Political Hotsheet
By

Brian Montopoli /

CBS News/ November 17, 2010, 9:04 AM

Sarah Palin: I'm Considering Running for President

Sarah Palin in her new show, "Sarah Palin's Alaska."

/ TLC

Updated 4:37 p.m. Eastern Time

In a just-released New York Times Magazine cover story, Sarah Palin responds "I am" when asked if she is considering a run for president.

"I'm engaged in the internal deliberations candidly, and having that discussion with my family, because my family is the most important consideration here," Palin is quoted as saying.

She goes on to argue that the major potential Republican candidates are largely alike when it comes to policy - "but in fact there's more to the presidency than that."

Should she run, Palin tells author Robert Draper, "I'd have to bring in more people -- more people who are trustworthy" into her inner circle. Palin has only about ten advisers (most of whom did not know her before two years ago) and has built up little in the way of infrastructure for a run, unlike likely GOP candidates Mitt Romney and Tim Pawlenty. (Here, via Politico, is the cover image for the story, which shows her advisers.)

A number of top Republicans are reportedly discussing how to stop a Palin presidential run for fear that the polarizing former Alaska governor will lose badly against President Obama in a general election should she secure the nomination.

Palin acknowledges in the story that unlike some other candidates, she would have to prove her record "right out of the chute."

"That's the most frustrating thing for me - the warped and perverted description of my record and what I've accomplished over the last two decades," she tells Draper. "It's been much more perplexing to me than where the lamestream media has wanted to go about my personal life. And other candidates haven't faced these criticisms the way I have."

Because of the unfairness of the media toward her, she adds, "I fear for our democracy." 

In the story, a Palin friend suggests that she could improve public perceptions of her if "when she starts doing the debates during the primaries, she knocks it out of the park."

"That would cause an entirely different view of things, wouldn't it?," he says. 

In a seperate interview with ABC's Barbara Walters, Palin also said she is considering a run.

"I'm looking at the lay of the land now, and trying to figure that out, if it's a good thing for the country, for the discourse, for my family, if it's a good thing," she said.

Palin told Walters she believed she could beat President Obama if she does run.

The former Alaska governor says in the Times story that while she has declined most media requests except with Fox News, where she is paid as a contributer, she hasn't been avoiding discussion of her positions.

"I'm not avoiding anything or anybody," she says. "I'm on Facebook and Twitter. I'm out there. I want to talk about my record, though." 

The story quotes White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs complaining that he is frustrated by a situation in which Palin posts a provocative comment online and then the White House press corps becomes focused on it.

"Now, I could say, 'You know what? I'm not going to deal with that,'" Gibbs says. "And big headline: Palin Accuses Obama of X. The White House Had No Comment."

Palin also says in the story she is as qualified as Mr. Obama for the job.

"If I had any doubt in my ability or administrative experience that would've been put to good use in a McCain administration, then I never would have accepted the nomination," she says. 

The Palin, Inc. Reality Show

Draper writes that Palin, then the GOP's vice presidential nominee, pushed to make more media appearances during the 2008 presidential campaign than she ultimately made. He also describes her as seen as thrifty within the campaign when it comes to her wardrobe - contradicting the perception left by reports that Republicans had spent lavishly on clothing for the then-candidate and her family - and says she "was seen more than once passed out on her hotel bed half-buried in briefing books and index cards."

During the campaign, Palin says, she developed a distrust of "the left," which she says "came out attacking me." As Alaska governor, she had tried to project an image of bipartisanship, one that largely fell by the wayside after she became John McCain's running mate and offered harshly critical comments about Mr. Obama and Democrats.

"They showed me their hypocrisy; they showed me they weren't willing to work in a bipartisan way," she says. "I learned my lesson. Once bitten, twice shy. I will never trust that they are not hypocrites until they show me they're sincere."

According to a new Gallup poll, there is no clear frontrunner for the Republican nomination. The survey found that 19 percent of Republicans and Republican-leaners favor Mitt Romney, while 16 percent favor both Palin and Mike Huckabee. Another 13 percent say they support Newt Gingrich.


Brian Montopoli is a political reporter for CBSNews.com. You can read more of his posts here. Follow Hotsheet on Facebook and Twitter.
© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
154 Comments Add a Comment
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sfbanak says:
I HOPE THIS MOTIVATES ALOT OF PEOPLE TO RUN AGAINST HER!!! I DO NOT WANT HER TO BE PRESIDENT! SHE IS FRIGHTFUL!
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baukunin says:
Sorry. I've known the family for 22 years.

She's an idiot.

"Articulate" means that a person can capably express themselves about complex matters.

You can teach a parrot talking points.
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americaisconservative says:
She should run for President. She is a bright, articulate woman.

Americaisconservative.blogspot.com
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baukunin says:
If the "lamestream media" were really after Palin they'd touch one subject that calls her integrity into question more than anything else. It's the third rail, however, and they won't.

Palin knew months before she delivered in 2008 that her child had Down Syndrome. She was 43 years old when she conceived, a mothers' age when one of forty pregnancies are so affected. Since her older children were born so widely spaced, it is difficult to believe she did not use birth control.

She had a history of at least one miscarriage.

We don't know what sort of prenatal care received, though she must have had amniocentesis to have diagnosed the baby she carried.

The day before Trig's birth, she was in Dallas to deliver a speech. Her water broke, but instead of presenting herself for medical attention, she went on to the conference, finally delivering her talk. Then she flew on her scheduled flight to Anchorage, by way of Seattle. The flight with the stopover took about 13 hours.

Once in Anchorage, landing on the west side of town on a snowy day, she drove or was driven not in an ambulance, but a car, past three excellent hospitals, the Alaska Native Medical Center (since Todd was 1/8th Yup'ik, she was eligible for Indian Health Services), the Alaska Regional Hospital and Presbyterian Medical Center. She traveled instead 50 miles to a small clinic in Wasilla, where she delivered.

By all rights, she should have miscarried again, or delivered a fragile neonate on an airplane or in a car up to 25 miles from medical care. By all rights her baby would have died. That would have solved her dilemma of continuing to maintain a "pro-life" posture while at the same time relieving herself of the burden of raising a damaged child.

No reporter has apparently ever had the guts to ask her a question about this. Some have questioned, absurdly, whether or not she actually bore her child, or if it were Bristol's. The chances of a 16-year-old Bristol carrying a Down Syndrome child were over one in two thousand. The chances of her getting pregnant again with Tripp, so soon after supposedly giving birth were next to nil.

So the media, which is supposedly unalterably against her, has never sought an answer to the obvious question: "Were you trying to kill you baby?"

If anyone has a better explanation for Sarah's bizarre behavior, other than infanticidal intent, I'd like to hear it. None has ever been offered.

Not only has Sarah deftly avoided the question, but has managed to make the descriptive word, "retarded," off limits in public discourse. She called for Rahm Emanuel's resignation when he used the word pejoratively with a vulgarism to describe those health care reform activists who wanted a congressional vote on the single payer option.

So please. Give us a break. When Sarah uses the term, "lamestream media," referring to any news source or commentary outside the Fox empire/right wing noise machine, how about some intrepid reporter, any one, asking her about that otherwise inexplicable behavior?
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obamadblesse says:
If Sara Palin becomes President.....i will sell everything i have and go live in a third world country....i dont need anyone without an education leading an intelluctual person as i am...that would be in insult to my intelligence. Hellooooo!
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lawkwfl replies:
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Feel free, Gywenth Paltrow did it. Barbara Streisand threatened to do it, and we're still waiting for her to leave. I hear land is cheap is Cuba.
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nearl451 says:
WOWOWIE!!! What a NEWS FLASH......not.
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ladyang says:
Sarah palin, anything you say can and will be used against you in a general election!
Choose your positions wisely!
Get off faux noise and get some real education!
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cyberbuff says:
Dear God..
PLEASE, let this wing nut get the GOP nomination...so that we (my Country), and DEFEAT HER IN A General Election LANDSLIDE Dismissing her to Alaska...or Obscurity...FOREVER!!!
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cyberbuff says:
Dear God..
PLEASE, let this wing nut get the GOP nomination...so that we (my Country), and DEFEAT HER IN A General Election LANDSLIDE Dismissing her to Alaska...or Obscurity...FOREVER!!!
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tomdegan58 says:
To paraphrase Molly Ivins in a slightly different context:

If that woman's IQ gets any lower we're gonna have to start watering her twice a day.

http://www.tomdegan.blogspot.com

Tom Degan
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