Posts Tagged ‘Palin’

The Making (and Remaking) of McCain

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MAGAZINE PREVIEW
This article will appear in this Sunday’s Times Magazine.
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Lauren Greenfield/VII, for The New York Times

STUMPED SPEECH Sarah Palin and John McCain at the Delaware County Courthouse in Media, Pa., on Sept. 22. As late as June, one aide said, the campaign could not agree on an answer to the question ‘‘Why elect John McCain?’’

By ROBERT DRAPER
Published: October 22, 2008
On the morning of Wednesday, Sept. 24, John McCain convened a meeting in his suite at the Hilton hotel in Midtown Manhattan. Among the handful of campaign officials in attendance were McCain’s chief campaign strategist, Steve Schmidt, and his other two top advisers: Rick Davis, the campaign manager; and Mark Salter, McCain’s longtime speechwriter. The senator’s ears were already throbbing with bad news from economic advisers and from House Republican leaders who had told him that only a small handful in their ranks were willing to support the $700 billion bailout of the banking industry proposed by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson. The meeting was to focus on how McCain should respond to the crisis — but also, as one participant later told me, “to try to see this as a big-picture, leadership thing.”

As this participant recalled: “We presented McCain with three options. Continue offering principles from afar. A middle ground of engaging while still campaigning. Then the third option, of going all in. The consensus was that we could stay out or go in — but that if we’re going in, we should go in all the way. So the thinking was, do you man up and try to affect the outcome, or do you hold it at arm’s length? And no, it was not an easy call.” Continue reading »

Study: McCain coverage mostly negative

POLITICO  

By MICHAEL CALDERONE | 10/22/08 1:59 PM EDT 
  

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Just 14 percent of the stories about John McCain from the conventions through the final presidential debate were positive in tone, according to a study.
Photo: AP
 

The good news for John McCain? He’s now receiving as much attention from the national media as his Democratic rival. The bad news? It’s overwhelmingly negative.

Just 14 percent of the stories about John McCain, from the conventions through the final presidential debate, were positive in tone, according to a study released today, while nearly 60 percent were negative — the least favorable coverage of any of the four candidates on the two tickets.

The study, by The Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism, a nonpartisan journalism watchdog organization, examined 2,412 stories from 43 newspapers and cable news shows in the six-week period beginning just after the conventions and ending with the final presidential debate.

“Much of the increased attention for McCain derived from actions by the senator himself, actions that, in the end, generated mostly negative assessments,” the study found. “In many ways, the arc of the media narrative during this phase of the 2008 general election might best be described as a drama in which John McCain acted and Barack Obama reacted.”

Indeed, the increased and increasingly negative media attention for McCain isn’t surprising when looking at how the campaign’s strategy changed since the beginning of the general election.

“We ran a different kind of campaign and nobody cared about us,” spokesman Brian Rogers told Politico last month, adding later that “we intend to stay on offense.”

For Barack Obama, the study found coverage “has been somewhat more positive than negative, but not markedly so,” with 36 percent of the stories positive in tone, 35 percent mixed, and 29 percent negative.

So do these numbers reveal a pro-Obama bias? Not necessarily, according to the study’s authors.

Rather, they say, the statistics “do offer a strong suggestion that winning in politics begat winning coverage, thanks in part to the relentless tendency of the press to frame its coverage of national elections as running narratives about the relative position of the candidates in the polls and internal tactical maneuvering to alter those positions.”

While McCain left St. Paul, Minn., with mostly positive coverage, Obama started out the same period with mostly negative press. But as things turned in the polls, and especially in articles about detailing the electoral map, Obama’s coverage became more favorable.

Obama’s numbers, in fact, are in line with past presidential candidates around the same time periods in the 2000 and 2004 races. It’s McCain’s coverage that has been extraordinarily negative in tone.

On the vice presidential side, Sarah Palin received three times as much attention as Joe Biden, though the two candidates atop each ticket are again receiving far more attention than their running mate as the campaign has moved into the home stretch.

Coverage of Palin, the study found, went from “quite positive” to “very negative” to “more mixed.” Overall, the six-week breakdown showed 29 percent positive, 39 percent negative and 33 percent neutral.

While Biden has received far less coverage that the other three candidates, the study found the stories about him were “far more negative than Palin’s, and nearly as negative as McCain’s.”

In examining tone, the project’s authors wrote that they took a “cautious and conservative approach,” only judging a story positive or negative if the slant was very clear.

 

Palin Claims Vice President ‘In Charge of the U.S. Senate’

Posted by Ryan Powers, Think Progress at 12:03 PM on October 21, 2008.

Governor, there’s this great document called the Constitution that you should really take a look at.

Steve Benen Washington Monthly

 

Yesterday, Gov. Sarah Palin (R-AK) sat for an interview with KUSA, an NBC affiliate in Colorado. In response to a question sent to the network by a third grader at a local elementary school about what the Vice President does, Palin erroneously argued that the Vice President is “in charge of the United States Senate“:

Q: Brandon Garcia wants to know, “What does the Vice President do?”

PALIN: That’s something that Piper would ask me! … [T]hey’re in charge of the U.S. 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.

Watch it:

Continue reading »

The ‘Socialist’ Scare

By Ruth Marcus
Wednesday, October 22, 2008; The Washington Post

WOODBRIDGE — John McCain should not have to be here, not on a crisp October Saturday scarcely two weeks before the election. Prince William County is the electoral Maginot line between the Washington suburbs and what a McCain spokeswoman has just unhelpfully described as “real Virginia.” George W. Bush twice won 53 percent of the vote in this booming exurb, mirroring his statewide totals.
But here is McCain, in front of one sign reading “Phil the Bricklayer” and another proclaiming “Rose the Teacher.” If there are any undecided voters here, I have not found them, and McCain does not seem to be looking. His red-meat message is not pitched to the wavering. Continue reading »

Palin’s Staffers Keep Her Away From the News to Avoid Being ‘Depressed’

Posted by Katharine Zaleski, Huffington Post at 10:43 AM on October 17, 2008.

This is so Bush-like it’s scary … and kind of sad.
Steven Rosenfeld

A day after The Washington Post’s Dana Milbank wrote about how the Secret Service is blocking press at Sarah Palin’s rallies, it appears Palin’s staff is blocking her from listening to the press. Palin revealed at a fundraiser last night that she is in an ever-growing media bubble.

“So North Carolina, I appreciate you all so much, who are here who already get it. You know, maybe I’m preaching to the choir a little bit here, but being here encourages me because I know that I’m not alone and I’ll send this message back to John McCain also. At those times on the campaign trail when sometimes it’s easy to get a little bit discouraged, when, you know, when you happen to turn on the news when your campaign staffers will let you turn on the news,” she said, prompting laughter from the group. “Usually they’re like ‘Oh my gosh, don’t watch. You’re going to, you know, you’re going to get depressed.’”

She added that while she doesn’t always appreciate the way reporters portray the GOP ticket, she’s been bolstered by the prayers of many of the campaign’s backers.

“But yeah, sometimes you do get depressed watching what it is that they’re reporting and the spin and some of the distortion of what our message is and what we stand for. Sometimes that, that gets draining,” she continued. “But it’s at events like these and our rallies that we are so energized and inspired and we know that we are not alone. We feel your strength and we feel the power of prayer, so many of you tell us that you are praying for us and praying for our country and that’s why we so appreciate you being here.”

Palin also attributed polling numbers to God. “We even saw today, thank the Lord,” she said, looking upwards and raising her fist, “We saw some movement.”

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Katharine Zaleski has been the News Editor of the Huffington Post since May 2005.

Webb Tells Virginians: ‘You Should Trust Barack Obama’

washingtonpost.com
Oct 17, 2008
By Shailagh Murray


ROANOKE — Democratic Sen. Jim Webb, a favorite son of western Virginia, offered a rousing introduction to Sen. Barack Obama and a few choice words about Sarah Palin at an event here today.

On Obama, he sought to dispel some myths. “I know what it’s like to be involved in a Karl Rove campaign, and it’s not fun, folks,” said Webb, referring to his bruising battle in 2006 against GOP incumbent George Allen. “And the last several months we have seen that same type of campaign conducted against Barack Obama. What they do is they say, ‘That person’s not like you. That person doesn’t understand you. You can’t trust ‘em.’”

“Let me tell you,” Webb continued. “First of all, Barack Obama is like you. He knows what it’s like to struggle.”

He offered a few biographical facts, to clear up possible misconceptions. “There’s a lot of comments that have been made about certain ethnic issues in this campaign,” Webb said. “I would like to say we know Barack Obama’s father was born in Kenya. Barack Obama’s mother was born in Kansas by way of Kentucky. We are going to see on Election Day the election of the 14th president of the United States whose ancestry, whose family line goes back to the mountains of this area.”

“I grew up moving all over the place,” Webb told the crowd. “I was a boxer for eight years. I served in the Marine Corps in Vietnam. I’m a very skeptical person. When I say I trust somebody, I mean it. I trust Barack Obama and you should trust Barack Obama.”

Moving on to Obama’s rival, Sen. John McCain, Webb called the Arizona Republican ” a friend,” but questioned his leadership skills, citing the GOP nominee’s pick as a running mate.

“Do you really think that Sarah Palin is the most qualified person?” Webb asked, to resounding boos. “How many people here like country music? I like country music. There was a song about two years ago, it was called, ‘I know what I was doing, but what was I thinking?’”

THE EDGE: 5 short takes on the debates

The Seattle Times Company

Four debates, 61,000 words, plenty of spin, sighs, smirks and grimaces, one plumber. What to take away from the three debates between Barack Obama and John McCain and the single faceoff between Joe Biden and Sarah Palin? Five AP reporters help sort it all out.

WASHINGTON -

Four debates, 61,000 words, plenty of spin, sighs, smirks and grimaces, one plumber. What to take away from the three debates between Barack Obama and John McCain and the single faceoff between Joe Biden and Sarah Palin? Five AP reporters help sort it all out.

Continue reading »

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