“America is ready for another revolution.” -- Sarah Palin, Tea Party Convention
First off, I have to report that Palin was wearing a pin with two flags, one for the US and one for Israel. This is so beautiful and brave, I am speechless. What utter goodness.
Secondly, she delivered the goods.
Palin is America. Before it was infected and corrupted by the left.
Pray she runs and prepare to take a bullet for this woman, because they are going to come after her with every vile weapon the decayed and debased left can dream up. She threw down the gauntlet last night. The gangstas, smear merchants, chicagoland operatives, moveon, Soros, they are getting ready -- she is the silver cross to their Dracula.
She told Chris Wallace this morning, if asked if she'd run:
Would she consider running for president? "I would if I believe that that is the right thing to do for our country and for the Palin family,'' she told Wallace. "It's going to be thankfully a lot of time to be able to make such a decision. Right now, I'm looking at... other potential candidates out there who are strong. They're in a position of having the luxury of having more information at their fingertips right now...
"I think that it would be absurd to not consider what it is that I can potentially do to help our country,'' Palin says. "I don't know if it's going to be ever seeking a title, though. It may be just doing a darn good job as a reporter or covering some of the current events.''
If she is not offering herself as a leader for the TEA Party, however, Palin has plenty to say lately about the president.
"He has some misguided decisions that he is making that he is expecting us to just kind of sit down and shut up and accept, and many of us are not going to sit down and shut up,'' Palin, a FOX contributor, told Wallace in the interview. "We're going to say no, we do not like this..''
"Wait, wait, where's he saying sit down and shut up?'' Wallace asked.
"In a general just kind of general persona I think that he has when he's up there at, I'll call it a lectern,'' Palin said reiterating a line about a president whom she calls "a law professor... When he is up there and he is telling us and he is us basically, 'I know best, my people here in the White House know best, and we are going to tell you that yes, you do want this essentially nationalized health care system,' and we're saying, no, we don't.
NRO here:
Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin blasted the Obama administration on Saturday night during her 45-minute keynote address at the inaugural national “tea party” convention in Nashville. Palin said the president must “stop lecturing and start listening” and questioned whether Obama’s 2008 campaign theme was succeeding: “How’s that hopey-changey stuff working out for you?” she asked, to cheers. “It’s time they stop blaming everyone else.”
America is “ready for another revolution,” Palin said. The tea-party movement, she added, “is about the people” and “it’s a lot bigger than any charismatic guy with a teleprompter.” (Palin, interestingly, gave the speech without one.) The 2008 Republican vice-presidential nominee also urged the GOP “to absorb as much of the Tea Party as possible.” The Tea Party, she said, “is the future of politics.” It is “inspiring,” she said, “to see real people, not politicos, inside-the-beltway professionals, come out, stand up, and speak out for common-sense conservative principles.” In a sign of her support, Palin pledged to give her compensation from the appearance (reportedly $100,000) “right back to the cause.”
Palin began her speech by saying “happy birthday” to former president Ronald Reagan, who would have been 99 years-old on Saturday. She then gave “a special shout-out to America’s newest senator,” Sen. Scott Brown (R., Mass.). “He looked around and he saw things just weren’t quite right in Washington,” Palin said, admiringly. “He stood up and he decided that he was going to do his part to put our government back on the side of the people. And it took guts, and it took a lot of hard work. But with grassroots support, Scott Brown carried the day.”
Brown’s upset, Palin said, is part of a “beautiful movement” of conservatives winning important elections across America, pointing to Republican gubernatorial wins in New Jersey and Virginia last year as examples. “If there is hope in Massachusetts, there is hope everywhere,” she said. “His victory is a sign of more good things to come.” Obama, she chided, is now “0 and 3” in major elections in the past year. Looking ahead, Palin added that the GOP should not be afraid of contested primaries, saying such contests are “how we’re going to find the cream of the crop to face a challenger in the general.”
On policy matters, Palin’s speech was wide-ranging. She spoke out in favor of a “pro-market agenda” and tax cuts. “Get government out of the way,” she said. “If they would do this, our economy would roar back to life.” On health care, Palin criticized the special deals in the Senate, railing against the “Cornhusker Kickback” and the “Louisiana Purchase.” A bipartisan bill, with tort reform, she said, is needed, as is a “start over” on negotiations. She also praised Rep. Bart Stupak (D., Mich.) for “standing up” for the sanctity of life during the health-care debate and joked about how C-SPAN was “welcome” to cover the tea party, but not welcome to broadcast the White House and congressional deliberations.
When it came to fiscal policy, Palin called President Obama’s proposed 2011 budget “immoral” for heaping trillions onto the national debt. Increasing the deficit, she said, is “generational theft,” “makes us less free,” and “should tick us off.” Kill the “second stimulus,” she advised, and “beware that it is being billed as a jobs bill.” Palin also criticized the administration for being unable to handle multiple policy issues simultaneously: “If you can’t ride two horses at once, you shouldn’t be in the circus,” she said, to laughs.
National-security issues featured prominently. “National security — that’s one place where you got to call it like it is,” Palin said. She expressed displeasure at the “disturbing” way in which the Obama administration treated the failed Christmas bomb plot of Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab — as a “crime spree” and not as an “act of war.” That kind of thinking, she said, is what helped lead to September 11.
“Treating this like a mere law-enforcement matter places our country at great risk because that’s not how radical Islamic extremists are looking at this,” Palin said. “They know we’re at war, and to win that war we need a commander in chief, not a professor of law standing at the lectern.” The administration, she worried, uses “misguided thinking” and believes that foreign policy can be “managed through the politics of personality.”
Palin also called for more open dialogue about God in America during a question-and-answer session following the speech. “America’s spirit,” she said, can “rise again by not being afraid to kind of go back to some of our roots as a God-fearing nation where we're not afraid to say — especially in times of potential trouble in the future — you know, we don’t have all the answers. As fallible men and women, it would be wise of us to start seeking some divine intervention again in this country, so that we can be safe and secure and prosperous again.” The country, she said, needs politicians unafraid “to go that route, not so afraid of the political correctness . . . to proclaim their alliance to our Creator.”
Andrew Breitbart, the founder of BigGovernment.com, introduced Palin. Her remarks were carried live by C-SPAN and all three major cable-news networks and covered by 240 journalists at the convention hall. When Palin bounded onto the stage, and when she left it, chants of “Run, Sarah, Run” could be heard throughout the audience. On her lapel, Palin wore a small pin with two flags — for Israel and the United States.
Palin last night:
"Opponents of this message, they are seeking to marginalize the movement. They want to paint us as ideologically extreme," Palin said. "But unlike the elitists who don't want to hear this message...I've travelled across this great country and I've talked to the patriotic men and women who make up the Tea Party movement and they're good and kind and selfless and they are deeply concerned about our country...the best of America can be found in places where patriots are brave enough and free enough to be able to stand up and speak up and where small businesses grow our economy one job at a time."
Palin today, courtesy of FOX News Sunday, is a transcript of Palin's talk with Wallace:
CRIS WALLACE: Governor Palin, welcome to FOX NEWS SUNDAY.
SARAH PALIN: Thank you so much.
WALLACE: How do you see yourself as a member of the Tea Party movement or a member of the Republican Party?
PALIN: Oh, I think the two are and should be even more so merging because the Tea Party movement is quite reflective of what the GOP, the planks in the platform are supposed to be about. Limited government and more freedom, more respect for equality. That's what the Tea Party movement is about, so I think that the two are much entwined and I'm happy about that.
WALLACE: So what's wrong with the Republican Party that these Tea Party activists feel they have to go outside the GOP?
PALIN: Because both major parties, the "D" and the "R"s have both kind of lost their way in some respects. The GOP has some very strong planks in the platform that build a platform that I believe is best to build a strong, safe prosperous nation.
When the GOP strays from the planks in the platform, a people's movement like the Tea Party movement is invited in to kind of hold these politicians accountable again and remind them of their constitutional limits there on the federal level and it's a beautiful movement. I'm proud to get to be a part of it in terms of at least hearing from those in the Tea Party movement and sharing with them what I believe are some common sense solutions to the challenges facing us.
WALLACE: You say you are happy to be or proud to be a part of it. Some people think you want to be the leader of the Tea Party movement.
PALIN: No, I would hope that the Tea Party-ers don't believe that they need some kind of well-oiled machine, some kind of replicate of the GOP or the Democrat Party and instead they remain a movement of the people uprising and saying, listen to us, we have some common sense solutions that we want our politicians to consider and to implement and this is much bigger than a hockey mom from Wasilla.
It's much bigger than any charismatic guy with a teleprompter. It is the people's movement. It's about the people and I'm proud to be a part of this.
WALLACE: You recently stirred up some controversy as you often do, even
when you endorsed Rand Paul as the Senate, he's running in the Senate
primary in Kentucky the GOP Senate primary. And Bill Kristol, your
long-time supporter was upset with you because one of the things he
pointed out, Paul wants to close Guantanamo. He wants to send the
detainees back to Afghanistan. He wants to repeal the Patriot Act. He
wants to do away with any federal role in either gay marriage or drug
laws, leave it to the states. Why would you support a guy like that?
PALIN: Because he's a federalist and he wants the states to have more
say and as we respect the 10th Amendment in our Constitution, he wants
the states to have more say in a lot of these issues. But nobody is
ever going to find a perfect candidate. There are things that I don't
agree with Rand Paul, and yet his domestic policies for the most part,
I do agree with. He wants limited government. He wants the Feds to
start taking their hands off states issues and I respect that and I'm
proud to support him. Again, never finding a perfect candidate, no
doubt he disagrees with me on a whole lot of issues. But proud to
support him and others whom I can believe in.
WALLACE: What do you think of Barack Obama's presidency so far?
PALIN: He has some misguided decisions that he is making that he is
expecting us to just kind of sit down and shut up and accept, and many
of us are not going to sit down and shut up. We're going to say no, we
do not like this...
WALLACE: Wait, wait, where's he saying sit down and shut up?
PALIN: In a general just kind of general persona I think that he has
when he's up there at, I'll call it a lectern. When he is up there and
he is telling us basically, I know best, my people here in the White
House know best, and we are going to tell you that yes, you do want
this essentially nationalized health care system and we're saying, no,
we don't. And the messages are not being received by Barack Obama. So I
think instead of lecturing, he needs to stop and he needs to listen on
health care issues. On national security, this perceived lackadaisical
approach that he has to dealing with the terrorists. We're saying that
concerns us and we're going to speak up about it and please don't allow
this persona to continue where you do try to make us feel like we need
to just sit down, shut up and accept what you're doing to us.
WALLACE: Let's talk about national security. During the campaign, you
said this about Mr. Obama. "Our opponent is someone who sees America as
imperfect enough to pal around with terrorists who targeted their own
country."
The president has escalated the war in Afghanistan. He has launched
more drone attacks in his first year than George W. Bush did in eight
years. Given what he's done as president, do you take back palling
around with terrorists?
PALIN: No, I don't, because his associations with Bill Ayers and with
others, he never really has, I think, adequately addressed why in the
world he would have a relationship with a type of person like that, who
had such disdain for America that he would want to bomb, harm, hurt,
kill, Americans.
WALLACE: But has he done a good job in protecting the country?
PALIN: So the things that he has done right now as president in
protecting the country, more power to him. We appreciate that he kind
of went there fully with the commanders on the ground asking for more
reinforcements in Afghanistan. Couldn't get there all the way with
these guys, but kind of went there. Good, more power to you. And I
speak as a military mom, too, saying thank you. You're giving me a
little bit more of a secure knowledge that you're looking out for our
troops and the things that their commanders are asking for. I'm
thinking kind of, of my son in this situation. Thank you for doing
that. However, there are many things that he is doing today that cause
an uneasiness in many, many Americans, I'm one of those.
Who looks at the way that he is treating the trials of these terrorists
and kind of as gosh, they're on a crime spree right now. No, we are in
war. These are acts of these war that these terrorists are committing.
We need to treat them a little bit differently than an American who is
worthy -- an American being worthy of our U.S. constitutional rights. I
don't think the terrorists are worthy of our rights that people like my
son fight and are willing to die for.
WALLACE: The unemployment rate fell to 9.7 percent in January. The
growth rate of the economy, 5.7 percent in the fourth quarter. Doesn't
President Obama deserve some credit for that?
PALIN: Very happy to hear about that miniscule decrease there in the
unemployment rate, but better that than a growing unemployment rate.
The point is though that we have lost millions and millions and
millions of jobs as we have incurred greater and greater debt and
deficit, debt that I believe is immoral because we're handing the bill
to our children. They're going to have to pay for our needs and some of
our wants today and I think that is unfair.
The point being, millions of jobs have been lost because, I think
Chris, what's coming from the White House is just a fundamental
difference from a lot of Conservatives in our belief that government is
not the answer. The bailouts, the takeovers of the private sector--
that's not the answer. That is not what built this great country into
the most prosperous, healthiest, safest country on Earth.
No. It -- it is free enterprise. It's the innovation, and work ethic of our small businesses, and -- and our entrepreneurs.
Empowering them to be able to keep more of what they earn, and reinvest
according to their priorities. And then be able to create jobs -- one
-- one job at a time with the principles that are free market -- free
enterprise based.
I don't think that is what we're seeing coming out of the White House. It -- it's quite fundamental -- the difference there.
WALLACE: Let's turn to Sarah Palin, because there are some questions quite frankly I've wanted to ask you for a while now.
In your book, "Going Rogue," you said that when you first heard that
you were pregnant with Baby Trigg, you wrote this: "I'm out of town.
No one knows I'm pregnant. No one would ever have to know."
You made the choice to have Trigg, and it obviously -- you were showing
me earlier pictures of him -- it was the right choice for you. Why not
allow all women to make their own choice?
PALIN: Well I believe that these babies in our womb have the right to
life. And that's what I stand on. And I did. I -- I honestly, candidly
talked about that in my book when I said, "I can understand the
sensitivity of the issue," because I've been there.
I've -- I've understood why that fleeting thought would enter a woman's mind.
And then when I found out that after ultra sounds, after tests, that
Trigg would be born with Downs Syndrome, of course that thought
occurred to me again. Wow, this is why a woman would be fearful of less
than ideal circumstances, and maybe think that a quote, unquote,
"problem," could just be swept away.
And instead I was able to kind of ratchet back my fears very quickly,
and -- and remember that no -- so many of us who have that fundamental
belief in the sanctity of life and the potential for every human
innocent life, I got to fall back on that. And -- and that did lead me
to make the right decision in allowing this baby to be born. And this
baby now turning out to be the best thing that has ever happened to me
and my family.
WALLACE: But can you understand where some women...
(CROSSTALK)
PALIN: Of course I can understand. That's why...
(CROSSTALK)
WALLACE: ... some people would say...
PALIN: ... I wrote about it.
(CROSSTALK)
WALLACE: ... I applaud your choice. Let me make my own decision.
PALIN: And that's why I wrote about it as saying that I understand why
those thoughts would enter their mind. I want to empower women though.
I -- I want -- and -- and if Trigg is an example, and if Pam Tebo's
(ph) son, Tim Tebo (ph) is an example of the potential for every human
life, then so be it. Let Trigg be that example.
I want women to know that they are strong enough, and they are smart
enough to be able to do many things at once -- including carrying a
child. Giving that child life. And then perhaps if they're in less than
ideal circumstances or they're carrying a child while they're trying to
pursue career, or avocations, or -- or education opportunities -- less
than ideal circumstances.
Giving that child life which it deserves, and then perhaps looking at
adoption, or looking at other circumstances after. But not snuffing out
the life of a child.
WALLACE: The second thing is your decision to resign as governor of Alaska...
PALIN: Yes.
WALLACE: ... with 17 months left in your term. You said, "I wasn't
going to run for reelection. So I was going to be a lame duck." You
said that the state was being paralyzed, because all of your opponents
were filing these lawsuits." Didn't you let your enemies -- your
opponents drive you from office?
PALIN: Hell, no. Thankfully I didn't. What's -- what we did was we won,
because the state today -- it's not spending millions of dollars to --
to fight these frivolous lawsuits, and -- and frivolous ethics charges.
Ethics charges like me wearing a jacket with a snow machine logo on it.
And getting charged for an unethical act for doing such a thing.
Little piddly, petty things like that that were costing our state
millions of dollars. And costing me and my administration-- my staff
members -- about 80 percent of our time fighting those things. "No," we
said, "We're not going to play this game."
We picked our battle. And we said, "We're going to get out there, and
we're going to fight for Alaska's issues," which usually involve energy
independence. We're going to fight for these issues on a different
plane. And we're not going to let you guys win.
You're not going to let...
(CROSSTALK)
WALLACE: But -- but...
(CROSSTALK)
PALIN: You're not going to...
(CROSSTALK)
WALLACE: ... they're going to think they won, cause you're no longer governor. Let me -- let me just make...
(CROSSTALK)
PALIN: I don't think that they...
(CROSSTALK)
WALLACE: Let me just make this...
(CROSSTALK)
PALIN: I don't think that they think I -- look it. I'm sitting here
talking to Chris Wallace today. I think some of them are going, "Dang,
we thought she'd sit down and shut up after we tried to do to here what
we tried."
WALLACE: Yes. Well I don't know that that's going to be-- instead of this...
(CROSSTALK)
PALIN: And now we get to talk about energy independence.
Now we get to talk about those things that are important to Alaskans, and our country.
(CROSSTALK)
WALLACE: OK. But wait a minute. When -- before we were talking about
Ronald Regan, do you openly admit he was your political inspiration...
PALIN: Yes.
WALLACE: ... really a formative figure in your...
PALIN: Yes.
WALLACE: ... developing of political consciousness?
Regan during his entire second term as governor of California was a
lame duck. Regan in that second term was being sharply attacked by
anti-war radicals. I can tell you, Ronald Regan would never have quit.
PALIN: It's a big difference between just getting political pot shots
fired your way. I can handle those. I get those-- shoot I -- I got more
of those this morning. So what? That doesn't matter. But when it
adversely affected the people that I was serving, that's bull. And I
wasn't going to put up with that. Again millions of dollars -- a
paralyzed administration. My staff not knowing what they could do or
say, because the adversaries were continuing to obstruct.
No way. I love Alaska too much to put them through that.
So in that last -- in that lame duck session I'm like no. I'm going to
hand the reigns over to the lieutenant governor. He's as conservative
as I am. He can progress our agenda -- a common sense conservative
agenda for our state. And we can all get on with life.
WALLACE: You talk about new potshots. I think what you're probably
referring to is that NBC has gotten a hold -- I'm sure you've heard --
of hundreds of emails in which your husband -- it was during your days
as governor -- your husband, Todd, exchanged views with state officials
about a judicial appointee, about appointments to-- to various state
boards. A labor dispute -- was what he was doing appropriate?
PALIN: Absolutely. And you know there are so few people in the
political world, and the media world that -- someone like me that we
can trust. My husband is -- is -- he's my soul mate. He's my best
friend. He's my number one advisor. I'm going to bounce things off
Todd. Nothing confidential that couldn't be shared with others out
there in the public. Todd never circulated anything that was
confidential, and hadn't already been circulated.
WALLACE: But it's one thing to advise...
(CROSSTALK)
PALIN: He certainly had the right to express his opinion on things too. No, what NBC...
(CROSSTALK)
WALLACE: But it's one thing to advise you. He was also sending emails to state officials.
PALIN: He was forwarding on emails. And here's another thing. Todd and
I being in some -- in some cases thousands of miles apart. If I emailed
him about something -- say I was outside traveling. Todd's home. He's
-- he's there at -- at a desktop, and I'm telling Todd, "Hey, Todd.
Print this off for me. I'm going to grab it on my way home." Cause I
work off a Blackberry constantly.
For practical reasons it helped too.
Todd helped as Alaska's first dude with no staff, with no office, being
thousands of miles away in a -- a -- during a lot of times that with
his job in Prudhoe Bay on the North Slope, and commercial fishing. He
helped with workforce development issues.
Issues that meant a lot to him, and -- and people, yes, out there in
the real world with car hearts (ph), and steel toed boots, and -- and
hard hats trying to build this country. Todd helped in that respect.
He never got into the minutia of the politics. Todd's too good for
that. He hates this kind of periphery political bull stuff that we go
through. He's not a part of any of that. And, no. More power to Todd
for being a good advisor, and a good practical person with common sense
solutions.
WALLACE: We like to do a lightening round. Quick questions -- quick answers. So I want you to play along with me here.
PALIN: All right.
WALLACE: Attorney General Eric Holder -- should he step down?
PALIN: Sure. He should. And I think Rham Emanuel should step down too.
I think these guys are giving our president wrong advice, and for a
variety of reasons I would like him to step down...
(CROSSTALK)
WALLACE: And specifically Holder -- what...
PALIN: Yes.
WALLACE: Why?
PALIN: Yes. Yes. Because of the way that we are treating these
terrorists allowing them our U.S. Constitutional protections when they
do not deserve them.
WALLACE: Should the rule "don't ask -- don't tell" for the Military be revealed?
PALIN: I don't think so right now. I'm surprised that the President
spent that on his State of the Union speech when he only spent about
nine percent of his time in the State of the Union on national security
issues. And I say that because there are other things to be worried
about right now with the Military.
I think that's kind of on the back burner. It's sufficient for now.
To put so much time and effort and politics into it, unnecessary.
WALLACE: White House Chief of Staff -- you mention him -- Rahm Emanuel.
You called him out. He used the "R" word. He said, "retarded." He has
now apologized for using that word, met with activists, said he's going
to join the campaign to try to eliminate use of that word --
PALIN: Oh, you know, Rahm Emanuel, I think he had some indecent and
insensitive ways of being, including his language. And as I said for a
variety go reasons, giving the President poor advice and his heavy
handedness. I think he should step down.
I'm not politically correct. I am not one to be a word police. But I do
believe that his insensitivity, in a time when I had just promised in
my GOP convention speech that those with special needs and families and
those who love those with special needs would have a friend, and a
advocate in the White House if John McCain and I were so blessed as to
be elected.
That didn't stop me because our votes didn't carry the day, we didn't
win. That didn't stop my passion, my commitment to reaching out and to
helping the special needs community when they asked for it. And they
did ask for it on this one. They reached out to me and said, can you
kind of highlight the problem that we have the White House, with both
the President and his Chief of Staff being so insensitive to the
special needs community. And I said, I'm here. Send me. I will do so.
WALLACE: OK. But Rush Limbaugh weighed in this week. And he said this:
"Our politically correct society is acting like some giant insult's
taken place by calling a bunch of people who are retards, retards."
PALIN: He was satirical (ph) in that --
WALLACE: Wait a minute, let me finish.
PALIN: OK.
WALLACE: "I mean, these people, these liberal activists are quote, kooks."
Should Rush Limbaugh apologize?
PALIN: They are kooks, so I agree with Rush Limbaugh. Rush Limbaugh was
using satire to bring attention to what this politically correct--
WALLACE: But he used the "R" word.
PALIN: Using satire. Name calling by anyone -- I teach this to my
children, you teach it to your children and your grandchildren, too.
Name calling by anyone, it's just unnecessary. It just wastes time.
Let's speak to the issues and --
WALLACE: But you know what some people are going to say, Governor, and
have said. They say, look, when it's her political adversary Rahm
Emanuel, she's going to call him out, he's indecent, apologize. But
when it's a political friend like Rush Limbaugh, oh it's satire.
PALIN: I didn't hear Rush Limbaugh calling a group of people whom he
did not agree with "F-ing retards." And we did know that Rahm Emanuel,
it's been reported, did say that. That's a big difference there.
But again, name calling, using language that is insensitive by anyone--
male, female, Republican, Democrat, it's unnecessary, it's
inappropriate and let's all just grow up.
WALLACE: All right. You can are a FOX News analyst so I want you to
take off your political player hat and put the analyst hat on and
really try and do your best job, almost like one of the commentators of
the Super Bowl.
PALIN: Oh gee, I'll try. OK.
WALLACE: Handicap the 2012 GOP presidential race for us. Who's the front-runner?
PALIN: No idea. I have no idea.
WALLACE: You're not a very good analyst.
PALIN: Fire me then, Roger. Sorry. I already failed.
But listen, no, we have some strong, some young terps (ph) in this party. Paul Ryan, I'm very impressed with Paul Ryan.
WALLACE: Congressman from Wisconsin.
PALIN: Yes. He's good. Man, he is sharp, he is smart, articulate and he
is passionate about these common-sense solutions that America has got
to adopt to get us on the right road.
I can name a whole lot of people.
WALLACE: Well, what about Romney and Huckabee and Pawlenty?
PALIN: As I say, I could name a whole lot of them but we don't have a
whole lot of time. But I'm very impressed with many of the characters,
the personalities of those with great intelligence in this party and I
can't wait to see who rises to the surface, after hopefully some very
competitive, contested primaries.
I'm all about competition. I'm all about, even on our local level and
state level, I want to see contested primaries where we are forced via
competition to work harder, produce better, be more efficient and
that's what these contested primaries that I look forward to will
produce.
WALLACE: You talk about rising to the top. There's a new poll out this
week of Republican voters across the country and it shows someone named
Sarah Palin leading the 2012 race by five points over Mitt Romney.
Aren't you the front-runner for the nomination?
PALIN: Nope. Don't know who conducted that poll and I know that polls
are fickle and heck, after this interview, Chris, we may see a
plummeting in the poll numbers. Who knows.
These are fickle. I can't comment on what the poll numbers mean today.
WALLACE: Why wouldn't you run for president?
PALIN: I would. I would if I believe that that is the right thing to do
for our country and for the Palin family. Certainly, I would do so.
WALLACE: And how do you make that decision over the next three years?
PALIN: It's going to be thankfully a lot of time to be able to make such a decision.
Right now, I'm looking at, as I say, other potential candidates out
there who are strong. They're in a position of having the luxury of
having more information at their fingertips right now. So that the
current events that we're talking about today, they --
WALLACE: Wait, wait, wait. Because -- you're basically saying you will consider it.
PALIN: I think that it would be absurd to not consider what it is that
I can potentially do to help our country. I don't know if it's going to
be every seeking a title though. It may be just doing a darn good job
as a reporter or covering some of the current events.
WALLACE: But you're going to consider, you're go to go through the process of thinking --
PALIN: I won't close the door that perhaps could be open for me in the
future. I don't want any American to ever close the door in their
personal or their professional lives and put themselves in a box and
say, heck, yes I'm going to do that. Or, no way I'm not going to do
that, when we don't know what the future holds.
WALLACE: There's a report this weekend that you are now getting daily
e-mail briefings on domestic and foreign policy issues from a group of
top advisors in Washington, D.C.
How come?
PALIN: Ever since our PAC was formed, we have had good people
contributing. Some -- many volunteers, I guess you would call them
advisors, yes, firing away e-mails to me every morning saying, this is
what's happened in Washington overnight. You need to be aware of this.
Good. It's great. It's helpful.
WALLACE: Do you -- isn't that the move of somebody who is thinking about running for president?
PALIN: You mean, conventionally how someone would -- I have no idea how
conventionally people do this. How they try to open a door that's
cracked, if it's even open. And if that involves having a group of
advisors send them e-mails every morning. I don't know how any of that
stuff works. I don't know, I'm just appreciative of having some good
information at my fingertips right now.
WALLACE: Would you say that you're more knowledgeable about domestic and foreign affairs now than you were two years ago?
PALIN: Well, I would hope so. Yes, I am.
Two years ago my engagement was on the state of Alaska. Largest, most
diverse state in the union. Twenty percent of the U.S. domestic supply
of energy coming from our state, desiring to and working towards
rampage up that domestic energy production. That was my focus.
Now, of course, my focus has been enlarged. So, I sure as heck better
be more astute on these current events, national issues than I was two
years ago.
WALLACE: I know that three years is an eternity in politics. But how
hard do you think President Obama will be to defeat in 2012?
PALIN: It depends on a few things. Say he played, and I got this from
Buchanan, reading one of his columns the other day. Say he played the
war card. Say he decided to declare war on Iran, or decided to really
come out and do whatever he could to support Israel, which I would like
him to do. But that changes the dynamics in what we can assume is going
to happen between now and three years. Because I think if the election
were today, I do not think Obama would be re-elected.
But three years from now things could change if on the national security threat --
WALLACE: You're not suggesting that he would cynically play the war card.
PALIN: I'm not suggesting that. I'm saying, if he did, things would
dramatically change if he decided to toughen up and do all that he can
to secure our nation and our allies. I think people would perhaps shift
their thinking a little bit and decide, well, maybe he's tougher than
we think he is today. And there wouldn't be as much passion to make
sure that he doesn't serve another four years --
WALLACE: But assuming he continues on the path that he going on and we don't have that rally around the flag (ph) --
PALIN: Then he's not going to win.
WALLACE: Not going to win?
PALIN: He's not going to win. If he continues on the path that he has
American on today -- and here's the deal -- that's what a lot of
Americans are telling him today and he's not listening. Instead he's
telling everybody else, listen up and I'll tell you the way it is.
Well, we have a representative form of government in our democracy.
And we want him and we want Congress to listen to what those things are
that we are saying. And that's what the Tea Party movement is about,
too. It's not a well-oiled beautiful machine.
It's the people saying, please hear us. Congress, you have
constitutional limits and we want you to adhere to those. We have free
market principles that built out country. Mr. President, we want you to
remember those. We want you to look back on successes in history, like
what Reagan did in times of crisis. And, could you repeat those things
because they are proven to succeed.
WALLACE: Word is that you're getting $100,000 for this speech this weekend. True?
PALIN: I'm not getting it. They're writing a check -- a $100,000 check.
And as I've said from Day One on this, I'm turning right around and
being able to contribute it back to the cause. That means to people, to
events --
WALLACE: So you're going to use your PAC and contribute it to candidates?
PALIN: I don't know if it's going to go to the PAC or if it goes to some non-profit or what.
Bottom line, I'm not personally benefiting from this. And the funny
thing is, as I've had a lot of people, including a couple of talented
people and talent at FOX say, funny thing about these type of speeches,
Sarah you're an anomaly. Nobody ever has asked, are you getting paid
for this? Or, what are you going to do with the money?
But, this is the new normal I think when it comes to me, is people
wanting to have me under a microscope and figure out every little
detail of my life, including speaking fees.
Bottom line, Tea Party movement, I'm giving the money back to the cause.
WALLACE: Finally, regardless of whether you ever run for political
office or not. What role do you want to play in the country's future?
PALIN: First and foremost I want to be a good mom. And I want to raise
happy, healthy, independent children. And I want them to be good
citizens of this great country.
And then I do want to be a voice for some common-sense solutions. I'm
never going to pretend like I know more than the next person. I'm not
going to pretend to be an elitist. In fact, I'm going to fight the
elitist because for too often and for too long now, I think the
elitists have tried to make people like me and people in the heartland
of America, feel like we just don't get it and big government is just
going to have to take care of us.
I want to speak up for the American people and say, no, we really do
have some good common-sense solutions. I can be a messenger for that.
Don't have to have a title to do it.
WALLACE: Can I get a "you betcha" out of it?
PALIN: Oh, you betcha.
(LAUGHTER).
WALLACE: Governor, thank you.
PALIN: Thank you.
WALLACE: Now that you've found the way to FOX NEWS SUNDAY, I hope you'll come back.
PALIN: Thank you, I will.




