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In her new book, Sarah Palin, seen here at the Republican National Convention in 2008, reprises some claims from the 2008 campaign that haven't become any truer over time.
PAUL J. RICHARDS/AFP/Getty Images
Sarah Palin's new book reprises familiar
claims from the 2008 presidential campaign that haven't become any
truer over time.
Ignoring substantial parts of her record if not the facts, she
depicts herself as a frugal traveler on the taxpayer's dime, a
reformer without ties to powerful interests and a politician
roguishly indifferent to high ambition.
Palin goes adrift, at times, on more contemporary issues, too.
She criticizes President Barack Obama for pushing through a bailout
package that actually was achieved by his Republican predecessor
George W. Bush - a package she seemed to support at the time.
A look at some of her statements in "Going Rogue," obtained by
The Associated Press in advance of its release Tuesday:
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---
PALIN: Says she made frugality a point when traveling on state
business as Alaska governor, asking "only" for reasonably priced
rooms and not "often" going for the "high-end,
robe-and-slippers" hotels.
THE FACTS: Although travel records indicate she usually opted
for less-pricey hotels while governor, Palin and daughter Bristol
stayed five days and four nights at the $707.29-per-night Essex
House luxury hotel (robes and slippers come standard) overlooking
New York City's Central Park for a five-hour women's leadership
conference in October 2007. With air fare, the cost to Alaska was
well over $3,000. Event organizers said Palin asked if she could
bring her daughter. The governor billed her state more than $20,000
for her children's travel, including to events where they had not
been invited, and in some cases later amended expense reports to
specify that they had been on official business.
---
PALIN: Boasts that she ran her campaign for governor on small
donations, mostly from first-time givers, and turned back large
checks from big donors if her campaign perceived a conflict of
interest.
THE FACTS: Of the roughly $1.3 million she raised for her
primary and general election campaigns for governor, more than half
came from people and political action committees giving at least
$500, according to an AP analysis of her campaign finance reports.
The maximum that individual donors could give was $1,000; $2,000
for a PAC.
Of the rest, about $76,000 came from Republican Party
committees.
She accepted $1,000 each from a state senator and his wife in
the weeks after the two Republican lawmakers' offices were raided
by the FBI as part of an investigation into a powerful Alaska
oilfield services company. After AP reported those donations during
the presidential campaign, she said she would give a comparative
sum to charity after the general election in 2010, a date set by
state election laws.
PALIN: Rails against taxpayer-financed bailouts, which she
attributes to Obama. She recounts telling daughter Bristol that to
succeed in business, "you'll have to be brave enough to fail."
THE FACTS: Palin is blurring the lines between Obama's stimulus
plan - a $787 billion package of tax cuts, state aid, social
programs and government contracts - and the federal bailout that
Republican presidential candidate John McCain voted for and
President George W. Bush signed.
Palin's views on bailouts appeared to evolve as McCain's vice
presidential running mate. In September 2008, she said "taxpayers
cannot be looked to as the bailout, as the solution, to the
problems on Wall Street." A week later, she said "ultimately what
the bailout does is help those who are concerned about the health
care reform that is needed to help shore up our economy."
During the vice presidential debate in October, Palin praised
McCain for being "instrumental in bringing folks together" to
pass the $700 billion bailout. After that, she said "it is a time
of crisis and government did have to step in."
---
PALIN: Says Ronald Reagan faced an even worse recession than the
one that appears to be ending now, and "showed us how to get out
of one. If you want real job growth, cut capital gains taxes and
slay the death tax once and for all."
THE FACTS: The estate tax, which some call the death tax, was
not repealed under Reagan and capital gains taxes are lower now
than when Reagan was president.
Economists overwhelmingly say the current recession is far
worse. The recession Reagan faced lasted for 16 months; this one is
in its 23rd month. The recession of the early 1980s did not have a
financial meltdown. Unemployment peaked at 10.8 percent, worse than
the October 2009 high of 10.2 percent, but the jobless rate is
still expected to climb.
---
PALIN: She says her team overseeing the development of a natural
gas pipeline set up an open, competitive bidding process that
allowed any company to compete for the right to build a 1,715-mile
pipeline to bring natural gas from Alaska to the Lower 48.
THE FACTS: Palin characterized the pipeline deal the same way
before an AP investigation found her team crafted terms that
favored only a few independent pipeline companies and ultimately
benefited a company with ties to her administration, TransCanada
Corp. Despite promises and legal guidance not to talk directly with
potential bidders during the process, Palin had meetings or phone
calls with nearly every major candidate, including TransCanada.
---
PALIN: Criticizes an aide to her predecessor, Gov. Frank
Murkowski, for a conflict of interest because the aide represented
the state in negotiations over a gas pipeline and then left to work
as a handsomely paid lobbyist for ExxonMobil. Palin asserts her
administration ended all such arrangements, shoving a wedge in the
revolving door between special interests and the state capital.
THE FACTS: Palin ignores her own "revolving door" issue in
office; the leader of her own pipeline team was a former lobbyist
for a subsidiary of TransCanada, the company that ended up winning
the rights to build the pipeline.
---
PALIN: Writes about a city councilman in Wasilla, Alaska, who
owned a garbage truck company and tried to push through an
ordinance requiring residents of new subdivisions to pay for trash
removal instead of taking it to the dump for free - this to
illustrate conflicts of interest she stood against as a public
servant.
THE FACTS: As Wasilla mayor, Palin pressed for a special zoning
exception so she could sell her family's $327,000 house, then did
not keep a promise to remove a potential fire hazard on the
property.
She asked the city council to loosen rules for snow machine
races when she and her husband owned a snow machine store, and cast
a tie-breaking vote to exempt taxes on aircraft when her
father-in-law owned one. But she stepped away from the table in
1997 when the council considered a grant for the Iron Dog snow
machine race in which her husband competes.
---
PALIN: Says Obama has admitted that the climate change policy he
seeks will cause people's electricity bills to "skyrocket."
THE FACTS: She correctly quotes a comment attributed to Obama in
January 2008, when he told San Francisco Chronicle editors that
under his cap-and-trade climate proposal, "electricity rates would
necessarily skyrocket" as utilities are forced to retrofit coal
burning power plants to reduce carbon dioxide emissions.
Obama has argued since then that climate legislation can blunt
the cost to consumers. Democratic legislation now before Congress
calls for a variety of measures aimed at mitigating consumer costs.
Several studies predict average household costs probably would be
$100 to $145 a year.
---
PALIN: Welcomes last year's Supreme Court decision deciding
punitive damages for victims of the nation's largest oil spill
tragedy, the Exxon Valdez disaster, stating it had taken 20 years
to achieve victory. As governor, she says, she'd had the state
argue in favor of the victims, and she says the court's ruling went
"in favor of the people." Finally, she writes, Alaskans could
recover some of their losses.
THE FACTS: That response is at odds with her reaction at the
time to the ruling, which resolved the long-running case by
reducing punitive damages for victims to $500 million from $2.5
billion. Environmentalists and plaintiffs' lawyers decried the
ruling as a slap at the victims and Palin herself said she was
"extremely disappointed." She said the justices had gutted a jury
decision favoring higher damage awards, the Anchorage Daily News
reported. "It's tragic that so many Alaska fishermen and their
families have had their lives put on hold waiting for this
decision," she said, noting many had died "while waiting for
justice."
---
PALIN: Describing her resistance to federal stimulus money,
Palin describes Alaska as a practical, libertarian haven of
independent Americans who don't want "help" from government
busybodies.
THE FACTS: Alaska is also one of the states most dependent on
federal subsidies, receiving much more assistance from Washington
than it pays in federal taxes. A study for the nonpartisan Tax
Foundation found that in 2005, the state received $1.84 for every
dollar it sent to Washington.
---
PALIN: Says she tried to talk about national security and energy
independence in her interview with Vogue magazine but the
interviewer wanted her to pivot from hydropower to high fashion.
THE FACTS are somewhat in dispute. Vogue contributing editor
Rebecca Johnson said Palin did not go on about hydropower. "She
just kept talking about drilling for oil."
---
PALIN: "Was it ambition? I didn't think so. Ambition drives;
purpose beckons." Throughout the book, Palin cites altruistic
reasons for running for office, and for leaving early as Alaska
governor.
THE FACTS: Few politicians own up to wanting high office for the
power and prestige of it, and in this respect, Palin fits the
conventional mold. But "Going Rogue" has all the characteristics
of a pre-campaign manifesto, the requisite autobiography of the
future candidate.
Gallery
1 of 1
In her new book, Sarah Palin, seen here at the Republican National Convention in 2008, reprises some claims from the 2008 campaign that haven't become any truer over time.
PAUL J. RICHARDS/AFP/Getty Images
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