CAMPAIGN 2008

"She's Just Like Your Neighbor"

The Alaska delegation proudly backs its new star

Suddenly in the Spotlight

9/3/08: NEWSWEEK's Suzanne Smalley talks to the Alaska delegation about the uniqueness of their state and their governor (Producer/Camera/Editor: Lee Wang)

 
 
 

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When the 29 members of the Alaska delegation gathered on the convention floor in St. Paul yesterday evening, they were mobbed by reporters—some from as far away as Italy. The delegates, who wore identical drilling helmets and yellow and orange fluorescent vests decorated with a large color photo of caribou grazing in Alaska's Prudhoe Bay oil field (to advertise their support for drilling in Alaska's National Wildlife Refuge), were hard to miss. That was the point. The Alaskans happily submitted to questions from journalists, eager to dispel myths about their state and to talk up their governor.

Bill Noll, a 69-year-old delegate from Anchorage who has known vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin since 2002, said Alaskans should expect the scrutiny (except about Palin's teenage daughter's pregnancy, which he called irrelevant). What matters is that Palin is down-to-earth, accessible, and will help Alaskans change their state's image from a sleepy backwater. "America is really good at this—having people come out of the soil in the small towns—Truman did it," he said. "Sarah's like that. She's a real person with a shiny personality."

Noll and other Alaska delegates said they are excited about Palin's ascension to the presidential ticket because she is one of them and understands how they live. Many delegates cited Palin's support for drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) and said they hope she convinces John McCain to reconsider his steadfast opposition to using the protected territory for oil production. Gene Brokaw, 67, also a delegate, explained that the ANWR is larger than many other entire states, but that the area under consideration for drilling, is no bigger than a medium-sized airport. Palin understands how important it is to start producing our own oil, Brokaw said, and she shares his belief that opening the ANWR to drilling will be an economic boon for Alaska. "It will bring good jobs to Alaska because ANWR is not the most hospitable part of the state (so currently it is not developed)," he said. "It's bum ugly up there. She understands—she's been there, she knows, she's seen." Brokaw also praised Palin's ethics, saying she quickly won support from Alaskans because she is a reformer and has gone after "some people that were on the take" in a state that has long been plagued by corruption.

Chris Nelson, the 64-year-old chair of Alaska's delegation, emphasized something simpler. Palin is a friend to her constituents, he said. "She's one of the most approachable public figures you've ever met," he said. "There's nothing pretentious about her. She's just like your neighbor." Nelson said he recently encountered Palin and her husband at a seminar that Todd Palin gave on snowmobile racing. Palin and Nelson spent several minutes chatting and they toured the displays together, looking at the vehicles.

Nelson also praised Palin for her hobbies—she is an avid fisher and a lifelong hunter. Nelson said Palin and her husband have fished Alaska's Bristol Bay for years and even named their 17-year-old daughter Bristol after the body of water. Nelson said Todd Palin's decision to go by the moniker "First Dude" is a good example of how the couple fits in with average folks. "It's what we're all comfortable calling him," Nelson said. "We're kind of skeptical of people who are pretentious [and the Palins] have a great sense of humor."

Other Alaska delegates instead focused on Palin's competence, but spoke with equal pleasure. Mel Krogseng, a 66-year-old woman from Soldotna, a small town bordering Alaska's Kenai River, said that the media has been unfair to Alaskans by portraying the state as too small to count for much on a resume. She said Alaska might have a small population, but its landmass is huge, with one of the longest coastlines in the country. "We have a huge budget," she said. "Sarah has dealt with very important issues [such as] fisheries issues with Russia...Being governor of our state gives you tremendous experience."

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  • Posted By: UScitizen @ 09/07/2008 11:01:20 AM

    And yet she has more experience than Obama, who IS a Presidential nominee... THINK.

  • Posted By: dachpy arvile @ 09/07/2008 2:31:27 AM

    Why worry about it? If it had been Michelle Obama, she would have aborted (preferably with partial-birth abortion so she could watch the baby twitch and squirm as its brain was mutilated with scissors and sucked out with a vacuum tube while it was alive without anesthetic) it as soon as she knew it had Down's Syndrome! I'd pick Palin over Obama any day of the year.

    The Obamas are monsters of first order who would not be willing to punish their daughters with a baby if they were to get pregnant. They'd simply abort those fetuses. We know this is true because Obama himself has gone on record before this election campaign and stated that there should be no restrictions on abortion.

    I have the survey in my hot little hands that he claimed in front of voters that he never saw but which actually has his own handwriting on it! Kind of a hard thing to put your handwriting on something when you haven't seen it, now isn't it?!?

    I am glad that she took the baby to work with her! She is the baby's mother. Besides, the baby took it quite well and was calm for most of the proceedings. I say, Good on her for bringing her infant with her instead of sticking it in day-care like much of the Obama crowd would prefer for themselves and for others to do!

  • Posted By: dachpy arvile @ 09/06/2008 4:09:16 PM

    Enter Your CommentNo, the Republicans have not bankrupted the country. The truth is that oil prices and unaffordable loans and running credit cards up to the limits have done so. Yes, wars cost money and we have spent a lot in that direction but not as much as many think. In addition, the Trade Deficit is very different than most people realize.

    Clinton had that surplus because of what was set in place by both Reagan and Bush, Sr. Does no one remember how well the economy was doing just a couple years ago??? Why is it that people remember the bad times more than the good times? Hmmm.....???

    Obama will bring change alright--just not the change you are looking for. The stock market plunged at the news that Obama was nominated. Or, does no one remember that, either? There is a reason for that. Businesses are frightened by the prospect of Obama becoming POTUS. He already has vowed to increase their tax burdens. They will end up shipping more jobs overseas or laying more people off if Obama keeps at least that promise. Don't believe it? Just wait and see for yourselves should he get in--well, if he can demonstrate that he was born an American, that is.

    As it stands now, the birth certificate on his official websites is a forgery and several sources have come forward that seem to indicate that Obama (a.k.a. Barry Suetoro) is an Indonesian national! A lawyer just was notified that Obama was served with papers demanding that a court grant that Obama (a.k.a. Suetoro) be forced to provide a valid US birth certificate as proof of American citizenship. :-)

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