech that serve as the first draft of a future Palin campaign blueprint.

1. Her announcement -- eliminate all federal corporate income tax

As part of a broader plan that focused on the 10th Amendment and devolving powers locally, eliminating ObamaCare and burdensome regulations, eliminating runaway debt by prioritizing and cutting spending and engaging in serious entitlement reform, and using domestic energy production as the “real stimulus” plan, Palin called for an end to the federal corporate income tax.

By eliminating the federal corporate income tax, Palin said America would again be “the most attractive and competitive place” to “hire people” and “attract capital,” which would lead to an “explosion of growth” by creating “millions of high paying jobs.”

To balance out the loss of federal revenue, Palin said, “we eliminate corporate welfare and all the loopholes and all the bailouts,” and, by doing so, “we break the back of crony capitalism because it feeds off corporate welfare, which is socialism for the very rich.”

Palin said that America’s message to businesses and corporations will be, “we will unshackle you, … but you must stand or fall on your own just like the rest of us on Main Street.”

More broadly, eliminating the federal corporate income tax and all the gaming and political maneuvering that accompanies it, according to Palin, will end the culture of corruption that has infested and enriched Washington. According to Palin, seven out the 10 wealthiest places in the nation are suburbs of Washington.

“There may not be a recession in Georgetown,” Palin said, “but there is in rest of America.”

Palin spoke of people who “arrive in Washington of modest means” and “then miraculously, throughout the years, end up very wealthy” because “they derive power and their wealth from their access to our money -- tax payer dollars -- that” they then use to “bail out their friends on Wall Street, their corporate cronies, reward contributors and buy votes via earmarks.”

She called this a system of “corporate crony capitalism” that is “not the capitalism of free man and free markets, of innovation, … of ethics, of sacrifice, and hard work and risk.”

According to Palin, this “collusion of big government and big business and big finance” hurts the “little guy” and is a “slap in the face at small business owners.”

There is nothing in it for the “permanent political class” to change because they have a “lot of mouths to feed” in order to keep “the good times rolling” for the likes of corporate lobbyists.

2. She attacked Perry by implicitly by directly attacking Obama

Palin threw cold water on the members of the mainstream media and the Republican and conservative establishments who erroneously and ignorantly assumed she was going to endorse Texas Gov. Rick Perry. While Palin directly attacked Obama by name, she cleverly and implictly attacked Perry, who has been accused by his critics of being a crony capitalist who engaged in “pay for play” politics.

“I detest crony capitalism,” Palin said, before saying that Obama has shown us “cronyism” on steroids.

The steroids reference was interesting because Perry has often been accused of being “George W. Bush on steroids.”

Palin lambasted Obama for awarding his donors and supporters but also said that GOP candidates needed to be vetted as well.

“Now to be fair, some GOP candidates also raised mammoth amounts of cash, and we need to [also] ask them … what, if anything, do their donors expect in return for their investments,” Palin said. “We need to know this because our country can’t afford more trillion-dollar thank you notes to campaign backers … it is an important question [to ask because] it cuts to the heart our problem.”

According to Palin, such a culture is the “antithesis of the pioneering spirit that built our free and hope filled country.”

These lines were significant because Palin has been the most thoroughly vetted potential candidate in history, especially with the trove of her personal e-mails that were released that only showed her to be the anti-crony capitalist reformer she had claimed she was all along.

3. Copies Obama’s 2008 strategy of having the same message in a primary and general election

More importantly, by running against the “crony capitalism” in the GOP and tying Obama to that same “pay for play” culture, Palin is doing to the GOP and Obama on fiscal issues what what Obama did to Hillary Clinton and George W. Bush in 2008 on issues related to war and peace.

In the 2008 election, Obama ran as a change candidate who was against the wars in which America was mired. Clinton, who voted for the Iraq war, and Bush, who oversaw it, were essentially the same “establishment” Obama skillfully ran and positioned himself against.

Richard Nixon​ famously said that candidates run to the extremes in the primary and dash back toward the center. In modern politics, with the hyper and incessant news cycle that travels with increased levels of velocity, such dexterity is harder to pull off.

It is often why politicians are derided as being no different from porn stars who change positions on camera.

What made the Obama campaign successful in 2008 was that the anti-war and anti-establishment campaign he ran to win the Democratic primary was essentially the exact same campaign he ran against George W. Bush (though John McCain was the nominee) in the general election.

Likewise, should Palin run, she will attempt to do what Obama did in 2008 by running against the GOP establishment and Obama at the same time by tying them both to the crony capitalism culture of Washington.

“The challenge is not to replace Obama,” Palin said, “but who or what to replace” him with.

It is “not enough just to change up the uniform,” Palin said, expressing the frustration of many independent voters have with the two political parties they feel are merely two sides of the same status quo coin. “If we don’t save the team and change the game plan, we won’t save our country.”

Palin said that “candidate Obama pledged to fundamentally transform America” and “that’s the one thing he has delivered on … we’ve transformed from a country of hope to one of anxiety.”

To Palin, only a “sudden and relentless reform” will return power to ‘we the people.’”

4. The anti-McCain

Many conservatives held their noses and voted for McCain in the 2008 elections. Some stayed home.

Their suspicions about McCain as the type of establishment Washington politician who talks a good game and essentially uses the Tea Party for votes while not standing behind their conservative principles were solidified with his “hobbits” comments.

This speech established Palin as someone who would not turn her back on the principles of limited government and fiscal responsibility and the anti-establishment ethos the Tea Party movement holds sacrosanct.

5. Embraces the Tea Party as the true agents of change

Palin said that because of Washington’s reckless lurch to the left, the Tea Party was born of an urgency that was similar to that which “propelled” the “Sons of Liberty during the Revolution,” the “Abolitionists before the Civil War” in addition to the Civil Rights movement in the 20th Century.

Palin said the Tea Party is a part of a “noble American tradition” that comes from ordinary Americans and wrapped herself around this spirit in her speech.

6. Establishes that the establishment is doing to Palin what they are doing to the Tea Party

“Like you, I’m not for sale,” Palin told the audience, in reference to purportedly objective commentators who do not disclose their associations to other candidates while commenting about the 2012 race on television. Palin reiterated that she would not hire establishment hacks just so they can say nice things about her on television.

With that line, Palin firmly established herself as someone who is in line with the spirit of the Tea Party movement.

Part of the reason why the Tea Party is derided is because its members say what is on their minds. In the Twitter age, this can be a boon or a curse, but Palin often uses it to her advantage. Regarding the Obama Administration calling the government a “federal family,” Palin snidely said she “wanted to be emancipated” and, though she never thought she’d say it, wanted “divorce.”

Regarding polls that the permanent political class often uses to self-perpetuate their influence, Palin said that polls are just for “strippers and cross-country skiers.”

And Palin said that while Obama speaks of uniting a red America and a blue America that she represents a “red, white, and blue America.”

Palin told the audience that while it is easy to tell people that tell them to “go to hell” to “go to hell” themselves, they should “keep it classy” because time-tested truths prevail in the end.

In many ways, the entrenched interests in the GOP and the Washington establishment that only want candidates they know they will get a return on investment from to run represents what Palin and the Tea Party movement are fighting against.

And the more these forces try to set false deadlines or prevent Palin from participating in what is purportedly a democratic process, the more she becomes an avatar for a movement that feels the same is being done unto them.

7. United States of Europe?

Palin said that the crony capitalism endemic in Washington is one “that destroyed Europe’s economy.” With all due respect to T.R. Reid, who penned a book titled The United States of Europe, when Herman Cain​ says he will fight so that America doesn’t become “the United States of Europe,” he gets thunderous applause from the audience.

In a primary and general election, Palin can say that the Tea Party movement must be the agent of change that prevents America from being more like Europe. By implication, Palin would also say that Obama’s policies are making America become more like Europe.

8. 2012 will be a “finish the job” election of epic proportions

Palin spoke of an America that is “hurting” and a permanent political class that focuses solely on “symptoms” instead of the “root’ of the disease.

Two great forces have clashed during the last two election cycles. Palin seems like she will argue that in 2008, Obama’s vision of solving America’s problems through big government programs prevailed even though she urged Americans to look past candidate Obama's rhetoric. She will argue that in 2010, the Tea Party movement that was in favor of the liberty and freedom that is often antithetical to big government policies and programs prevailed.

In essence, the 2012 election will be a rubber match between these two forces in which the Obama coalition and the Tea Party coalition will try to finish the job from 2008 and 2010, respectively.

Palin is squarely aligning herself with the latter group because she feels it is the only way for the “heirs of freedom” to pass down the same freedoms they inherited to their heirs.

9. Palin is the only person with a proven track record to battle Obama

Another central argument in Palin’s speech was that her message of change is different from candidate Obama’s and those of other GOP candidates like Perry because, unlike candidate Obama, she has a proven record of having defeated crony capitalists and special interests in Alaska.

“I've seen this crony capitalism before” and “I’’ve defeated in my home state” Palin said. She added that “real reform is hard” and that “sudden and relentless reform never sits well with entrenched interests and power brokers.”

Palin’s message is simple. When she says she’ll clean up Washington, her words, unlike like Obama’s, are not hollow because she cleaned up Alaska.

10. Acknowledgement of “O4P” and “C4P” and her plan show that Palin is running

Many dumbfounded members of the mainstream media who purportedly cover Palin are just familiarizing themselves with “Organize4Palin” and “Conservatives4Palin.” Her acknowledgement of the former struck me as an indication that she is running. “O4P” is a volunteer grassroots network of supporters that will serve as Palin’s de-facto ground game should she run. If she were not running, why would she acknowledge a group of relentless, tireless, and fierce volunteers (whose motto is "Get your Grrrr on") whose sole purpose is to organize on Palin’s behalf to get her elected President?

Further, if Palin were not running, why would she lay out a plan and governing philosophy?

From her speech, the tea leaves can be read simply: Palin sees the 2012 contest as a three way battle among the forces of big government, crony capitalism associated with big business, and a populism rooted in free markets.

Palin’s running for President as a free market populist, and the only questions that remain are when she is going to formally announce and if the electorate will opt for a message of free market populism above those of big government and crony capitalism.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Extended News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: economy; obama; palin; palinsep3speech; perry; sarahpalin; taxes; teaparty; teapartyrebellion
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To: yellowhorse

I so agree on sellout Chambliss. I have detested that man ever since he (and Isakson) teamed up with Kennedy for amnesty in 2006. He’s a sick joke.


81 posted on 09/04/2011 12:30:06 PM PDT by Student0165
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To: techno

“Superb analysis”

Couldn’t agree more...Tony Lee is a bright guy.


82 posted on 09/04/2011 12:32:40 PM PDT by Dansong
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To: HMS Surprise

If you read Sasrah’s book America by Heart...you will find a lot of her philosophy that fits in with her speech plus she lived it in that she wasn’t a creature of crony capitalism throughout her 20 years in public office ...there’s nothing new in the overall message just some specific points coming out now


83 posted on 09/04/2011 12:37:06 PM PDT by Bigtigermike
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To: NTHockey
No third party...Palin would know that would likely lead to another Zer0 term.

...but to your point:...I don't think that it is up to the party these days who gets the nomination....it is up to the people who vote in the primaries, is it not? If Gov Palin runs in the Republican primaries and wins, she would be the Republican candidate whether the "establishment" likes it or not. What are they to do if she wins the primaries?...just give the nomination to Romney?

I would agree with you if we were still stuck with the old convention system where the "delegates" (party hacks) picked the candidates.

Ms Palin is smarter than the average politician...she has the MSM and the party establishment in a constant state of angst.

Both parties and the MSM are formulating polls, sending out hordes of investigators, looking in trash cans, and about any other thing that they can think of to bring her down...but it appears that she gets stronger every day. Every word that she says on Twitter and in her speeches cuts the MSM and party establishment to the bone.

They are absolutely helpless against her.

I think she is running and will operate a campaign like none has been run before.

84 posted on 09/04/2011 12:38:56 PM PDT by B.O. Plenty (Give war a chance...)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Excellent. Bring her on into the presidential race :-).


85 posted on 09/04/2011 12:41:11 PM PDT by GOP Poet (Obama is an OLYMPIC failure.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Excellent. Bring her on into the presidential race :-). Oh. I guess she is already there. Just not officially.


86 posted on 09/04/2011 12:41:45 PM PDT by GOP Poet (Obama is an OLYMPIC failure.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Sarah is running.

After spending a long evening with grass roots supporters at The Machine Shed restaurant in Urbandale, IA. on Friday night, she gives the great speech in Indianola on Saturday and spends an hour after the speech working the rope line. I was at both events and the crowd is reflective of Palin’s wide support. Plenty of young 20 -somethings, many minorities, local farmers, families with their children, ex-military, and on and on. It rained hard for most of the rally but nobody left. A very tiring day though.

What does Palin do on Sunday? She runs a half marathon in Storm Lake, IA! Unannounced and with no fanfare, she finishes and mixes with the crowd. They go wild for her.

She is giving another Tea Party speech in New Hampshire on Monday. I have no idea where she gets the energy at age 47.

Now maybe she isn’t going to run but she sure is making a huge splash in certain key States.


87 posted on 09/04/2011 12:43:14 PM PDT by libertymaker
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To: Semper911
Oh, good call. The Day of Rage is also scheduled to happen on Wall Street in NYC

Grrr, you're right....it's happening on Wall St.

I think there is another event in October that is supposed to be in DC, I got the two mixed up.

Damn commies all look alike and all that....Especially in a scope ;)

88 posted on 09/04/2011 12:44:09 PM PDT by Las Vegas Ron (Rush Limbaugh = the Beethoven of talk radio)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
I can assure you that Sara Palin has gotten very, very wealthy through politics. Not by kick backs or quid pro quo, but by media attention.

Part of the reason she resigned the Gov position was to pursue big time money making ventures while she was still a hot item in the publics eye. Alaska does not pay much.

89 posted on 09/04/2011 12:46:47 PM PDT by rdcbn
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To: libertymaker

Another interesting aspect of Palins “campaign”...is politicians are watching it carefully as well as future candidates.....now why would they bother doing so? Some have stated it’s fasinating and remarkable she has accomplished all she has thus far....and without the standard “walk” most do.

Regardless if Sarah runs or not she has “changed” the political climate in more ways than any other Candidate. If and when she declares....there will no doubt be some frantic moments for her contenders. Even those who oppose her are saying as much.


90 posted on 09/04/2011 12:51:17 PM PDT by caww
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To: Bad~Rodeo

“It’s time she either....”

Whose time?......Yours???????

Sarah will be a candidate and the Republican nominee in the presidential election cycle at the time of her choosing.

Two thoughts......

She can run her campaign’s strategy without imput from you, me, or any political pundits just fine.

If she couldn’t, how could she possibly become a President worthy of the title? (and her recent speech illustrates that she is worthy)

Sarah Palin will be the next President of the United States.........Accept no substitutes.........


91 posted on 09/04/2011 12:53:05 PM PDT by Forty-Niner (Palin/West 2012)
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To: Las Vegas Ron
Especially in a scope ;)

Heh heh so true. Careful though, they'll print your post on MSNBC.

92 posted on 09/04/2011 12:56:03 PM PDT by Semper911 (When you want to rob Peter to pay Paul, you'll always have the support of Paul.)
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To: ishmac; onyx
Palins speech was significant because, should she choose to enter the presidential race, it put forth a skillfully crafted blueprint that would allow her to...... seamlessly run a primary and general election campaign 'at the same time'.

...and some folks question what she's doing as "teasing"...hahahaahahaha...

Interesting is Huntsman is already rebutting her "plan"......pretty amazing the candidates take her seriously regardless of actually formally declaring....the polls list her as a candidate as well....

Makes you wonder who's heads are going to spin most if she does run...or doesn't run...but they will indeed spin on both sides of the aisle either way.

93 posted on 09/04/2011 1:00:12 PM PDT by caww
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To: libertymaker
What does Palin do on Sunday? She runs a half marathon in Storm Lake, IA! Unannounced and with no fanfare, she finishes and mixes with the crowd. They go wild for her.

This is an indication of how she is going to announce her candidacy:

She will probably just casually mention it on the local radio talk show in Alaska, just like she promised to the hosts of the morning drive show.

Can you imagine? Just a casual mention on hometown radio and then the Internet and airwaves explode. Brilliant!

94 posted on 09/04/2011 1:00:20 PM PDT by Semper911 (When you want to rob Peter to pay Paul, you'll always have the support of Paul.)
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To: Bad~Rodeo

The “Drama” is all from people like you who post like this...She will announce (or not) at a time she sees fit. If you can’t trust her to do that...why would you even care if she does?


95 posted on 09/04/2011 1:01:34 PM PDT by carjic (I've always been taught to respect my elders.... but it's getting harder to find any!)
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To: Las Vegas Ron
Gov.Palins reasons for eliminating the federal corporate income tax... were more important than the actual proposal.... because it was a way in which...

.... she drew a line to differentiate herself from not only President Barack Obama, but nearly every other GOP presidential candidate,...... most notably Texas Gov. Rick Perry.

And she did so with class and flair!

96 posted on 09/04/2011 1:04:22 PM PDT by caww
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To: mazda77

“As do her action to specifically reference McCain’s Hobbit sneer that officially put the stamp “Paid In Full” on her past association with him.”

Whens he signed on to the Vp run she was requird to agree to support McCain politically for a period of time and to endorse him. This is the usual agreement and is no different than any other politician who runs for VP.

McCain has not held up his end of this contract and the hobbit remark is a signal to him and to the electorate that her end of the contract has been fulfilled to the letter and spirit of the original agreement. The contract is no more.

The analysis is the best I have ever seen and it is a great jumping off point for others.

Run Sarah, Run!


97 posted on 09/04/2011 1:04:44 PM PDT by texmexis best
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To: Nervous Tick

She endorsed him for Governor of Texas. Not President of USA. BIG difference.


98 posted on 09/04/2011 1:05:12 PM PDT by carjic (I've always been taught to respect my elders.... but it's getting harder to find any!)
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To: duckman

If she runs, she’s the POTUS—if not she pleasantly slides into peaceful,tranquil,no more evil attacks on her and her family,obscurity.
She can’t lose either way.


99 posted on 09/04/2011 1:06:16 PM PDT by Happy Rain ("11/4/2008: The day America elected a pyromaniac in the middle of a fire storm.")
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To: Nervous Tick

Sorry wrong poster.


100 posted on 09/04/2011 1:06:46 PM PDT by carjic (I've always been taught to respect my elders.... but it's getting harder to find any!)
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