Saturday, December 17, 2011

Tea Party Hasn't Endorsed GOP Candidate Yet

The Tea Party is still pining for Sarah Palin.

The grassroots conservative movement has yet to throw its support behind a Republican presidential candidate because “we don’t have the female Ronald Reagan running — and that’s Sarah Palin,” said Amy Kremer, chairwoman of the Tea Party Express.

“We haven’t engaged in presidential politics yet because the movement hasn’t coalesced around anybody, so we’re just sitting back and waiting,” Kremer added.
Predicting that a good slice of the country’s conservatives will not make up their minds until they are standing in front of the ballot box, Kremer singled out the former Alaska governor as “the only person out there right now that can truly excite the base.”

Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1211/70572.html#ixzz1gmoACMXo.

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Thursday, December 3, 2009

Palin Fans Await Her In Morning Cold

Norman ~ They're already in line.
Fans of Sarah Palin (shown during a Fort Bragg book-signing event) already have been in line for hours, awaiting the opportunity to meet the former Alaska governor and Republican vice presidential candidate, who in about 14 hours will autograph copies of her book, Going Rogue, at Hastings Books on West Main.
Some are camped out in tents. It is 29 degrees. Staying warm is a priority.
In about 90 minutes, store employees will begin passing out wrist bands that certify the wearer is among those who will be allowed in the autograph line.
Demand apparently has been so great that Hastings has set these ground rules: Those who wish to have their book signed by Palin must be at Hastings in person and the wristbands will be issued to the first people at the store starting at 7 a.m. The exact number of wristbands to be handed out has not yet been determined.
The size of the crowd is expected to be in the "thousands," a Norman police officer said.
At the book signing, Palin will sign only copies of her books that have been purchased at Hastings. A receipt is required. The signing is limited to her signature only, no personalization.
Each person with a wristband is limited to two copies of Going Rogue. No memorabilia or additional items will be signed.
Cameras are allowed at the event, but not near the signing area. Guests are only allowed to carry copies of the book with them to the signing area. Hastings asks guests to leave any bags or purses in their car or be prepared to check them at the bag-check area inside the store.
Gifts or other items customers wish to leave for Palin will be collected by Hastings staff and delivered to Palin at the end of the event. The store will remain open during the event.
Here's the latest Norman Transcript report on the event by Julianna Parker:
Norman resident Chris Gregg arrived at Hastings at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday and set up camp for the chance to meet Sarah Palin today.
He was the first to get in line and expected to spend the next 28 hours at the book store, all to have his book signed by a woman he described as down-to-earth. [Gregg actually is in line to get his book signed for his wife, likewise a huge Palin fan.]
"She can tell about things that make sense and relate to the things we've done," Gregg said.
He'll be the first in line when the store hands out 500 wristbands starting at 6:30 a.m. Wristbands guarantee a book signing, but there will be another standby line in case Palin can meet with more people.
Gregg wasn't alone in his enthusiasm to see the former vice-presidential candidate and Alaskan governor when she arrives at 7 p.m. today to sign copies of her memoir.
About 24 hours before Palin is set to arrive in Norman, the line of people camped out to see her stretched from the front of Hastings, 2300 W. Main St., down the sidewalk to Party Galaxy.
Some had brought tents, one brought a brazier and everyone brought warm clothes and lots of layers. Hastings' restrooms and cafe were set to remain open all night to accommodate the campers.
April Bowers of Norman got in line shortly after Gregg to see Palin. She said Palin's visit to Norman was "a historic event" that she wouldn't miss.
Annette Ehardt of Norman lined up with her sleeping bag at about 5 p.m.
"I just want to come out and support Sarah Palin," she said. "I purchased her book and I want to get to know more about her."
Ehardt said the country wanted change, but isn't happy with the change that it got. She said she sees hope for America's political future in Palin. "I believe she's headed the right direction," Ehardt said.
Ted Sholette of Norman said he would vote for her, which he guessed he may have the chance to do in the presidential election in 2012. Sholette arrived at Hastings at 5 p.m. Wednesday. He waited until he got off work, but because he's self-employed he decided to cancel work Thursday in order to wait in line for Palin.
"She's very genuine," Sholette said. "I think the common person can relate to her. I think she's old-fashioned, and I think the majority of the people in the U.S. are old-fashioned."
Those who didn't camp out for a wristband Wednesday night still will have the chance to see Palin. Even those too far back in line to have their book signed will be able to see her when she arrives. She should arrive between 6:30 and 7 p.m. today. Before she enters the store, she will address the crowd in front of Hastings briefly, said Jarrod Church, assistant store manager.

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Friday, October 2, 2009

Going Rogue: Not Out Yet, But An Online Bestseller

This is the cover of former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin's book, Going Rogue.
The memoir, a top-seller online weeks before publication, will feature an outdoor shot of Palin, wearing an American flag pin on her red fleece top, eyes turned slightly from the camera as she smiles confidently into the horizon, a patchwork of Alaska blue sky and clouds behind her.

The image was released by Harper, an imprint of HarperCollins.

The book, originally planned for next spring, is out November 17 with an announced first printing of 1.5 million copies. Palin and collaborator Lynn Vincent finished the book two months after Palin's resignation as governor.

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Friday, July 3, 2009

Fireworks: Alaska Governor Sarah Palin Resigns

Alaska Governor Sarah Palin disclosed today that will resign from office at the end of the month, raising speculation she'll run for the White House in the 2012 race.
Palin, however, gave no indication of her future plans.
The former Republican vice presidential candidate made the surprise announcement from her home in suburban Wasilla on Friday morning. She said she will resign effective July 26.

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Saturday, March 28, 2009

Palin Names NRA Director As Attorney General

Alaska Governor Sarah Palin has picked an Anchorage lawyer and National Rifle Association director as the state's new attorney general.
Palin named Wayne Anthony Ross to the post.
Ross twice sought the Republican nomination for governor. He is a former NRA vice president and current director.

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Thursday, January 1, 2009

Poll: Americans Pick Palin As Neighbor

If they had to live next door to a celebrity, American adults would most like to be neighbors with Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, a new poll shows.
The poll put Palin at No. 1 and chat show host Oprah Winfrey at No. 2.

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Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Chambliss Credits Palin For Help In Landslide Win

Republican U. S. Senator Saxby Chambliss of Georgia today credited Alaska Governor Sarah Palin with helping him win a landslide victory over Democrat Jim Martin in Tuesday's election.

“You want to peak on the last day," Chambliss said on Fox News, "and we had John McCain, Mike Huckabee, Governor [Mitt] Romney and Rudy Giuliani. But Sarah Palin came in on the last day and man, she was dynamite. We packed the houses everywhere we went.”

An interviewer asked, “You saw all the heavyweights in the Republican Party show up . . . tell me about Sarah Palin. Will her popularity last?”

“I cannot see it diminishing," the senator answered. “I can’t overstate the impact she had down here. All these folks did a great job, they all allowed us to add momentum, but when she walks in a room, folks just explode. She’s a dynamic lady, a great administrator, and I think she’s got a great future in the Republican Party.”

In a subsequent interview with a Politico reporter, Chambliss added, “We had John McCain and Mike Huckabee and Gov. Romney and Rudy Giuliani, but Sarah Palin came in on the last day, did a fly-around and, man, she was dynamite,” he said. “We packed the houses everywhere we went. And it really did allow us to peak and get our base fired up.”

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Tuesday, December 2, 2008

With Palin's Help, Chambliss Wins Georgia Race

Riding a wave of enthusiasm generated in part by Alaska Governor Sarah Palin's election eve appearances on his behalf, Georgia Republican Senator Saxby Chambliss handed the GOP a firewall against Democrats eager to flex their newfound political muscle in Washington, winning a bruising runoff battle.
With 92 percent of the precincts reporting, Chambliss had what amounted to a landslide victory, 58-42 percent, over Democrat Jim Martin.
Bill Clinton and Al Gore, and other prominent Democrats, had campaigned for Chambliss' Democratic opponent. President-elect Barack Obama did not appear personally, but did record a telephone message the campaign used.

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Saturday, November 29, 2008

Palin Dominates Search Engine Queries

From Politico ~ Three weeks after the Republican ticket suffered a sweeping defeat at the polls, Sarah Palin continues to dominate search engine queries, cable news and online video sites.
The only American politician who generates comparable interest is President-elect Barack Obama. No one else is close.
Palin was the most popular Lycos search from the week she joined the ticket continuously through last Sunday, some two weeks after the election, when she was dethroned by Paris Hilton, the celebutante whom John McCain famously compared to Barack Obama. The Alaska governor now ranks fourth, just one spot below Obama, on the weekly Lycos 50 list.
“People are still searching for her in record numbers,” said Kathy O’Reilly, a spokeswoman for Lycos. “How bizarre is that? Obama is the president-elect after the most historic election of all time and you’d think he would be dominating search activity and he only now is going ahead of her.”

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Friday, November 7, 2008

Rasmussen: Palin A 'Definite Asset' To McCain

Despite some news reports suggesting otherwise, a new poll shows that Sarah Palin was a definite asset to John McCain in his run for the White House.

According to a Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey, 69 percent of Republican voters say the Alaska governor helped McCain’s bid for the presidency. Twenty percent of GOP voters said she hurt the ticket, six percent said she had no effect, and 5 percent were undecided.

Other results of the poll:

91 percent of Republicans have a favorable view of Palin.

65 percent of Republicans have a very favorable view of Palin.

8 percent of Republicans have an unfavorable view of Palin.

3 percent of Republicans have a very unfavorable view of Palin.

64 percent of Republicans say Palin is their top choice for the GOP 2012 presidential nominee.

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Tuesday, November 4, 2008

NRA Sponsors Palin Home Watch Party

WASILLA, Alaska (From Politico) ~ The town of Wasilla, which bristled under the glare of intense media scrutiny in the weeks after John McCain tapped Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as his running mate, seems to be buzzing in anticipation of Election Day.
The National Rifle Association is sponsoring a results watching party here in Palin’s hometown featuring refreshments, booze, gun-safety classes and a rock band called Sarah and the Pit Bulls.
And the front page of the local paper, the Mat-Su Valley Frontiersman, on Sunday featured a five-column package on Palin resulting from its splurging to send a reporter on the campaign trail with her last week.

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Monday, November 3, 2008

Report Clears Palin In Alaska Controversy

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) - A report has cleared Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin of ethics violations in the firing of her public safety commissioner.
Released Monday, the report says there is no probable cause to believe Palin or any other state official violated the Alaska Executive Ethics Act in connection with the firing. The report was prepared by Timothy Petumenos, an independent counsel for the Alaska Personnel Board.

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Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Palin Rises Above Media Villification

An Analysis
The villification of Sarah Palin by the mainstream media continues unabated.
Some so-called "news" anchors mock her at every opportunity. MSNBC and CNN repeatedly cite polls they claim show she is not helping John McCain in his bid for the White House. The homosexual host of a late night show on MSNBC regularly makes outrageous comments about Palin, often with a smirk on her face.
The dissing of Plain comes in the face of the huge, enthusiastic crowds Palin continues to draw on the campaign trail and despite some earlier missteps, Palin has become an aggressive, articulate advocate of conservative values.
What many in the mainstream media miss is the impact Palin has had on the conservative base which, until her emergence, appeared ready to sit on its collective hands for the rest of the campaign. That is not the case now, as right-to-life, smaller government, pro-gun, less taxes and put-God-back-in-schools conservatives rally to the McCain-Palin ticket. And that occurs not just in Oklahoma.
Reports from some battleground states indicate that while Obama may lead in some, his leads are tenuous and the number of undecided voters has climbed as McCain-Palin commercials begin to pierce the non-stop barrage of Obama commercials.

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Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Palin Surprises Ohio Wal-Mart Shoppers


By Kevin Kelly/The Daily Sentinel, Pomery, Ohio

GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis Wal-Mart shoppers were at first surprised and then excited on Sunday to find a national political figure in their midst who was, just as they were, picking up a few things she needed.

Accompanied by her youngest son Trig, security, staffers and a small pool of news media, Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin stepped off the “Straight Talk Express” bus to enter the store around 1:30 p.m., where she purchased a bag of Parents’ Choice brand disposable diapers and a toy.

But it was also an opportunity for the first-term Alaska governor to meet the public at large and win some votes for the ticket on which she’s running with the GOP White House nominee, U.S. Sen. John McCain of Arizona.Palin did not have time to answer questions from the media following her trip through southeastern Ohio, but left some folks exhilirated at meeting her.

“It was so exciting,” said Pat Miller of Patriot, accompanied by her daughter Amber, a student at South Gallia High School. “She seemed to be very sweet, and if she could stop and take the time to buy some diapers for her son, it tells you that for her, family is first.”
Read the entire story at http://www.mydailysentinel.com/articles/2008/10/13/news/news00.txt.

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Friday, October 10, 2008

John Leo: The Power Of One

Liberal media transforms a single bigot at a Sarah Palin rally into a racist mob.

By John Leo ~ Dana Milbank of The Washington Post often writes with a good deal of attitude, and his Tuesday column was no exception. In his report on Sarah Palin’s campaign speech in Clearwater, Florida, laced with mocking Palinisms (“darn right,” “betcha”), he wrote that “the self-identified pit bull has been unleashed, if not unhinged.”
The “unhinging,” in Milbank’s assessment, came when Palin charged that Obama still has some explaining to do about his relationship with 1960s Weatherman bomber William Ayers.
Milbank also wrote that Palin blamed Katie Couric for her “less-than-successful” CBS interview.
Other newspapers reported a more light-hearted Palin response to the dismal interview. The Tampa Tribune, for example, reported that she said: “I shoulda told them I was just trying to keep Tina Fey in business.”
But Milbank’s report triggered Democratic rage across the Internet with his charge that “Palin’s routine attacks on the media have begun to spill into ugliness.” Some in the Clearwater crowd, he wrote, shouted abuse at reporters. Someone yelled “Kill him,” apparently a reference to Ayers; and one person shouted an epithet at a network sound man (apparently the N-word, though Milbank didn’t say) and told him, “Sit down, boy.”
Two shouting extremists in a crowd of 4,500 are two too many, of course.
The question is whether these outliers offer sufficient evidence for a clearly hostile reporter to demonstrate that Palin’s rallies have gotten ugly.
Florida reporters did not see the event that way. The St. Petersburg Times ran a benign story on the Palin speech. William March of the Tampa Tribune told me, “They booed Obama and the press, but that just makes it a normal Republican rally.” March admitted that he was standing further from the speaker’s stand than national press reporters, and therefore heard less, but he maintains that the rally was no hate-fest.
An early web version of Milbank’s column was headlined, “In Fla., Palin Goes for the Rough Stuff as Audience Boos Obama.” Rough stuff? There’s no evidence that Palin did anything more than challenge Obama on Ayers.
In the short TV clip available at the Huffington Post, the crowd booed in response to Palin’s litany of Obama’s liberal votes in the Senate. This is pretty standard campaign behavior.
Milbank’s lone racist at the rally soon became a group (or a mob) of people shouting racial epithets.
A New York Times editorial Tuesday (“The Politics of Attack”) misquoted Milbank’s Post column, claiming that one person shouted “Kill him” and “others shouted epithets at an African-American member of a TV crew.”
Many blogs followed suit: “Crowd at Palin Rally Hurled Racial Epithets at African American on News Crew,” read the headline at Pensito Review. This was too much for Bob Somerby, the left-leaning blogger at the Daily Howler. Calling Milbank “a highly unreliable chronicler,” Somerby taunted the Times for multiplying racists at the rally: “It’s the power of pluralization!...One example becomes much more powerful when we stick an ‘s’ on the end. In this case, one epithet-shouter turns into a group. How many people were shouting those epithets? The editors let you imagine.”
At the Huffington Post, the “Kill him” shout directed at Ayers was interpreted as an assassination threat against Obama. Another Huffington piece asked, “Is Palin Trying to Incite Violence Against Obama?”
As the misreporting gathered steam on the Internet, writers became ever angrier.
“The event sounds like the precursor to a lynching,” wrote a Daily Kos blogger. Another opined: “There is a time to start feeling fear.”
Former New York Times reporter Adam Clymer compared Palin events with George Wallace speeches, though he gracefully conceded that “lots of journalists have worked in situations more menacing than covering Sarah Palin.”
This was a disastrous outing for the Post, the Times, and bloggers determined to view Palin appearances as brownshirt rallies. If the atmosphere is so hate-filled and racist at these events, why does the evidence come down to one shouter at one rally?
John Leo edits the Manhattan Institute website Minding the Campus.

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Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Is Ifill Out As Veep Debate Moderator?

There's word today that PBS anchor Gwen Ifill may be removed as moderator of Thursday's vice presidential debate between Democrat Joe Biden and Republican Sarah Palin because of Ifill's new book, out on Inauguration Day, that praises Barack Obama.
Ifill's impartiality and credibility have been under attack this week, as word of the book's existence became known.
The McCain-Palin campaign was not aware of it when they agreed to Ifill as the moderator, a spokesman told Fox News' Greta Van Sustern.
Whether the Republicans have lodged a formal request is speculated, but not known.

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Will Ifill's Obama Bias Show In Veep Debate?

By Bob Unruh/© 2008 WorldNetDaily ~ The moderator of Thursday's vice presidential debate between Democrat Sen. Joe Biden and GOP Gov. Sarah Palin is writing a book, to come out about the time the next president takes the oath of office, to "shed new light" on Democratic candidate Barack Obama and other "emerging young African American politicians" who are "forging a bold new path to political power."

Gwen Ifill, of the Public Broadcasting Service program called "Washington Week," is promoting "The Breakthrough," in which she argues the "Black political structure" of the civil rights movement is giving way to men and women who have benefited from those struggles over racial equality.

Ifill declined to return a WND telephone message asking for a comment about her book project, and whether its success would be expected should Obama lose. But she has faced criticism previously for not treating candidates of both major parties the same.

During an earlier debate event she moderated, when Democrat John Edwards attacked Dick Cheney's former employer, Halliburton, the vice president said, "I can respond, Gwen, but it's going to take more than 30 seconds."

"Well, that's all you've got," she told him.

Ifill told The Associated Press Democrats were delighted with her answer, because they "thought I was being snippy to Cheney." She explains that wasn't her intent.

But she also was cited in complaints PBS Ombudsman Michael Getler said he got after Palin delivered her nomination acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention in Minneapolis this year.

The complaints cited Ifill's "dismissive" look during her report on Palin's speech. According to Getler, some complaints also said she wore a look of "disgust" while reporting on Palin.
Read the entire column at www.worldnetdaily.com.

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Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Hastings Apologies For Palin Remarks

(CNN) - An African-American congressman from Florida is apologizing for his comment that black and Jewish voters should not support Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin because "anybody toting guns and stripping moose don't care too much about what they do with Jews and blacks."
"I regret the comments I made last Tuesday that were not smart and certainly not relevant to hunters or sportsmen," Rep. Alcee Hastings said in a statement issued Monday.
Last week, at a panel on the shared agenda of Jewish and African-American Democrats during the annual conference of the National Jewish Democratic Council, Hastings told attendees what he intended to tell his Jewish constituents about the importance of supporting Sen. Obama in November's presidential election.
"If Sarah Palin isn't enough of a reason for you to get over whatever your problem is with Barack Obama, then you damn well had better pay attention," Hastings said last week. "Anybody toting guns and stripping moose don't care too much about what they do with Jews and blacks. So, you just think this through," he added

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Monday, September 29, 2008

Can Biden Withstand Palin Debate Pressure?

Can Joe Biden withstand the pressure of his debate with Sarah Palin this week?
It's a fair question to ask given Biden's repeated gaffes and while Palin has stumbled during recent television interviews, it is Biden whose comments have drawn "He said what?" responses.
The most recent Biden gaffe came when he said that when the Depression occurred (in 1929), President Franklin Roosevelt went on television and reassured the nation. Herbert Hoover was president in 1929; commercial television was, at that time, unknown to the nation. The mainstream media, however, have given Biden a pass on this gigantic gaffe and instead focused on Palin.
Writing on the National Post, Sheldon Alberts reported, "In recent days, Biden has claimed it was the “patriotic” duty of wealthy Americans to pay higher taxes, urged a wheelchair-bound man to 'stand up' at a Democratic rally, and suggested Hillary Clinton 'might have been a better pick than me' as Obama’s running mate.

"But many of those remarks were lost amid the media fascination with Palin."
Those remarks, and others, have prompted what Alberts described as "growing concern" in the Obama camp that Biden will make a campaign-staggering gaffe in the debate with Palin.
A Los Angeles Times columnist wrote of Biden, "And, of course, last summer Biden attempted to endear himself to an Indian American supporter by telling him that in Delaware, 'you cannot go to a 7-Eleven or a Dunkin’ Donuts unless you have a slight Indian accent.' Not only was this an offensive line, it didn’t even make any sense: The observation, familiar to anybody who watched a comedian on cable television 15 years ago, is that Indian Americans are the only ones who work in convenience stores, not that they’re the only ones who shop there. The man can’t even keep his condescending cliches straight."
Then there's this, from a New York Times columnist, who wrote that Biden is "a human verbal wrecking crew.

"This is the fellow who nearly derailed his nascent presidential campaign last year by calling Mr. Obama 'articulate and bright and clean,' and who noted that a person needed a slight Indian accent to walk into a Dunkin’ Donuts or 7-Eleven in Delaware, his home state.

"The man who, reading his vice-presidential acceptance speech from a teleprompter, bungled Mr. McCain’s name and called him 'George.' ('Freudian slip, folks, Freudian slip,' he explained.)

"The man who, on the day Mr. Obama announced him as his running mate, referred to his party’s presidential nominee as 'Barack America' and noted that his wife, Jill Biden, a college professor, was 'drop-dead gorgeous' but, problematically, possessed a doctorate.

"The man who has said he is running for president (not vice president) and who confused Army brigades with battalions. Who referred to Ms. Palin as the lieutenant governor of Alaska.

"Aides to Mr. Obama said that Mr. Biden’s propensity to misspeak could pose problems, particularly in the vice-presidential debate on Oct. 2. They are watching his performance but have not tried to rein him in. They have assigned two veteran minders to travel with him — David Wilhelm, a former Democratic National Committee chairman, and David Wade, a former spokesman for Senator John Kerry."

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Monday, September 22, 2008

California Is Obama's, But...

From Sunday's San Francisco Chronicle ~ Post-convention swing state polls are tipping toward Sen. John McCain, the TV pundits are waxing about "The Palin Factor," and Sen. Barack Obama's California supporters are freaking out about a race Democrats were uncommonly confident about only a month ago.

Conversely, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's addition to the GOP ticket jolted Northern California Republicans out of what one described as their "Underground Railroad" existence in one of the nation's most liberal regions.
Ever since her speech to the Republican National Convention on Sept. 3, party officials say volunteers have been contacting California GOP offices in numbers unseen since Ronald Reagan was on the ballot for the White House.

Despite generating all this fear and enthusiasm, the Palin Factor hasn't changed the race in California. Obama beats McCain 52 percent to 36 percent in a Field Poll released last week....

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