The LD Podcast Tumblr Blog

the purpose of this blog is to collect information and links from blogs i find interesting all over the 'net.  Some will be LD related, others will be parenting tips, and I reserve the right to throw in a few surprises as well.  Hope you enjoy!
Jan 03
Permalink
Oct 13
Permalink
Sep 29
Permalink
Sep 11
Permalink

And Ending Politics as Usual?

Article from Bloomberg, September 11, 2008

Palin’s Ethics Scrapes May Undercut Pledge to End Old Politics

By Timothy J. Burger and Tony Hopfinger

Enlarge Image/Details

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) — John McCain’s choice of Sarah Palin as his running mate sent a signal that he would end business as usual and cronyism in government. Her record shows the Alaska governor engaged in some of the same practices she and McCain now condemn.

Palin’s office approved a state job for a friend and campaign aide with whom she shared a land investment, financial records and interviews over the past two weeks show. She hired a former lobbyist for a pipeline company to help oversee a multibillion-dollar deal with that same company.

She named a police chief accused of harassment to head the state police. And she sent campaign e-mails on her city hall account while serving as mayor of Wasilla — conduct for which she later turned in an oil commissioner on ethics charges.

These incidents raise “some serious questions about her judgment and serious questions about her standards of ethics in public service,” said James Thurber, director of American University’s Center for Congressional and Presidential Studies in Washington. Suggesting a real estate investment partner for a job “may be acceptable in Alaska; it would not be acceptable in Washington, D.C., a place whose norms she wants to change.”

Palin defeated an incumbent governor, a fellow Republican, in 2006 charging that her party’s old guard had committed ethical lapses and become too cozy with special interests, including oil companies. A central theme in this year’s presidential campaign has been that Palin’s record demonstrates the change a McCain administration would bring to Washington.

Recent statements by the governor may erode that claim. In her acceptance speech last week, she suggested that she opposed the infamous “Bridge to Nowhere,” a $223 million earmark for a bridge to an island where only 53 people lived.

For It, Against It

When Palin, 44, campaigned for governor, however, she said she was in favor of the bridge. In 2007, she canceled the project in the face of national outrage. The state never returned the money allocated by the federal government, with some of the funds going toward other state and local projects.

And as mayor of Wasilla, a job she held for six years until 2002, Palin hired lobbyists to get federal funding for local projects. Wasilla secured $27 million in earmarks for the town of about 9,000 that included a rail project and a youth center.

Shortly after she was elected governor, Palin’s office signed off on hiring Deborah Richter — who attended college for a year then worked in bookkeeping and finance jobs — as director of a division that distributes dividends to Alaskans from the state’s oil-wealth savings account.

Richter, who said she’s known Palin for 13 years, was Palin’s gubernatorial campaign treasurer and ran her inaugural committee.

Sharing an Investment

The Richters and Palins also shared an investment: 30 acres of rural property near a lake in Petersville, Alaska, worth $47,300, according to Matanuska-Susitna Borough data.

“It sounds like a patronage deal for someone who ran your campaign; that’s pretty normal,” said Bill Buzenberg, executive director of the Center for Public Integrity in Washington. “What’s not normal is that they have business dealings together.”

No evidence has emerged to suggest that laws were broken in the appointment, and Richter said she “didn’t go in there with any promises from the governor or the chief of staff or anybody. I turned in my resume” to the governor’s transition team “and I didn’t know if anyone was going to call me.”

“She was qualified,” said Pat Galvin, commissioner of the Department of Revenue and Richter’s boss. Galvin said he also interviewed other people for the job and that Richter has done well. He said Palin’s office approved his selection of Richter.

Not Palin’s Decision

Palin’s gubernatorial spokesman, William McAllister, said the decision to hire Richter was Galvin’s. “I have no knowledge of land ownership or college degrees,” he said.

Deborah Richter gave up her share of the property last September in a divorce settlement that followed an affair with Palin’s legislative director, John Bitney. Bitney and Richter both acknowledged the affair in interviews. Bitney said Palin fired him over it; Richter is still on the job. They are now married.

Last month, Palin signed a law granting TransCanada Corp., Canada’s largest pipeline company, an exclusive state license and up to $500 million in subsidies to proceed with work on a $27 billion pipeline, which would carry natural gas from Alaska to other U.S. markets.

Once a Lobbyist

Marty Rutherford, the chief coordinator behind Palin’s pipeline effort, once worked as an Alaska lobbyist for a TransCanada pipeline subsidiary, according to state records. Rutherford, deputy commissioner at the Alaska Department of Natural Resources, earned $40,200 as a lobbyist for 10 months in 2003 working for Foothills, the subsidiary.

Rutherford said in an interview that she only did consulting work for the company, including reviewing natural gas legislation. She said the work had no bearing on her future job as coordinator of Palin’s pipeline team.

“I intended to leave state government when I went to Jade North, but as time went on I realized my heart was in government,” she said, referring to the firm she briefly worked for.

Palin told the Anchorage Daily News last December that Rutherford’s work with Foothills wasn’t a conflict because it had been five years earlier.

Trooper Investigation

The governor already has triggered an investigation by the Alaska legislature into whether she fired the state commissioner of public safety, Walt Monegan, for not removing a state trooper involved in a contentious divorce from Palin’s sister.

Palin has denied exerting any pressure on Monegan and said she dismissed him because she wanted to take the department in a new direction.

Since McCain picked Palin, seven Palin aides have declined to be interviewed on the matter by an investigator hired by the Alaska legislature, according to the House and Senate Judiciary committees.

Earlier this year, Palin found herself apologizing for her handling of Monegan’s replacement. About six weeks before she learned McCain wanted her to be his vice president, she named Kenai, Alaska, police chief Charles Kopp to replace Monegan.

On July 25, two weeks after being appointed, Kopp resigned amid scrutiny over a 2005 sexual-harassment complaint against him while he was chief in Kenai. The complaint resulted in a letter of reprimand from the city, which Palin told reporters she never knew about and had believed that the allegations were unsubstantiated, according to the Anchorage Daily News.

Not a Harasser

In a July press conference, Kopp denied any harassment. “I’ve always done every job I’ve ever done with honor and integrity,” he said. “There is one thing I am not. I am not a sex harasser.” Attempts to reach him were unsuccessful.

Asked about these episodes in Palin’s career, McCain campaign spokesman Tucker Bounds lauded her reform efforts. Bounds said Palin has allowed the public to scrutinize state financial information, “cut wasteful spending by a quarter of a billion dollars just last year and ushered in landmark ethics legislation.”

The moment that crystallized her image as a reformer came when she turned in state Republican chairman Randy Ruedrich after discovering he was using his state e-mail account to conduct party business.

Palin and Ruedrich were serving together as commissioners on the Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission, a state regulatory agency, at the time. Ruedrich resigned from the commission in November 2003, and was later fined $12,000, according to a 2004 article in the Anchorage Daily News.

In 2006, Palin found herself asking forgiveness for a similar offense from her past, according to a July 28, 2006, article in the Anchorage Daily News. She had sent campaign e- mails from her Wasilla mayor’s office in 2002, when she made an unsuccessful run for lieutenant governor.

“For any mistakes like that (were) made, I apologize,” Palin said of the e-mail controversy in July 2006, according to the Anchorage Daily News.

For Related News: For news on the election: STNI ELEC2008 <GO> For news on McCain: BIO JOHN S MCCAIN <GO> For news on Palin: BIO SARAH LOUISE PALIN <GO>

Last Updated: September 11, 2008 00:01 EDT

Permalink

So if all that Fiscal Conservative stuff isn’t strictly true….

From Bloomerg.Com, September 11, 2008

When the financial people don’t like you very much, how can you improve the economy?

As Palin Stars, McCain Goes Along for Ride: Margaret Carlson

Commentary by Margaret Carlson


Enlarge Image/Details

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) — By this time, you know more about Alaska Governor Sarah Palin than John McCain did when he picked her as his running mate, which isn’t to say you’ve gotten answers to the big questions.

As I headed out to see Palin yesterday in Virginia, I wanted to sort out how much of what McCain said about his vice presidential choice in the first blush of new love was true.

For instance, the colorful detail that Palin sold the state’s private jet on EBay isn’t exactly so. A broker disposed of it, so she keeps the sentiment by saying she “put it” on EBay. She’s still claiming she said, “Thanks, but no thanks” to the “Bridge to Nowhere,” when it’s been shown she loved the project until she saw it wasn’t going anywhere.

In any event, are you really a frugal steward of the taxpayer’s money if you charge a per diem for you and your family for 312 days out of the year when you’re at home in Wasilla?

As for the earmark-seekers that McCain vows to name and shame when he vetoes legislation with pork in it? She used to be one of those people and hired a lobbyist associated with Jack Abramoff to land money for such undertakings, some of which McCain, in a former life, ridiculed.

Palin is an action figure akin to Jesse Ventura with a high body count. She dismissed two law-enforcement officials — one of whom coincidentally wouldn’t fire Palin’s former brother-in-law, who was locked in a custody fight with her sister, and another for allegedly wanting to close bars in Wasilla at 2 a.m. instead of 5 a.m.

There was her top legislative director, whom she praised publicly to high heaven but got rid of for “poor job performance” after she learned he was having an affair with a married friend of hers.

Banning Books

As for the town librarian being fired, the official story is that Palin did call to ask how you would go about banning books if you wanted to do such a thing, a purely hypothetical inquiry. And yes, the librarian was reluctant to ban books and yes she was terminated but supposedly for some other undisclosed reason. Anyway, she eventually got her job back.

Palin, who said parents of special-needs children would have an advocate in the White House, cut funds for the Special Olympics, Catholic Charities and Covenant House. It would be good to know what she favors that parents need.

But for the moment, for all the facts matter, Palin could have laid the caissons for the Bridge to Nowhere and burned books in the town square. To the huge audience in Virginia, she hung the moon and the stars. Crowds and celebrity were on the list of Obama’s flaws until Palin started attracting the first and became the latter. Now McCain doesn’t leave home without her.

Just Like Them

The 20 people I asked said they supported Palin because she’s just like them. I wouldn’t want a vice president just like me. I’d prefer someone who graduated close to the top of the class from a respected university, tested intellectually in any number of jobs, with a cogent philosophy about what government should do and with a lucid plan to do it.

But for many, being a mother of five, a frontierswoman who can field dress a moose and run over the good old boys in Juneau like a pit bull, is more important. Some might think a pregnant woman bypassing hospitals and traveling 22 hours to a clinic after her water broke is unwise if not reckless. But for others it’s one more example of just how spunky Palin is.

According to recent polls, a lot of undecided voters prefer spunk to, say, health care. Obama wants to expand coverage and lower costs. McCain wants to give tax credits for buying insurance and to tax as income health benefits an employee gets through an employer. It takes a powerful amount of spunk to overcome that difference.

Mommy Wars

Women are driving the new numbers. Palin has reignited the Mommy Wars and the family values fault line, with some feminists and conservatives switching sides.

Some feminists huff about how a mother with a Down syndrome baby and a pregnant teenager can throw herself into being a heartbeat away from a president who’s 72 years old. Conservatives are all for letting mothers decide on balancing career and children, and cheering on Palin’s Mr. Mom even though he’s away for months at a time working on the North Slope and training for the Iron Dog snowmobile competition.

But that’s not the only switching of hats. Conservatives have long damned teenage pregnancies as the result of a fraying moral fiber induced by the loose sexual mores of liberals, Hollywood and welfare mothers.

Now when teen pregnancy comes to a Christian family, it’s “beautiful.” Conservatives have argued that pregnant students be banned from school activities or any honors on the grounds that not censuring them conveyed tacit approval to others.

Between Shame, Celebration

Surely it conveys approval to parade the as-yet-unmarried couple on stage at a national convention. There must be a middle ground between shame and celebration.

Since the convention, the campaign has dissolved into a carnival of personality politics. You would think that after putting the class clown into the Oval Office over the class nerd, with the inevitable results, we might want to forget about who we would prefer to have a beer with and concentrate on who is going to save the country from financial meltdown and war: Will it be the party that got us there or someone else?

Maybe shooting a moose has something to do with being the leader of the Free World. Maybe McCain thinks Palin is ready to step in on Day Two. It’s also likely picking her was, as Karl Rove said, “not a governing decision but a campaign decision.”

As the argument flares over whether “lipstick on a pig” is a sexist comment or one of the world’s most shopworn cliches, the question is no longer whether Palin will be put out to campaign alone but whether her sidekick McCain will.

(Margaret Carlson, author of “Anyone Can Grow Up: How George Bush and I Made It to the White House” and former White House correspondent for Time magazine, is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are her own.)

To contact the writer of this column: Margaret Carlson in Washington at mcarlson3@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: September 11, 2008 00:02 EDT

Permalink
Jun 08
Permalink
Mar 04
Permalink
Permalink
Feb 26
Permalink