HolyCoast: Going Rogue - An Excerpt
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Friday, November 13, 2009

Going Rogue - An Excerpt

Parts and pieces of Sarah Palin's new book are leaking out a few days before the planned release, and in the excerpt below you see a McCain campaign that clearly did not know what do with the Alaskan governor who had injected some much-needed life into their campaign. Excerpt courtesy of Don Surber:
Going Rogue: An American Life
by Sarah Palin
Chapter Four; Section 8, pages 255-257

By the third week in September, a “Free Sarah” campaign was under way and the press at large was growing increasingly critical of the McCain camp’s decision to keep me, my family and friends back home, and my governor’s staff all bottled up. Meanwhile, the question of which news outlet would land the first interview was a big deal, as it always is with a major party candidate.

From the beginning, Nicolle [Wallace] pushed for Kattie Couric and the CBS Evening News. The campaign’s general strategy involved coming out with a network anchor, someone they felt had treated John well on the trail thus far. My suggestion was that we be consistent with that strategy and start talking to outlets like FOX and the Wall Street Journal. I really didn’t have a say in which press I was going to talk to, but for some reason Nicolle seemed compelled to get me on the Katie bandwagon.

“Katie really likes you,” she said to me one day. “she’s a working mom and admires you as a working mom. She has teenage daughter like you. She just relates to you,” Nicolle said. “believe me, I know her very well. I’ve worked with her.” Nicolle had left her gig at CBS just a few months earlier to hook up with the McCain campaign. I had to trust her experience, as she had dealt with national politics more than I had. But something always struck me as peculiar about the way she recalled her days in the White House, when she was speaking on behalf of President George W. Bush. She didn’t have much to say that was positive about her former boss or the job in general. Whenever I wanted to give a shout-out to the White House’s homeland sescurity efforts after 9/11, we were told we couldn’t do it. I didn’t know if that was Nicolle’s call.

Nicolle went on to explain that Katie really needed a career boost. “She just has such low self-esteem,” Nicolle said. She added that Katie was going through a tough time. “She just feels she can’t trust anybody.”

I was thinking, And this has to do with John McCain’s campaign how?

“Katie wasn’t people to like her,” Nicolle said. “She wants you to like her.”

Hearing all that, I almost started to feel sorry for her. Katie had tried to make a bold move from lively morning gal to serious anchor, but the new assignment wasn’t going very well.

“You know what? We’ll schedule a segment with her,” Nicolle said. “If it doesn’t go well, if there’s no chemistry, we won’t do any others.”

Meanwhile, the media blackout continued. It got so bad that a couple of times I had a friend in Anchorage track down phone numbers for me, and then I snuck in calls to folks like Rush Limbaugh, Laura Ingraham, Sean Hannity and someone I thought was Larry Kudlow but turned out to be Neil Cavuto’s producer. I had a friend call Bill O’Reilly after I was inundated with supporters in Alaska asking why the campaign was “ignoring” his one-air requests for a McCain campaign interview. I had another friend scrambling to find Mark Levin’s number. Aboard the campaign plane I was within twenty-five feet of reporters for hours on end. Headquarters’ strategy was that I should not go to the back of the aircraft and talk to the press. At first this was subtle, but as the campaign wore on, Tracey or Tucker would call headquarters to request permission, and someone in DC would respond, “No! Absolutely not — block her if she tries to go back.”
I think there was a combination of things going on here. You had a McCain campaign that was concerned both about a VP candidate inexperienced on the national stage and with the national press that was going to be out to get her, and a campaign that was jealous of the tremendous attention she generated when she was announced. McCain didn't want her to make mistakes in national interviews, but also didn't want her to upstage him.

It was really handled quite badly and the momentum which they generated with her announcement and tremendous convention speech was completely squandered.

4 comments:

Dr. B said...

Poor John McCain --- He thought Sarah would upstage him. Wrong again!! In our household, we could not have voted for John McCain. When she became the VP candidate he cemented our vote for him. Actually, we didn't vote for him -- we voted for Sarah!! We are not alone in our feelings about John McCain. We estimate he would not have been much better than BO and without Sarah on his ticket he would have lost by a much larger margin.

Goofy Dick said...

I think many of the votes McCain received were not so much because of how great he was but there was new life in the party with Sarah Palin running on the ticket. She was a real asset to the old party and without her on the ticket the final results would have been absolutely disasterous, it was bad enough as it was.

LewArcher said...

I like the line in her book where she Charlie Gibosn for "peering skeptically" over his glasses at her.

Or the other line on page 380 where:
“Now I wanted to see Andrea and her colleagues sporting fish-slimed waders, BANGING around in a skiff…”

Sam L. said...

You and Don make a good pair.