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The Five Best (According To TIME) Explanations As To Why Sarah Palin Quit



Jul 6, 2009 34 Comments ›› Erik Wong

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TIME Magazine:

When Alaska Governor Sarah Palin announced her intention to resign on July 3, many assumed there must be a looming scandal. Why else make the surprise announcement late in the afternoon before the July 4 holiday — the equivalent of a news black hole — in tones that varied from angry to anxious? Palin even hauled her husband back from a commercial fishing trip to be by her side.

In the days since, however, it has become clear that no other shoe is likely to drop. No federal investigation or teen pregnancy or hikes along the Appalachian Trail. Alaskan politicos who have worked with Palin for years say her reasons for leaving are multilayered, and largely personal. Her unhappiness in the job came as no surprise in Alaska. In fact, given her history — and how miserable the past eight months have been for her — perhaps the surprise is that more people didn’t see it coming. Here are the most important factors that Alaska insiders say went into Palin’s sudden decision. (See pictures of Sarah Palin.)

1. If It Worked Before, Why Not Try It Again?
Palin’s 2004 protest resignation from the Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission (AOGCC) catapulted her into the political limelight. Appointed to the AOGCC by then Governor Frank Murkowski, Palin quit when fellow board member Randy Ruedrich, who was also chairman of the Alaska Republican Party, refused to give up his party role despite what many saw as a conflict of interest. Palin accused Ruedrich of engaging in politics on government time, and he was ultimately fined $11,000 — the largest ethics fine in Alaska’s history. He resigned his AOGCC post (he remains to this day head of the Alaska GOP). Palin was perceived as a whistle-blower, willing to call out her own party. Less than two years later, Palin won Murkowski’s job. “She was going to stand up to the corrupt administration, she was going to expose wrongdoing, she was going to slay the evil dragon,” says Larry Persily, a former Palin aide who now works for a Republican state legislator. “She knows how to position herself. She knows how to appeal to the public, and that was a great move.”

In her announcement on July 3, Palin sought to portray her resignation in much the same way: a selfless act that should earn her kudos for saving taxpayers’ money. “Many just accept that lame-duck status, hit the road, draw the paycheck and milk it. I’m not putting Alaska through that — I promised efficiencies and effectiveness,” she said. “I love my job, and I love Alaska. It hurts to make this choice, but I am doing what’s best for Alaska.”

Perhaps. But this time around, her motives don’t ring as true. “In some ways, she is trying to repeat that feat,” Persily says. “But there are some flaws in the argument. Under her thinking, every second-term governor or President was a misfit for staying in office because you can’t run for re-election. That doesn’t make sense.” (See pictures of Bristol Palin and Levi Johnston.)

2. Bye-Bye, Bipartisanship
At the start of her term in 2006, Palin’s platform looked much more Democratic than Republican. She picked up on Dem calls for ethics reform and backed Democratic stands against oil- and gas-company interests. She made limited mention of abortion and other social-conservative issues. She would also visit the legislative offices, sometimes bringing fresh baked cookies and bagels. “I’m sure she visited some Republicans, but mostly the people she visited were Democrats,” says Alaska representative Harry Crawford, an Anchorage Democrat who has known Palin for more than a decade. “With Sarah, we were able to do things that we’d been trying to do for 25 years. Everything she can point to in terms of achievements was done with nearly uniform Democrats votes and just a smattering of Republican votes.”

But her vice-presidential candidacy remolded Palin in the eyes of Alaskan Democrats from a moderate willing to reach out across the aisle to a bomb thrower who accused Barack Obama of “palling around with terrorists.” As she became more partisan, she lost support in Alaska — her favorable poll numbers are now in the mid-50s, down from the 80s before she was tapped for VP. Without the Democrats, her agenda has gone nowhere, and she’s now attacked from both the left and the right. “I saw her on the elevator in the beginning of session in January,” Crawford says. “I said, ‘Good afternoon.’ She didn’t even reply. She was standing there six inches from me, and she didn’t say a word. We’ve hardly seen each other since. This was someone I considered a friend.”

Other legislators lay the blame at the Democrats’ door. “I believe the word came down from national Democrats to local Democrats to do everything in their power to take her down,” says state senator Gene Therriault, a Republican who represents the town of North Pole. “We started seeing a proliferation of ethics complaints against her. It was an orchestrated effort to take her down.” Either way, all sides agree that the relationship is irreparable.

3. Do-Nothing Governor
Palin knew that coming back to Alaska wasn’t going to be fun and that she’d face a lot of criticism. Her response has been to withdraw. Excluding the budget and appropriations bills, which are mandatory, she has introduced next to very little legislation. In his third legislative session in office, Murkowski introduced 32 bills and saw 19 made into law. In her third session, Palin has introduced 12 bills — none that could be considered sweeping measures — and only one has made it into law.

But Palin has spent a lot of time saying no. She fought to reject federal stimulus money, even though Alaska’s legislature is expected to override her final veto of 3% of the funds intended for Alaska. She also spent a great deal of effort trying to keep a Democratic representative from taking a vacant state senate seat. Juneau representative Beth Kerttula, a former Palin ally on energy issues, made the mistake of going on national TV and saying that Palin wasn’t ready for higher office. Over the space of six weeks, Palin not only rejected Kerttula but every Democrat put forth by the Juneau Democratic Party for the vacant seat, bringing the state senate to a near standstill. On the last day of session, Palin finally accepted a neutral candidate, former Juneau mayor Dennis Egan. “The governor was on the brink of being taken to court in violation of appointment statutes,” says senator Hollis French, an Anchorage Democrat. “All because she was trying to rebuke Beth, who during the campaign said one or two things that weren’t ingratiating to the governor.” (Read “Palin Bow-Out: Boon to Her Book Sales?”)

4. Remember Me, America?
Meanwhile, Palin’s attempts to engage on the national stage have flopped. Partly because Alaska is so far away, her trips outside the state were noticed by Alaskans, and may well have affected her ability to govern. When she nominated a highly controversial figure for state attorney general, for example, most members of her own party joined the vote to reject him. Palin might have been able to persuade them to support the nomination, but she was out of the state, speaking to a pro-life group in Evansville, Ind.

She has also found it increasingly difficult to campaign and fundraise for 2010 congressional candidates, and her Twittering from Wasilla is like shouting from the top of Mount McKinley for all that it’s heard in the lower 48. The only news that does break through nationally are tabloid items like her fights with Levi Johnston and David Letterman. “I buy that you want to spend more time with your family, the stress and demands of five children and a husband. I can buy that you want to push your conservative agenda. I would buy that she thought that she could do more on a national scale because of her popularity and because of her Hollywood stature,” says representative Charisse Millett, an Anchorage Republican. “But the lame-duck analogy — you don’t do that. You don’t quit the game. I wish that she could’ve been a better example for my daughter and Alaska’s daughters.” (Read “Why Sarah Palin Quit as Governor.”)

5. Show Me the Money
Between her husband’s income and her own salary, Sarah Palin is by no means poor. But the Palins have had to spend more than $500,000 to deal with the 15 ethics complaints filed against Palin by various outside groups in the past eight months. Palin has been exonerated in all cases, but Alaskan law states that she has to use her own money to defend herself. More cases were expected, which could’ve become expensive with four kids (and a grandchild) still living at home.

Quitting frees up her time for speaking engagements; politicians of Palin’s stature get as much as $50,000 a pop. “I don’t think Sarah Palin is a politician. I don’t think she wants to be a politician. I think she wants to be an inspirational leader,” says representative Mike Doogan, an Anchorage Democrat. “She has the opportunity to make a drop-dead amount of money in the next 18 months.” Without resigning, she might have been looking at more than $1 million in legal fees over her remaining 16 months in office. Now she’s looking at an unlimited, and very green, horizon.


  • Jeff

    I really do not disagree with anything in this article. The reasoning behind each point is pretty sound.

    It makes me feel bad for Palin, she had so much support and a good thing going in Alaska before she became a VP nominee. McCain made a mistake in picking her, she should have continued her work in Alaska and finished out her first term. Instead, she was pushed into national politics way too soon and was not prepared.

    I really believe she means well and I wish her the best in whatever she decides to do. She needs to sort things out and get back to what she is comfortable doing. I would not expect to see her in a national political setting for a while or even ever again.

    • copperpeony

      Don’t bet on it. Just because no one else knows what she’s doing doesn’t mean she doesn’t know what she’s doing. :lol:

    • Sully

      “… sound reasoning…” from TIME… lmao

    • tlk

      So Jeff which kool-aid flavor is your favorite?

      Uncomfortable because she isn’t part of the DC scene Jeff? Afraid of her because she is a true conservative? Don’t like that she has children? Is it because she is a woman? She didn’t graduate from Harvard? What is it exactly that you think she is “comfortable” with? Do you know ANYTHING about her background and what she has achieved as an INDIVIDUAL? Anything at all?

      Didn’t think so!

      You’re in for a rude awakening.

    • Jeff

      ‘Uncomfortable because she isn’t part of the DC scene Jeff?’
      No

      ‘Afraid of her because she is a true conservative?’
      No.

      ‘Don’t like that she has children?’
      No

      ‘Is it because she is a woman?’
      No

      ‘She didn’t graduate from Harvard?’
      No

      ‘What is it exactly that you think she is “comfortable” with?’
      She is comfortable being a mom and running a state government. A state that shares a lot of her own personal values and applauds her actions when she took on her own party for something she did not like. The state loved her and thought she was doing a good job. She faltered on the national stage because she was not prepared and because it involved a whole lote more than what she is used to as governor of alaska.

      Your entire response was a bunch of nonsense. You made so many assumptions and felt like attacking me for no reason. Why? because I think she wasn’t ready? Because I think the article made some good points?

      Oh and I prefer Tang by the way

    • Sully

      Jeff as victim… lol
      How did she ‘falter on the national stage’ Jeff? I saw her on that stage and thought she did great.

    • grumpy mechanic

      Sounds like Jeff faltering on the Dollard stage.
      Talk about not ready… :roll:

    • Jeff

      “Jeff as victim… lol
      How did she ‘falter on the national stage’ Jeff? I saw her on that stage and thought she did great.”

      When you become the butt of every joke, when you can not handle the pressure of the media, when you rally your base like nothing that has happened in a while and still lose, you have faltered on the national stage. Is it fair what the media does to some people…no. But successful politicians can deal with it, she couldn’t.

      You seem to take my opinion on this as an attack on Palin. I really don’t understand it. I think she meant well and had some good ideas but she really has not been able to overcome the past election and the months following.

      It’s the reason she gave for leaving, she didn’t want to be a lame duck and just be some do nothing governor wasting the states time because as the article states she wasn’t putting forth many new bills and had lost the trust and partnership of some of her friends. She does not want the spotlight at the moment and that is totally understandable after what she has gone through.

      I don’t think she was ready, a sentiment many of you have expressed against Obama. I didn’t think she was ready, i certainly didn’t think Obama was ready, and thought neither should have been under consideration. If she had finished out her term in Alaska, gotten some more experience, gone for a higher office after that, she could have been a lot stronger. But now she is going out of the spotlight for a while to do what she thinks is best for her, her family, and what she wants to do.

    • Sully

      JEFF, I believe you are either a Liberal or, as tlk called it, a kool-aid kid, but let’s give this a shot…
      All of the points you make show the problem as I see it.
      “the butt of every joke” and the “pressure of the media” are a concerted effort by the left to move the country to the left (and make Obama ‘appear’ centrist) by trying to paint a genuine Conservative as radical. Would you say the attacks leveled at Palin were ‘normal’? You seem to me to be promoting that view.
      And as for ‘rallying the base and still losing’, the MSM and Hollywood had been so successful moving the country to the left by summer 2008 that McCain had, in my opinion, close to zero chance of winning prior to naming Palin. Without her he gets nowhere close to 47%. Her grassroots appeal is quite clear.
      Our challenge now is to move the country back to the center-right, which all polling shows it is, and push back the ‘Socialism as the new American center’ paradigm promoted by… well, Socialists.
      So yes, I do view opinions like yours that find reasonable argumentation from a blatantly biased source like TIME to be at best a veiled “attack” on Palin.
      So knock it off.

    • Sully

      … And this is the same TIME ragazine that carried Barry on its cover *14* times in 2008 with glowing propaganda and zero ‘vetting’ of him as a candidate.

    • Jeff

      “So yes, I do view opinions like yours that find reasonable argumentation from a blatantly biased source like TIME to be at best a veiled “attack” on Palin.”

      What does not make sense about all your anger is the points in the article is the exact reasoning that Palin herself gave to leaving.

      Number 1 is a bit of a stretch. Did she really leave her position as governor to set herself up sometime later. Maybe, although a lot you here think that is true.
      Number 2 you can believe what the article says or you don’t. But I think from her record as governor from before and after she did take a more conservative role because her role as VP was to appeal to a GOP base that McCain did not.
      Number 3 is the exact reason Palin gave for leaving. She felt she was a do-nothing and lame duck governor and because things were not getting done she left for the good of Alaska
      Number 4 is another stretch. I really think Palin was trying to stay away from the national spotlight, not trying to get it put on her again so soon after the election.
      Number 5 makes sense. She has had to fend off frivolous lawsuits. While she will never be found in the wrong people can still file for them and fending off lawsuits with your own money can take a big toll especially on the family. Coupled with all the media attention recently, anyone can get stressed out and look for a way out to help their family and their own personal life.

    • Sully

      Anger? At TIME?
      Nah. I already know them to be a Progressive propagandist rag. Didn’t even read the article because I couldn’t possibly care less what they have to say about anything.
      No Jeff. This is about you.
      First that you tried to peddle TIME as ‘sound reasoning’ and then spring to an attack on Palin of your own.
      Yeah… I think we’ve got you pegged Jeff.

    • Jeff

      So you are arguing about this and telling me that my support for the article is wrong even though you did not read the article. What is wrong with you?

    • Sully

      What’s wrong with me?
      I just told you in my last reply.
      You.
      Answer that or stfu.
      K?

    • cocorico

      er ummm, fucknews is Bible thumbers reality watched

      … er umm, can’t resist

  • Semper Loco

    We had an expression when a non-hack it would refuse recruit training on Parris Island and give up to go home: launching a pig.

    She’s no pig mind you- very attractive indeed. But it seems as though she did quit. I heard some media turd call it the “Alaskan Iquitarod” Har!

  • mike3481

    An alternative title for the article could be; “Why Nobody Reads Time Magazine”.

  • http://www.jihadwatch.org LCpl. Alexander

    This isn’t the end for Sarah Palin, this is just the beginning. Do not trust anything put out by TimeWarnerAol, the print/film/internet trifecta of Ted Fucking Turner.

    • tlk

      or Jeff above :evil:

  • DoubleTap

    I personally think she quit because she felt like she was wasting her time as Gov. She was not able to do anything effective because she had become a lightning rod for attacks from around the country. I think she quit to allow Alaska to be governed without constant ridicule from the lib moron media and the attack troops that have been hired to keep her in court as much as possible.

    Time has not been worth the paper it is printed on for at least 30 years.

    • grumpy mechanic

      Finally someone speaks with some common sense.
      Too many people don’t understand “Doing the Right Thing” anymore.
      It’s not always about what’s best for “me”.
      Some still answer to a higher morality than self.

    • Jeff

      Did you read the article. Time had that as one of their five points. It is number 3 Do-Nothing Governor. Maybe not to the extent of saying that she would be constantly ridiculed from the media, but that part of the article does say that she was not putting forth new legislation. From this it’s probably why she said she did not want to be a lame duck governor.

      But the article evens mentions how a democratic rep came out and put down Palin and in response she held up the state Senate. Maybe not an attack from outside but it was from the inside and it held up business. Palin realized this and decided that doing this and being in that position was wasting Alaska’s time.

  • cocorico

    http://twitter.com/LarrySabato

    the must on Sarah Palin

    • Sully

      Get lost franchie.

    • mike3481

      Hey francie, shouldn’t you be more concerned with the impending Muslim takeover of France rather than what what happens at this Website?

      BTW, have you been fitted for your Burqa yet?

    • Steven D

      Larry Sabato is an idiot.

      I read his book on the Constitution, and had to wonder if he had ever read the Constitution. His suggestions for amending the Constitution were ridiculous.

    • cocorico

      hi my fan club, watch your very political idol on TV now , this is America

    • cocorico

      mon cher Mike, I think that you’re more in danger than us,I’m aware of what your muslim organisations can achieve, and it ain’t fair but scair LMAO

  • Mark Gibbons

    The dimocraps,the media and a bunch of beltway repuklicons hate this woman. It must be because they are afraid of all the people that will go watch her speak. She should start speaking at Tea Party gatherings. Then the media will go nuts when tens of thousands of Americans show up. People may agree with Chuck k. and other journalist hacks that she is done for awhile. But chuck k. is a mouthpiece for the washington compost and quite frankly is getting old on fox. They are afraid of how much she has in common with the common man. Fuck chuckie k. fuck fox ,fuck you jeff and fuck you franchie.

  • Racerrose

    What if she quit for the reasons she said?

    What if she’s just honest?

    I’m as cynical about politicians as anyone, but you have to leave open the possibilty that she went out and spoke the truth. Her life seems to match her words, unlike hoards of other politicians.

    I’m hoping she sees, like I do, that there is no point man on the right with enough nerve to take on Obama’s policies with the necessary fervor. I’m hoping she goes full-time explaining conservative principles, making all the speech dollars that all the Democrats make.

    But if she wants to stay home and take care of cute kids and cute husband, I can’t blame her.

  • tlk

    The msm and the libtards did us a favor. They pushed Palin from Alaska to the lower 48. Alaska lost a great governor but we gained one helluva conservative!!

    Thanks libs!