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The McCain-Palin Blame Game Continues

by @ 10:32 am on November 6, 2008.

It started with Newsweek, made it’s way to Fox News, and now it’s on the front page of The New York Times:

Ms. Palin, who laughingly told the prankster that she could be president “maybe in eight years,” was the catalyst for a civil war between her campaign and Mr. McCain’s that raged from mid-September up until moments before Mr. McCain’s concession speech on Tuesday night. By then, Ms. Palin was in only infrequent contact with Mr. McCain, top advisers said.

“I think it was a difficult relationship,” said one top McCain campaign official, who, like almost all others interviewed, asked to remain anonymous. “McCain talked to her occasionally.”

(…)

As the ticketmate with a potentially brighter political future, Ms. Palin has more at stake going forward than Mr. McCain, whose aides now have an interest in blaming outside factors for their loss, making Ms. Palin a tempting target. And even as the votes from the election were still being counted, there were new recriminations, with Mr. McCain’s aides suggesting that a Palin aide had leaked damaging information about them to reporters.

The tensions were described in interviews with top aides to the two campaigns who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they did not want to be seen as disloyal to Mr. McCain’s effort at a difficult time.

We’ve heard a lot of the stories already, but at the heart of it seems to be the belief among McCain loyalists that Palin wasn’t really looking out for the campaign’s best interests:

As late as Tuesday night, a McCain adviser said, Ms. Palin was pushing to deliver her own speech just before Mr. McCain’s concession speech, even though vice-presidential nominees do not traditionally speak on election night. But Ms. Palin met up with Mr. McCain with text in hand. She was told no by Mark Salter, one of Mr. McCain’s closest advisers, and Steve Schmidt, Mr. McCain’s top strategist.

(…)

Advisers in the McCain campaign, in suggesting that Palin advisers had been leaking damaging information about the McCain campaign to the news media, said they were particularly suspicious of Randy Scheunemann, Mr. McCain’s top foreign policy aide who had a central role in preparing Ms. Palin for the vice-presidential debate.

As a result, two senior members of the McCain campaign said on Wednesday that Mr. Scheunemann had been fired from the campaign in its final days. But Rick Davis, the McCain campaign manager, and Mr. Salter, one of Mr. McCain’s closest advisers, said Wednesday that Mr. Scheunemann had in fact not been dismissed. Mr. Scheunemann, who picked up the phone in his office at McCain campaign headquarters on Wednesday afternoon, responded that “anybody who says I was fired is either lying or delusional or a whack job.”

Mr. Scheunemann was referring to widely disseminated criticism by Mr. McCain’s advisers in the final days of the campaign that Ms. Palin, as first reported in Politico, was a “whack job.”

Whatever the permutations, the advisers said they strongly believed that Mr. Scheunemann was disclosing, as one put it, “a constant stream of poison” to William Kristol, the editor of the conservative Weekly Standard and a columnist for The New York Times.

And remember that disastrous interview with Katie Couric ? Well, this was certainly interesting:

The McCain camp was further upset about Ms. Palin’s interview with Ms. Couric, which was broadcast at a time when Ms. Palin was meeting with foreign leaders at the United Nations and trying to establish some foreign policy credentials. Ms. Palin’s wobbly and tongue-tied performance was mocked in an iconic impersonation on “Saturday Night Live” by Tina Fey.

Ms. Palin, who had prepared for and survived an initial interview with Charles Gibson of ABC News, did not have the time or focus to prepare for Ms. Couric, the McCain advisers said. “She did not say, ‘I will not prepare,’ ” a McCain adviser said. “She just didn’t have a bandwidth to do a mock interview session the way we had prepared before. She was just overloaded.”

It’s pretty clear what we’re seeing here. McCain’s allies are looking for a scapegoat and, for a lot of reasons, Sarah Palin is an easy target. As I noted last week, though, if Sarah Palin really did doom the campaign then she’s not the one who’s to blame for it:

I’ve been pretty critical of Sarah Palin over the past two months, but this is just pathetic.

If Sarah Palin has hurt the ticket, if she’s manifestly not qualified to be President, if she’s engaged in rhetoric that made McCain’s promise of a clean campaign seem like joke, if she’s demonstrated little understanding of the important issues of the day, and even if she doesn’t seem to know what the Vice-President actually does, whose fault is that ?

I’ll tell you whose, fault it is — it’s John McCain’s.

More importantly, placing all the blame on Palin ignores the fact that John McCain ran an appallingly bad General Election campaign.

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2 Responses to “The McCain-Palin Blame Game Continues”

  1. republicannibal Says:

    Not sure if you caught this hilarious youtube video on this topic, but in their own words! LMAO!! In a heated campaign counseling session with Jim Lehrer:

    Blame Game : Et tu, Palin? Palin 2012

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yrUN8oldj9o

    I agree with you. McCain squandered his lead as Barack and Hillary battled it out. By the time Barack received the presumptive nominee nod, McCain should have crafted a remarkable middle-America platform with real solutions for real issues. Instead he called in a fake plumber to fix the leaks. By the time he was matched up, he had already dropped the ball and had to steer away from issues, violating his past 2000 statements of trying to run positive campaigns. The saddest part of this was when he tried to salvage what little Maverick dignity he had left in his gracious concession speech it was met with boos and canned GOP cheers. Once the hate machine gets fired up, it’s hard to turn it off. And guess who was smiling during those canned cheers? “You Betcha!” Et tu, Palin? So, while she’s not to blame for her placement on the ticket and the lack of vetting, she is complicit in her willingness to play an integral part with her suggestive gestures and folksy innuendo in firing up Real America with a failed Southern Strategy 2.0. She played her hand and I think people are still trying to figure out if she fleeced an elephant when she was supposed to field dress a donkey. The only thing we do know is that she got a great wardrobe. She’d do well to “leave” it at Sen. Steven’s house so they GOP lawyers can’t find it.

  2. Guitar Willy Says:

    My son is 10 years old and pretty bright. If John McCain had picked my boy to be his running mate I think he would have done alright – for a 10 year old at least. But McCain would have surely lost and no one would be to blame more than John McCain. So people can blame Palin as much as they want (and i think being a Governor is GROSSLY overrated, as I live in California where we had exactly 350 run for Governor not long ago…and Arnold is up to his neck in sh*t and talking about raising taxes…), but at the end of the day, JOHN MACCA has is to blame and, being the stand up guy he is (but was not during the election), has shouldered the blame.

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