Oct. 10, 2008
PR Consultant Helped Palin Grab Spotlight
Washington Post: Alaska Governor's Calendar Helps Explain Her Rise On The National Stage
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Play CBS Video Video Troopergate Hounds Palin The soon-to-be released report is expected to show Todd Palin's involvement in the dismissal of an Alaska official, reports John Blackstone. Bob Schieffer discusses the probe's likely effect.
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Video Desperate Times As John McCain and Sarah Palin go on the offensive on their personal attacks against Barack Obama, the Democratic candidate feels it's a sign that the GOP ticket is losing steam. Chip Reid has more.
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Video Palin On Couric Interview Gov. Sarah Palin reacted to comments about her less than favorable interview with CBS' Katie Couric at a rally in Clearwater, Fla. Palin said that she was "a little bit impatient and a little bit annoyed" with the questions.
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Republican vice presidential candidate, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin speaks to supporters at a rally at the Center Court Sports Complex in Waukesha, Wis., Thursday Oct. 9, 2008. (AP)
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Timeline Palin's Path A look at Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's life and career
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Photo Essay Sarah Palin Alaska's youngest and first female governor tabbed to be McCain's running mate.
During her first months in office, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin kept a relatively light schedule on her workdays in Juneau, making ceremonial appearances at sports events and funerals, meeting with state lawmakers, and conducting interviews with Alaska magazines, radio stations and newspapers.
But this spring, Palin's official calendar chronicles an extraordinary rise to national prominence. A fresh face in Republican politics, she was discovered by the national news media at least in part because of a determined effort by a state agency to position her as an oil and gas expert who could tout Alaska's determined effort to construct a natural gas pipeline.
An outside public relations expert hired under a $31,000 contract with the state Department of Natural Resources pitched the "upstart governor" as a crusader against Big Oil, a story line that Palin has adopted in her campaign as Sen. John McCain's running mate. The contract was the only time the Palin administration hired an outside consultant to set up media interviews, a function performed in many states by government employees.
At the state Capitol, Palin agreed to be "shadowed" for days by some national reporters, and her dealings with the legislature dropped off so dramatically that some House and Senate members donned red-and-white "Where's Sarah?" buttons to show their disapproval. But her high-visibility campaign paid off, helping Palin win notice from political pundits, who began including her on lists of long-shot choices for the GOP vice presidential spot.
"We were glad she was out there promoting energy development," said Alaska state Rep. Jay Ramras (R), an occasional critic of Palin. "Who would have guessed the self-promoting element would have led to such an improbable move, to place her on the ticket, but it worked."
Palin's gubernatorial calendar, obtained by The Washington Post under the Alaska Public Records Act, adds to the understanding of Palin as a political phenomenon, a governor from an obscure state who exploded onto the national stage after just 21 months in office. While many factors played a role in Palin's rise, including her background in broadcast journalism and the appeal of her life story, she also benefited from expert counsel on how to take her message to a national audience.
Palin made energy a priority as she took office in December 2006. Much of her time was devoted to discussions of a proposed 1,700-mile pipeline that would deliver natural gas from the North Slope of Alaska to the lower 48 states. The issue had long been controversial, but Palin vowed to tackle it without making too many concessions to oil companies. Her first contact with Washington came on Jan. 17, 2007, when the vice president called her to discuss the project, the calendar shows.
In early January 2007, Palin met with Marathon Oil executives, and the next month, while attending a meeting of the National Governors Association in Washington, she met privately with Exxon Mobil executives, including the president of production at the time. The conference also provided her first audience with President Bush, who hosted the governors at the White House.
But Palin's typical day during her first months in office was far more mundane, the calendar shows. Her schedule shows long gaps in her official business on school holidays, appearances at local events and festivals, and frequent out-of-town trips with a child or two in tow.
Meetings on the pipeline became regular features on her calendar, and the Department of Natural Resources wanted to heighten national attention on it, said Kurt Gibson, a member of Palin's oil and gas team. Despite the project's "unprecedented" nature, state officials were not attracting the interest of national media, he said.
"We are a small state far removed from major media markets. We needed someone with expertise. The objective was to raise national awareness of the project," Gibson said. "It benefits not just the state of Alaska, but Americans in general. We want the public to understand this."
Gibson said Palin was an articulate advocate for the project and "the best person to deliver that message."
The agency signed a contract last year with Marcia Brier, who is based in Needham, Mass. Brier's Web site says she has been a public relations expert for 20 years, working mostly with law and medical firms. She represented Bader al-Saud, the Saudi prince, in his plea deal on a vehicular homicide charge. Another Brier client is the law firm Greenberg Traurig, which is providing legal services to the state of Alaska on the pipeline and recommended Brier to state officials.
Reached by telephone, Brier confirmed that she worked with Palin, "but once she became the vice presidential nominee, I stopped."
Brier began pitching Palin for media interviews as early as October 2007, when an e-mail was sent to The Post.
The media campaign did not take off, however, until this year, after Palin announced that TransCanada was the only firm to meet the bidding requirements for the pipeline. As events unfolded, Brier pitched stories promoting Palin, casting her as the force behind creating the pipeline plan and convincing the legislature to go along.
Media pitches sent to The Post in mid-May were titled "Big Oil Under Siege" and "Alaska's Love-Hate Relationship With Big Oil." Each offered an interview with Palin.
"The announcement of the winning bidder for a new Alaskan pipeline is a major blow to ExxonMobil, BP, and ConocoPhillips, the three oil companies operating in Alaska," Brier's pitch said. "These companies have blocked construction of a new pipeline for decades. . . . But now, the new governor of Alaska has devised a way to circumvent Big Oil's delaying tactics."
Another pitch said: "Even Alaska's upstart governor, who has been key in pushing through the pipeline project that oil companies detest, depends on these very companies for her family income. Her husband, Todd, works for BP as a field worker."
Adding to the media's interest in the 44-year-old governor was the delivery of her fifth child, Trig, on April 18. Palin flew home from a Republican Governors Association meeting in Texas to have the baby at a Wasilla hospital, and the schedules show that she returned to work three days afterward. She resurfaced to attend a meeting on the pipeline at the Capitol.
McCain shows up twice on Palin's calendar during the months he was considering her as a potential running mate. In February, he hosted a gathering with governors at a Washington hotel during the Republican Governors Association's winter meeting. The next month, Palin promoted McCain at the Alaska Republican Party's annual convention in Anchorage, reading a letter from him that expressed his regrets for not being able to attend.
On May 22, Palin recommended that the legislature approve the selection of TransCanada for pipeline construction. That same day, Brier scheduled an interview for Palin with the New York Times. She also did telephone interviews with The Post, Fox News, Fortune magazine and "60 Minutes" this spring and summer.
In June, Palin called the legislature into special session to consider the pipeline proposal as well as her plan to give state residents $1,200 oil-dividends checks. The Wall Street Journal flew in to shadow the governor, her calendar shows.
Before long, the spotlight on Palin had expanded to include personal profiles and stories about her staunch opposition to listing polar bears as endangered. People magazine, which sent a reporter to follow her, featured her in a cover story with photos of her holding Trig.
Some lawmakers complained about the governor's preoccupation with media coverage, blaming it in part for her absence at the Capitol.
There also was some resentment that Palin presented herself as the driving force behind the pipeline. "This didn't happen because of one person," said state Rep. Beth Kerttula, a Democrat and House minority leader. "We saw changes because many, many people wanted them and worked for them." The legislature ratified the TransCanada proposal in August.
Larry Persily, an associate director in Alaska's Washington office until June and a former Anchorage Daily News opinion page editor, said the governor initially might not have known how to reach out to national media, but she was well versed in doing interviews from her experience with Alaska news outlets. By the time there was some national buzz on her, he said, she was ready, and an easy sell to reporters.
"The national media loves it when we make the news, because we are so weird out there" in Alaska, Persily said. "Editors across the nation started saying, 'Let's go find out who this woman is.'"
Gibson, the oil and gas team member, said the contract with Brier ended when McCain picked Palin.
"We'd achieved our objective with getting the national attention," Gibson said. "There was no need anymore to use state money to achieve that. She has the platform. She can deliver the message. She doesn't have a problem reaching out to the media."
Research editor Alice Crites contributed to this report.
By Kimberly Kindy
© 2008 The Washington Post Company
- Most of the African Americans I have talked to is tired of the *** practiced by John McCain and no name Palin. They believe that the time frame of their meeting co-incide with the birth of her last baby and explains why he thinks she is more qualified than people sitting as U.S. Senators and higher ups.
When leaving his first wife due to her illness, he was listed as a womanizer and this would play into Ms. Palin''s grubby little hands for an advancement.
Everyone wants John McCain to get down and dirty with Obama, we think he already has with Ms. Palin. - Reply to this comment
- I wondered how anyone so dumb could govern a state -- well now I know, good PR at taxpayers expense. Pack this rabid pitbull hypocrite up and send her home. Let her serve the AIP from there not as our VP at our expense.
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- OMG, what a fake - she''s out there stumping, calling Obama "ambitious"...and here all the time was little Sarah Palin, totally underqualified, having the State pay a personal PR spinmeister to promote her onto the national stage as someone she so patently isn''t. I had wondered how on earth she arrived from nowhere, so amateurish and underqualified, to become a VP candidate...passing over so many great and qualified Republican women candidates. Wow!
Someone asked how Obama got to where he is? Columbia University, Harvard Law School, President Harvard Law Review, 3 years as a community organizer in Chicago, a practicing Civil Rights Lawyer in Chicago, a lecturing Professor of US Constituion at the University of Chicago, 6 years in the Illinois Senate, almost 4 years in the US Senate, chairman of the Illinois Senate''s Health and Human Services Committee, US Senate Foreign Relations Committee, US Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, US Senate Veterans'' Affairs Committee. Authored two best-selling books himself (Unlike McCain & Palin - both ghost written). Obama has authored or sponsored over 700 legislative bills on major issues affecting the US, some recognized as landmark laws, including on Ethics & Government Reform, Nuclear Diasarmament, Education, Energy, Health, Penal Code Reform, Veterans Issues, Taxation, Darfur, Iraq, N. Korea,. Detailsof Obama''s outstanding legislative record and speeches are available at www.obama.senate.gov. - Reply to this comment
- So, that was the Best person for McCain to chose as VP,putting Country - First?
You be a judge for him. - Reply to this comment
- Now I know how someone as dumb as Palin can govern a state? Good PR Rep. She embodies the dumbing-down of our political leaders. A shameful & risky move by an erratic and unlucky gambler.
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- The journalism major who is unable to speak with the media-NUTCASE!!!
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- Now we know Palin''s the governor that abused her power and if you love animals at all you need to know she put her blessing on the brutal practice of Aerial gunning of wolves and you know the poor don''t own planes to shoot wolves and collect the $150.00 bounty when you cut their front paws off! Sounds like Vice Presidentail material to me!! Sounds like "compassionate conservatism" McCain graduated 5th from the bottom of his class, sounds like Presidential material to me!! How much lower can Republicans go??
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- When will Sarah Palin be VETTED?
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- Heckofajob, McCain! You can really pick ''em! And, such a thoughtful choice. You met her once? And, you trust her with your country''s future should something happen to you? Aww, that shows how much you really care. It shows that your slogan "Country First" should read "McCain Wants to Be President."
And, to think I used to respect the man. Wow. - Reply to this comment
- Sarah Palin: V.P OF OPERATION REVERSE CHAOS!
Sarah Palin: OBAMA''''S SECRETE WEAPON! - Reply to this comment
- The "Troopergate" is really nothing--------compared to Palin''''s under reported income that the IRS is after! ...
Posted by excoachken at 11:43 AM
They do make an appropriate pair of bookends for the Palin Chronicles that are unfolding now. - Reply to this comment
- Posted by mjvw2 at 11:45 AM
Seems the Keating Five, Hagee, Paisley, and the bad Keating Five remake -- otherwise known as the McCain Mortgage Bailout is causing the light to shift more than your sources. Especially it as it applies to that morally hazardous corporate welfare program called McCain''s Mortgage Bailout Plan. - Reply to this comment
- Posted by OneAmerican7 at 12:32 PM
At this point calling then disproven lies from a smear campaign seems more appropriate and verified by credible sources. - Reply to this comment
- And the LAMEstream media elevated Ubama to the national spotlight. I guess it''s all even.
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McCain is rumored to be readying Palin''s replacement...- Reply to this comment
- [bq]
pitched the "upstart governor" as a crusader against Big Oil, a story line that Palin has adopted in her campaign as Sen. John McCain''s running mate.
[eq]
See how that works? You levy a tax on Big Oil and give your constituents $1200 APIECE.
Big Oil passes that tax down to the other 300 million or so other Americans.
You become a "crusader", your constituents are tickled to death, and the "conservative", "anti-tax" Republicans find in you their new Joan of Arc.
Ain''t Republican hypocrisy weird at times? - Reply to this comment
- Okay.Who helped Obama grab the spotlight?The angels? -
Posted by ozonmojo
ayers, farrahkan, flager, rezko, acorn to name a few - Reply to this comment
- The "Troopergate" is really nothing--------compared to Palin''s under reported income that the IRS is after! The other foot drops next week and then who will replace Sarah? Maybe June Clever is available!
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- Posted by Xlib at 10:50 AM : He wins and it will be the first President elected by the media. That''''''''s a fact, comrade...
Elected by the media? Even your own party is bailing on McCain. Especially after that "what was he thinking?" mortgage bailout bill he proposed in this week''s debate. Conservatives and liberals both agree that it''s a horrible plan. And Palin has been turning off potential supporters for weeks now. You can only hide her utter cluelessness for so long -- it has a way of rearing its head (just like Putin!) in interviews and debates. - Reply to this comment
- Yeah, right... Palin is such an "outsider"... uh huh... Sure sounds like she''s a typical politician to me. Every move calculated for the sake of her image and future campaigns. I trust Palin less than I do the vast majority of our government politicians. There''s something especially cold and calculating about her.
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