Mayor Palin: A rough record (Time Mag)

Fred

Middle of the road
http://www.time.com/time/politics/article/0,8599,1837918,00.html

Mayor Palin: A Rough Record

John McCain was clear about why he picked half-term Alaska governor Sarah Palin to be his running mate. "I found someone with an outstanding reputation for standing up to special interests and entrenched bureaucracies," he said in introducing her in Dayton, Ohio on Friday. Palin was someone, he noted, "who reached across the aisle and asked Republicans, Democrats and independents to serve in government."

It is a powerful reinforcement of McCain's own political brand: tough, reform-minded, willing to break with his own party for the right cause. And it's true that her high-profile crusade against corruption and complacency in her own state party over the last few years has made Palin the Frank Serpico of Alaska politics: she publicly ratted out her state party chairman, whupped the good old boys network, as she likes to put it, in a gubernatorial primary and fought a general election in which the scandal-stained state GOP didn't lift a finger on her behalf. She only won because she had the enthusiastic backing of independents and grassroots activists.

But in the first major race of her career — the 1996 campaign for mayor of her hometown of Wasilla — Palin was a far more conventional politician. In fact, according to some who were involved in that fight, Palin was a highly polarizing political figure who brought partisan politics and hot-button social issues like abortion and gun control into a mayoral race that had traditionally been contested like a friendly intramural contest among neighbors.

In the early 1990's, Wasilla was little more than half as big as it is today, and much more loosely confederated. The main issue at the time, says longtime resident Chas

St. George, was public safety. "We needed a police department," he says. "So we set up a group to make it happen." That group — Watch on Wasilla — had a handful of the town's most influential figures. That included St. George, the town's mayor John Stein, and Palin, who wasn't in elected office yet. Her father-in-law Jim Palin and his wife Faye were also in the group.

Eventually, they started a police department, led by chief Irl Stambaugh. Kaylene Johnson, author of Sarah, a Palin biography published earlier this year, says that there was another place the power group in town met, a step aerobics class that Stambaugh and Stein took along with Palin. That class signed the original petition for Palin's first political race, for city council in 1992, which she won.

Four years later, she took on her former workout buddy in a race that quickly became contentious. In Stein's view, Palin's main transgression was injecting big-time politics into a small-town local race. "It was always a non-partisan job," he says. "But with her, the state GOP came in and started affecting the race." While Palin often describes that race as having been a fight against the old boy's club, Stein says she made sure the campaign hinged on issues like gun owners' rights and her opposition to abortion (Stein is pro-choice). "It got to the extent that — I don't remember who it was now — but some national anti-abortion outfit sent little pink cards to voters in Wasilla endorsing her," he says.

Vicki Naegele was the managing editor of the Mat-Su Valley Frontiersman at the time. "[Stein] figured he was just going to run your average friendly small-town race," she recalls, "but it turned into something much different than that." Naegele held the same conservative Christian beliefs as Palin, but didn't think they had any place in local politics.

"I just thought, that's ridiculous, she should concentrate on roads, not abortion," says Naegele.

St. George was Stein's campaign manager at the time, and while he says he has no reason to dispute Stein's recollection of events, he doesn't remember Palin's conduct being beyond the pale. "Our tax coffers were starting to grow," he says. "John was for expanding services, and Sarah wasn't. That's what the race was about."

One thing all sides agree on is that the valley was in flux. The old libertarian pioneer ethos was giving way to a rising Christian conservatism. By shrewdly invoking issues that mattered to the ascendant majority, Palin won the mayor's race. But while she may have been a new face, says Naegele, she was no maverick, not yet. "The state party gave her the mechanism to get into that office," says Naegele. "As soon as she was confident enough to brush them off, she did. But she wasn't an outsider to start with, she very much had to kow-tow to them."

Governing was no less contentious than campaigning, at least to begin with. She ended up dismissing almost all the city department heads who had been loyal to Stein, including a few who had been instrumental in getting her into politics to begin with. Some saw it as a betrayal. Stambaugh, the police chief and member of Palin's step aerobics class, filed a lawsuit for wrongful termination, alleging that Palin terminated him in part at the behest of the National Rifle Association, because he had opposed a concealed-gun law the NRA supported. He eventually lost the suit. The animosity spawned some talk of a recall attempt, but eventually Palin's opponents on the City Council opted for a more conciliatory route.

At some point in those the fractious first days, Palin told the department heads they needed her permission to talk to reporters. "She put a gag order on those people, something that you'd expect to find in the big city, not here," says Naegele. "She flew in there like a big city gal, which she's not. It was a strange time, and [the Frontiersman] came out very harshly against her."

Stein says that as mayor, Palin continued to inject religious beliefs into her policy at times. "She asked the library how she could go about banning books," he says, because some voters thought they had inappropriate language in them. "The librarian was aghast." The librarian, Mary Ellen Baker, couldn't be reached for comment, but news reports from the time show that Palin had threatened to fire her for not giving "full support" to the mayor.

St. George, however, points out that Palin couldn't have seen everything through an evangelical lens. She had, he says, notably resisted calls to restrict operating hours for the bars in town. And even if faith did play an unusually large role in her decision-making as mayor, it may have only reflected the continued rise of evangelicism in the valley, a growth that continues to this day.

"We like to call this the Bible Belt of Alaska," says Cheryl Metiva, head of the local chamber of commerce. Churches proliferate in Wasilla today, and among the largest and most influential is the Wasilla Bible Church, where the Palins worship.

At the 11:15 am Sunday service, hundreds sit in folding chairs, sing along with alt-rock praise songs, and listen to a 20-minute sermon about the book of Malachi. The only sign of culture warring in the whole production is an insert in the day's program advertising an upcoming Focus on the Family conference on homosexuality in Anchorage called Love Won Out. The group promises to teach attendees how to "respond to misinformation in our culture" and help them "overcome" homosexuality.

When Palin, who went on to win re-election by a landslide, was finally forced out of the Mayor's office by term limits in 2002, her husband Todd's stepmother Faye Palin ran for Mayor. She did not, however, get Sarah Palin's endorsement. A couple of people told me that they thought abortion was the reason for Palin not supporting her family member — Faye is, they say, pro-choice, not to mention a Democrat. A former city councilman recalls that it was a heated race, mainly because of right-to-life issues. "People were writing 'BABYKILLER' on Faye's campaign signs just a few days before the election." Palin lost the race to the candidate that Sarah backed, Dianne Keller, who is still Mayor of Wasilla. (Over the weekend, Faye Palin told the New York Daily News that she liked listening to Barack Obama speak and that she wasn't sure who she would vote for in November.)

By the time Sarah Palin was entering state politics, the hottest issue in Alaska wasn't gay marriage or even abortion. It was corruption and cronyism. Andrew Halcro, a noted Palin critic who ran against her as an independent in the governor's race, says she knew instinctively that the issues were changing. Plus, he says, her opponents, such as incumbent Governor Frank Murkowski, whom she defeated in the primary, were just as hard-right on abortion and guns as she was.

She needed a new political identity to make it to the next level, so ethics reform became her calling card. "She's a very savvy politician," says Halcro. "So wedge issues were not part of the portfolio."

"If anything," he says, "she got tired of answering questions about them." Halcro recalls one debate in October 2006 in which, after repeated questions about her opposition to abortion even in cases of rape or incest, she looked at the moderator with exasperation and asked if they were going to talk about anything besides abortion. It was detracting from her new message: cleaning up the capitol.

Nor has Palin made social issues the cornerstone of her governorship. When a parental consent law was struck down by Alaska's highest court in 2007, Palin called the decision "outrageous", but refused calls from conservatives to remedy the defeat by introducing anti-abortion legislation in a session that was supposed to be about drilling rights.

Wearing her faith quietly fits more with Palin's personality, says St. George. "In all the years I've known Sarah and her parents, we never talked about right to life or any of that," he says. "She doesn't let those issues get in the way of getting things done for the community."

In the end, her political journey from banner-waving GOP social conservative to maverick reformer may simply be about good timing. It's what former journalist Bill McAllister, who now works for Palin's press staff, used to call "Sarah-dipity" — that uncanny gift of knowing exactly what voters are looking for at a particular moment. And, of course, the political will to give them what they want.
 

FREEBIRD

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Many people hold this position including yours truly. We don't believe in capital punishment for the baby for the crime committed by its father.
 

Safecastle

Emergency Essentials Store
Obviously, TIME's intent here was to try to drum up some opposition furor. They're digging pretty deep. The thing they don't understand is that these same tidbits of insight they put out there serve to fire up a larger segment of the population to support her.

I know TIME has given Obama plenty of ink--and 7 covers if I recall. Anybody have a link to at least one TIME story where they turn up some stones under which the nitty gritty on him is "hiding"?
 

Lone Eagle Woman

Veteran Member
Time .... that Liberal Marxist Rag like so much of the Press! The Liberals are
ALL in a frenzy on Sarah Palin and they ALL seem to be just fuming and fuming
about her. And they are trying everything and anything to try to discredit her
But this will be there (The Liberals) Undoing!
 

Josie

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I haven't got the time or the inclination to read that rag who's only purpose is to line the bottom of the bird cage.
 

RobinYyes

Inactive
Will Dalai 'bama rebuke Time for attacking her do you think? I'm not holding my breath, but I'm not buying tick tock mag either. Just another hit piece indicitive of the fear that the libs are feeling these days.
 

Green

Paranoid in Los Angeles
OK, so she's attractive. We get that part.

Now it comes out she is nothing more than an attractive right wing Dominionist fascist. Or more of the same ole steaming stinking pile of Bushco crap we've been fed for the last 8 years. America, however, is going to put an end to the evangelical influence in political office by dropping her and McSame like the bad nightmare they represent.

Hello November. Bye, bye to insane politics disguised in religion.
 

Bret4207

Senior Member
Wow, so some prefer to take the word of her politcal enimies rather than listen to the folks from Alaska that say she's the real deal and a good person. Huh.
 

Micro

Veteran Member
Hello November. Bye, bye to insane politics disguised in religion.

Then we can all worship Mother Gaia and be penitent for all the evil humans do to her. Then after that we can move to worship at the altar of “science”...:kaid:
 

Conrad Nimikos

Who is Henry Bowman
Gee, Green, I didn't know you had such a way with words. I wonder what you would say if you weren't such a left wing pansy
 
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