Palin's representatives say she was not a member, the AIP says she was. I'm sure Palin will actually speak to the press one of these days.
Meanwhile, a little report from the Republican Convention:
Here in St. Paul, talk of Palin has dominated the Republican convention—even more so than cable news—and by Monday night discussion among Republican operatives and reporters had turned to whether Palin would survive or become the first running mate since Thomas Eagleton in 1972 to leave a major-party ticket. On Monday, the InTrade futures market opened trading on whether Palin would withdraw before the election.
With reporters and opposition researchers crawling through Alaska, and with the McCain campaign having dispatched its own team of lawyers to re-vet Palin, Republicans are wondering what shoe might drop next. If further revelations prove damaging enough, McCain could decide to replace Palin or she could choose to withdraw. While such an event seems unlikely given her popularity in some quarters of the party—Jacob Heilbrunn has suggested that social conservatives would view her ouster as “political infidelity”—her rocky reception makes the “Eagleton scenario,” and how it might unfold, a subject of more than academic interest.
-edit-
Oh, yeah, I'm sure they want to have a vote on the status of their statehood 'cause, um, they just want to affirm how much they love the United States. That's the only logical explanation. That's why both the Republicans and the Democrats also want to have votes about whether or not the Union should stay together. It's like having a re-marriage, you know.
Sheesh. Let me know if you pull anything twisting yourself into these contorted positions, friend.
Bookmarks