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Palin Doesn’t Think She’s To Blame For Defeat

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PHOENIX – Was it Sarah Palin’s fault? She doesn’t think so.

She was asked this morning if her selection as John McCain’s running mate might have been a factor in his defeat yesterday.

She responded that nobody should give her that much credit. Instead, she says, voters were swayed by what she called a “woeful” economic situation.

But she adds that if she cost McCain even one vote, she’s sorry — because she believes McCain is the definitive American hero, and that she “had believed that it was his time.”

Just under 40 percent of voters who were surveyed at the polls yesterday said Palin would be qualified to become president if necessary. And about four in 10 independents said Palin’s selection had an important impact on their decision — with a narrow majority of them supporting Obama.

Palin Tells Kids The VP ‘Runs’ Senate

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WASHINGTON – Asked by a third-grader what a vice president does, Republican candidate Sarah Palin responded that the vice president is the president’s “team mate” but also “runs the Senate” and “can really get in there with the senators and make a lot of good policy changes.”

While aimed at a typical 8-year-old, Palin’s explanations oversimplify the Constitution’s definition of the duties of the vice president and don’t match the office’s traditional role in Senate activities.

The vice president’s main duty is to replace the president if the president dies, resigns, is removed from office or can no longer carry out his or her duties for other reasons. The Constitution names the vice president as the president of the Senate but allows the vice president to cast a vote only to break a tie.

The vice president, as a member of the executive branch of the government, has no official role in developing legislation or determining how it is presented to or debated by the Senate, which is part of the legislative branch. In all meaningful ways, the leader of the majority party runs the Senate.

Traditionally, the vice president appears in the Senate for ceremonial events and in case of a tie vote. Although the vice president can preside over the Senate, vice presidents have left that day-to-day chore to senators themselves. In the past, each president has determined the role of the vice president in an administration.
  
The subject of the vice president’s duties came up as Palin sat for an interview with KUSA-TV in Denver, which has a feature called “Question from the Third Grade.” The interviewer asked, “Brandon Garcia wants to know, ‘What does the vice president do?”‘

“That’s a great question, Brandon, and a vice president has a really great job, because not only are they there to support the president’s agenda, they’re like the team member, the team mate to that president,” Palin said.

“But also, they’re in charge of the United States Senate, so if they want to they can really get in there with the senators and make a lot of good policy changes that will make life better for Brandon and his family and his classroom. And it’s a great job and I look forward to having that job,” she said.

Biden Coming To NC Thursday

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RALEIGH, N.C. – Senator Joe Biden will return to North Carolina Thursday and will hold Change We Need Rallies in the Charlotte area, Winston-Salem and Raleigh. 

Biden was last in North Carolina on Sept. 27, when he appeared in Greensboro with Senator Barack Obama. 

Details of the Charlotte visit have not been announced.

Winston-Salem
Wake Forest University
Hearn Plaza outside of Reynolda Hall
2240 Reynolda Rd
Winston-Salem, NC  27106

Doors Open: 12:15pm
Program Begins: 2:15pm

Raleigh
Meredith College
McIver Amphitheater
3800 Hillsborough,
Raleigh, NC 27607

Doors Open: 5 p.m.
Program Begins: 7 p.m.

The events are free and open to the public.  Tickets are NOT required, but an RSVP is strongly encouraged. Members of the public are invited to RSVP at www.nc.barackobama.com.  Space is available on a first-come, first-served basis.

Tickets Still Available For Palin’s NC Visit

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Tickets are available for Gov. Sarah Palin’s first visit to North Carolina tomorrow.

Palin will hold a rally in Greenville Tuesday. Doors Open at 4 p.m. The event takes place at Williams Arena at Minges Coliseum, East Carolina University, 1 Ficklen Drive in Greenville.

After the rally concludes, attedees are invited to join fellow McCain-Palin supporters to watch the second Presidential Debate.

Tickets for the event are available for pickup at all North Carolina Victory Offices. Tickets are free of charge and will be distributed on a first come, first serve basis.

For additional information, call 919-828-6423 or email email@ncgop.org

Ticket Distribution Offices:

Asheville Victory Office
16 Regent Park Blvd, Suite I
Asheville, NC 28806
(919) 866-2130

Boone Victory Office
149 Meadowview Drive
Boone, NC 28607
(573) 647-1616

Charlotte Victory Office
1515 Mockingbird Lane, Suite 218
Charlotte, NC 28209
(704) 910-0696

Cornelius Victory Office
8301-17 Magnolia State Drive
Cornelius, NC 28031
(704) 987-4301

Durham Victory Office
4600 Durham Chapel Hill Blvd
Durham, NC 27707
(919) 539-5928

Fayetteville Victory Office
201 S. McPherson Church Road, Suite 204
Fayetteville, NC 28303
(910) 864-6584

Gastonia Victory Office
224 South New Hope Road
Gastonia, NC 28055
(704) 868-3330

Goldsboro Victory Office
147 South Center Street
Goldsboro, NC 27530
(573) 647-9016

Greensboro / High Point Victory Office
3800 Tinsley Road, Suite 103
High Point, NC 27265
(336) 885-0467

Greenville Victory Office
103B Commerce Street
Greenville, NC 27858
(252) 321-1996

Hickory Victory Office
1899 Tate Blvd. SE, Suite 1105
Hickory, NC 28602
(828) 324-1639

Jacksonville Victory Office
487 Western Blvd
Jacksonville, NC 28540
(910) 347-7442

Laurinburg Victory Office
684 Highway 401 North
Laurinburg, NC 28532
(919) 862-6079

Raleigh Victory Office
1506 Hillsborough Street
Raleigh, NC 27605
(919) 828-6423

Rocky Mount Victory Office
1826 Sunset Avenue
Rocky Mount, NC 27804
(919) 862-6183

Salisbury Victory Office
100 West Innes Street
Salisbury, NC 28144
(919) 827-5949

Wilmington Victory Office
3145 Wrightsville Avenue
Wilmington, NC 28403
(910) 251-8493

Winston-Salem Victory Office
2110 Cloverdale Ave, Suite D
Winston Salem, NC 27013
(336) 724-6000

 

 

 

 

 

Candidates Spar On Energy, Taxes, War

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ST. LOUIS — Republican Sarah Palin and Democrat Joe Biden sparred over taxes, energy policy and the Iraq war in a high-profile debate in which Palin sought to reclaim her identity as a feisty reformer and Biden tried to undercut the maverick image of GOP presidential hopeful John McCain.

“I think things went very well last night,” Palin said Friday as she flew to Texas for a fundraiser. “It was energizing and I was happy to have had the opportunity.”

Palin, in the 90-minute forum broadcast Thursday night from Washington University in St. Louis, was under intense pressure to show basic competence on issues facing the next president after a series of embarrassing television interviews called into question her readiness for high office.

For the most part she appeared confident and folksy while casting Biden and Democratic standard bearer Barack Obama as tax-raisers who would risk defeat in Iraq and the broader war on terror.

Two quick polls indicated that Biden fared better in the debate. A CBS News/Knowledge Networks Poll found that 46 percent of uncommitted voters who watched the debate thought Biden won, with 21 percent siding with Palin. A CNN poll found respondents judging Biden the winner by a margin of 51 percent to 36 percent but calling Palin more likable by 54 percent to Biden’s 36 percent.
 
Palin tried to portray the Democrats as obsessed with the failures of President Bush even as she acknowledged his Republican administration was responsible for “huge blunders” in the war and elsewhere.

“For a ticket that wants to talk about change and looking into the future, there’s just too much finger-pointing backwards to ever make us believe that that’s where you’re going,” Palin said, saying she and McCain were the real change agents in the race.

But Palin also sidestepped certain questions, pivoting at times to talking points and generalities.

Asked by moderator Gwen Ifill if she would support legislation allowing debt-strapped mortgage holders to file for bankruptcy to get out from under that debt, Palin said yes but avoided details, quickly steering the focus back to a more general discussion of the “toxic mess” in the financial industry.

And asked how she as vice president would help reduce partisanship in Washington, she said, “Let’s commit ourselves just every day American people, Joe Six Pack, hockey moms across the nation, I think we need to band together and say never again.”

Biden, for his part, largely avoided direct challenges to Palin and instead worked to undermine McCain, who has sought throughout the campaign to distance himself from the unpopular Bush.

The Delaware senator repeatedly noted that McCain had sided with Bush on crucial issues, from launching the war in Iraq to tax policies that widened the income disparity between rich and poor.

“He’s been a maverick on some issues, but he has been no maverick on the things that matter to people’s lives,” Biden said of McCain, noting that the Arizona senator had voted for Bush’s budget proposals and against legislation providing heating oil assistance to low income families and enrolling more children in government-sponsored health insurance.

The candidates traded jabs on energy. Palin criticized the Democratic ticket for opposing offshore oil drilling while Biden chided McCain for voting against proposals in the Senate to expand the development of alternative energy sources.

Palin repeatedly mentioned Obama’s vote in 2005 for an energy bill that allowed oil companies to receive large corporate tax breaks, saying she had worked to stop such corporate greed among oil interests in Alaska.

“Bless their hearts … they’re not my biggest fans,” Palin said of executives at ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips.

Palin also restated her controversial view that climate change is largely due to cyclical changes in the earth’s atmosphere and not primarily caused by human behavior. Biden disagreed, saying climate change was caused by man.

On taxes, Biden reaffirmed his position that it was “patriotic” for people who earn more than $250,000 to pay additional taxes. Obama’s tax plan would cut taxes for about 90 percent of Americans, Biden said.

When Palin called his position a “redistribution of wealth principle,” Biden shot back, observing that McCain wanted to reduce taxes on businesses and the very rich.

“We don’t call a redistribution in my neighborhood Scranton, Claymont, Wilmington, the places I grew up … to say that not giving ExxonMobil another $4 billion tax cut this year as John calls for and giving it to middle class people to be able to pay to get their kids to college. We call that fairness,” Biden said.

On social issues, the candidates both said they supported partnership rights for gay and lesbian partners but opposed same sex marriage.

The exchange over Iraq was personal for the two candidates, both of whom have sons set to deploy there with military units.

“Your plan is a white flag of surrender in Iraq and that is not what our troops need to hear today, that’s for sure,” Palin told Biden, who like Obama supports a timetable to remove U.S. troops from the region.

“You guys opposed the surge,” Palin said, referring to Bush’s decision in 2007 to send an additional 30,000 combat troops to Iraq. “The surge worked. Barack Obama still can’t admit the surge works.”

Biden defended Obama’s vote in May 2007 not to fund military operations in Iraq unless a timeline was set for withdrawal, even though Biden sharply criticized the Illinois senator’s vote at the time. And Biden tried to turn the table on McCain, questioning his judgment on the Iraq conflict from the beginning.

Palin To Stop In NC For Fundraiser

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Republican Vice Presidential candidate Sarah Palin will be in Greensboro Oct. 16 for a fundraiser.

Questions Raised About Moderator’s Impartiality

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NEW YORK – PBS journalist Gwen Ifill, moderator of the upcoming vice presidential debate, dismissed conservative questions about her impartiality because she is writing a book that includes material on Barack Obama.

Ifill said Wednesday that she hasn’t even written her chapter on Obama for the book “The Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama,” which is to be published by Doubleday on Jan. 20, 2009, the day a new president is inaugurated.
 
“I’ve got a pretty long track record covering politics and news, so I’m not particularly worried that one-day blog chatter is going to destroy my reputation,” Ifill said. “The proof is in the pudding. They can watch the debate tomorrow night and make their own decisions about whether or not I’ve done my job.”

The day before the Joe Biden-Sarah Palin debate, columnist Michelle Malkin wrote in the New York Post about Ifill’s book, saying, “She’s so far in the tank for the Democratic presidential candidate, her oxygen delivery line is running out.”
 
John McCain, though, spoke highly of the reporter in an interview with FOX News Channel. “I think Gwen Ifill is a professional and I think she will do a completely objective job because she is a highly respected professional,” he said Wednesday.

In its online description of the book, Doubleday says that Ifill “surveys the American political landscape, shedding new light on the impact of Barack Obama’s stunning presidential campaign and introducing the emerging young African American politicians forging a bold new path to political power.”

Ifill said Obama’s story, which she has yet to write, is only a small part of the book, which discusses how politics in the black community have changed since the civil rights era. Among those subjects is Colin Powell, secretary of state in the Bush administration.
 
The host of PBS’ “Washington Week” and senior correspondent on “The NewsHour” said she did not tell the Commission on Presidential Debates about the book. The commission had no immediate comment when contacted by The Associated Press. A spokeswoman for John McCain’s campaign did not immediately return phone and e-mail messages.

Ifill’s resume includes jobs at The New York Times, the Washington Post and NBC News. She moderated the 2004 vice presidential debate between Dick Cheney and John Edwards.

She said it was the publisher, not herself, who set the Inauguration Day release date. It will be released then whether Obama wins or loses.

Although Malkin raised the topic of Ifill’s impartiality the day before the debate, the PBS journalist said that Time magazine noted she was writing a book in August, and that it has been available for pre-sale on Amazon.com. The book also is mentioned in a Sept. 4 interview she gave the Washington Post.

Ifill questions why people assume that her book will be favorable toward Obama.

“Do you think they made the same assumptions about Lou Cannon (who is white) when he wrote his book about Reagan?” said Ifill, who is black. Asked if there were racial motives at play, she said, “I don’t know what it is. I find it curious.”

Moderator Still On For VP Debate Despite Breaking Ankle

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NEW YORK – Gwen Ifill has a broken ankle, but she’ll still serve as the upcoming vice presidential debate’s moderator.

The veteran PBS newswoman tripped in her Washington area home while walking downstairs Monday, carrying material she was using to prep for the debate between Joe Biden and Sarah Palin.

Despite the pain, doctors have given her the OK to travel to St. Louis, where the vice presidential debate is scheduled for Thursday.

“Another crazy twist in a crazy week,” Ifill said, confirming her injury in an e-mail.
 
Ifill is moderator of PBS’ “Washington Week” and senior correspondent on “The NewsHour.”

Wake GOP To Hold VP Debate Watch Party

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RALEIGH, N.C. — The Wake County Republican party invites you to join 200 of your fellow Wake County Republicans to cheer on Governor Sarah Palin as she debates Joe Biden in the Vice Presidential debate. 

The group will gather at the Raleighwood Cinema from 8:45 to 11 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 2 to watch Governor Palin take on Joe Biden on the big screen.  Go to www.WakeGOP.org  to order your tickets.

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