Margo Howard | 07/05/2009 7:15 am
Margo Howard, Ann Coulter Miraculously Agree: Palin Too Big for Alaska
Editor’s Note: A longtime journalist, Margo Howard went into the
family business (her mother was the fabled Ann Landers) in the 1990s as
Dear Prudence. Her broad experience and understanding of human nature
provide answers for the troubled — and entertainment for everyone else. Margo’s advice column, Dear Margo, appears twice a week — on Thursdays and Fridays — on wowOwow.com.
To slightly skew an e-mail that was going around a few weeks ago, let me just say that friends said the day I agreed with Ann Coulter pigs would fly. Well, swine flu … and I now find myself in agreement with Coulter. [Click here for Coulter’s post.] Sarah Palin is too big for Alaska. And you know why? She signed a book deal – reportedly for somewhere between $7,000,000 and $11,000,000. In April. I do not know how I missed this news, but I did. Maybe you did, too. In any case, no one is particularly tying this news to her resignation. I mean, wouldn’t you rather earn X millions of dollars than $175,000? The haste with which she made her announcement, however, does nothing to disabuse me of the idea that she and the Mr. might be in some legal trouble.
I think quitting for a big-bucks book deal shows a real lack of character, but a great deal of opportunism. The citizens of Alaska elected her to a term of office and she is skipping out because … well, she is too big for Alaska. People who are lame ducks seldom deal with their duckhood by resigning, so let’s scratch that one.
I do disagree with Coulter (my usual stance) on one point she makes in her post. She writes, "I thought her press conference explained it very clearly – though she couldn’t put it precisely this way without sounding vain, but it’s obvious." She "explained it clearly"? That, my dear, is a stretch. If she had explained it clearly the news outlets and the blogosphere would not be talking about how it could barely qualify as English.
Should you want to read a hilarious entry from Jim Washburn’s blog, here’s the beginning, and the link:
To slightly skew an e-mail that was going around a few weeks ago, let me just say that friends said the day I agreed with Ann Coulter pigs would fly. Well, swine flu … and I now find myself in agreement with Coulter. [Click here for Coulter’s post.] Sarah Palin is too big for Alaska. And you know why? She signed a book deal – reportedly for somewhere between $7,000,000 and $11,000,000. In April. I do not know how I missed this news, but I did. Maybe you did, too. In any case, no one is particularly tying this news to her resignation. I mean, wouldn’t you rather earn X millions of dollars than $175,000? The haste with which she made her announcement, however, does nothing to disabuse me of the idea that she and the Mr. might be in some legal trouble.
I think quitting for a big-bucks book deal shows a real lack of character, but a great deal of opportunism. The citizens of Alaska elected her to a term of office and she is skipping out because … well, she is too big for Alaska. People who are lame ducks seldom deal with their duckhood by resigning, so let’s scratch that one.
I do disagree with Coulter (my usual stance) on one point she makes in her post. She writes, "I thought her press conference explained it very clearly – though she couldn’t put it precisely this way without sounding vain, but it’s obvious." She "explained it clearly"? That, my dear, is a stretch. If she had explained it clearly the news outlets and the blogosphere would not be talking about how it could barely qualify as English.
Should you want to read a hilarious entry from Jim Washburn’s blog, here’s the beginning, and the link:
‘Let’s go quit!’ That was CNN’s Candy Crowley Friday night, imagining the decision process that led to Sarah Palin’s resignation, so spontaneous and unplanned did it seem. Nutty, too. It sounded like Richard Nixon if, heading into his Checkers Speech, he’d first taken the edge off by mixing Benzedrex inhalers into his rum and Cokes, the ones Dick Tuck had laced with pure Sandoz LSD, and then Nixon had gone on camera and wrestled an imaginary bear that turned into a black Satan and he’s going to keep that precious baby, no matter what anybody says, even the NBA coaches. That kind of nutty.Click here for the rest of Jim’s blog.
Read more about: Alaska, Ann Coulter, Books, Jim Washburn, Margo Howard, News, Politics, Sarah Palin

























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From the Vanity Fair article on Palin:
"she has signed a book contract for an undisclosed but presumably substantial sum, and has chosen Lynn Vincent, a senior writer at the Christian-conservative World magazine, as co-author of the memoir, which is to be published next year not only by HarperCollins but also in a special edition by Zondervan, the Bible-publishing house, that may include supplemental material on faith."
Dear Margo: As I see it, “knocked up” is just a slang term for pregnant. Irreverent, yes, and (in my opinion) with a connotation of carelessness. Whether or not it is offensive depends on the individual. Considering someone named their movie “Knocked Up”, a lot of people must think it is not an offensive term.
Tell that to Rove and Huckabee—-my, my……look what they think of Palin!
Rove: Palin resignation part of a ‘risky strategy’ By PHILIP ELLIOTT, Associated Press Writer Philip Elliott, Associated Press Writer Sun Jul 5, 12:12 pm ETWASHINGTON – One of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin’s potential presidential rivals said Sunday that her abrupt resignation won’t help her dodge scrutiny. President George W. Bush’s chief political adviser said her strategy is, at best, unclear.
Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee said Palin’s announcement that she would not seek a second term — and leave office before finishing her first — simply doesn’t make sense in a conventional political setting. Karl Rove, a longtime Bush counselor, said Palin has engaged in a "risky strategy."
Then again, the pair said, Palin has never been a conventional candidate and her stunning announcement on Friday is what they have come to expect from the Republicans’ 2008 vice presidential candidate.
"She marches to the beat of her own drum, and it’s going to be very interesting to see how she pulls this off," Rove said.
Palin on Friday announced she wouldn’t seek re-election in 2010 and surprised fans and critics alike by saying she would leave office on July 26, more than a year before she would have finished her first term as governor.
During a sometimes rambling statement, she cited ongoing ethics complaints and the financial toll they were taking on the state and her personal finances. She also blamed the media for sensational attention and attacks on her family, although she didn’t offer details.
Political observers struggled to make sense of the decision and its effect on a potential 2012 campaign for the White House. Even her rival during the last election, Vice President Joe Biden, seemed confused by the move.
"It maybe had a lot to do with what the state of their life was, and the state of their family, et cetera," Biden said. "So I’m not going to second-guess her."
Last year Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., plucked Palin from near-obscurity to be his running mate. The folksy governor remains a potent figure in GOP politics, although her resignation could make a potential 2012 campaign even more dicey. If she chooses to run, she’ll enter a race with questions about her strategy as well as her experience.
Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, whose state traditionally hosts the first nominating contest of the presidential campaign, called the move "astounding."
"I would think that if you want to run for president — and I’m not sure that’s got anything to do with what she’s doing — that the forum of a governorship would be a better forum than just being a private citizen," Grassley said. "I have no insight into why she did it."
Huckabee, who ran for president in 2008 and could try again, said he remains a Palin fan and insisted she continues to be a viable candidate. But she also should be prepared to explain the curious move.
"Well, it’s a risky strategy, and nobody knows whether it’s going to pay off or not," Huckabee said. "And even if she did get out, primarily because of a feeling of being chased, that’s not going to stop if she continues in politics. The only way that stops is for her to completely exit the stage and the spotlight."
But part of her explanation for resigning — that she was dogged by critics who cost her state millions in legal fees — will be a liability for her if she seeks the White House, Huckabee said.
"Well, if that had been the case for me, I’d have quit about my first month, because I was a Republican governor in a state where 89 percent of my legislature were Democrats," Huckabee said. "Been there, done that."
If she’s looking to be a national political figure, it’s not going to get easier, Huckabee said.
Besides, Rove said, Palin will not be able to escape the media’s attention.
"If she thinks somehow that she’s going to be able to protect her family against the kind of things that she’s suffered over the last couple of months, from David Letterman and others, and seek a role of leadership for effective change for our country, as she said in her speech, she’s not going to be able to do it," Rove said.
Palin recently led a public spat with "Late Show" host Letterman over a joke he made about one of her daughters.
"It is not clear what her strategy here is by exiting the governorship 2 1/2 years through the term and putting herself on the national stage that she may not yet be prepared to operate in," Rove said.
"She did a great job during 63 days during the fall campaign of 2008 … but now she’s going to have hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of days between now and the 2012 election, and she’s going to raise expectations about how well and how visible she’s going to be early on in that struggle," he said.
Huckabee and Rove appeared on "Fox News Sunday." Biden appeared on ABC’s "This Week" while Grassley appeared on CBS’ "Face the Nation."
Gee Patty…you could have saved yourself a lot of time typing to me….Rove or Huckabee are not my spokesmen..but I don’t see anything wrong with theri assessments.
They are commenting on her actions assuming that she has aspirations to run for President. Nothing I read above was rude or lewd…they stated their opinions from a political point of view.
Thanks for the info, Patty! I missed this.
But you can all stop wondering. Palin resigned because I told her to resign. Yes, it’s that simple. Last week she asked me: "Linda, What should I do? We don’t always agree, but I respect your opinion more than anyone’s. "
So I told her: "Get out. Get out of politics and stay out. You are in over your head, you aren’t fit to run a two-car funeral, and your future is in info-mercials. With the passage of Ed McMahon, and the guy-in-Florida who was on the airplane and got hit on the head, the field is all yours. Go for it. You will forever be the 1st Republican woman on the national ticket and probably the last, given your performance, so your place in history is assured."
And she thanked me and said that she would think about it. That was last Thursday, July 2nd.
Kelly, it is so petty of you to assume that one woman not liking another woman implies jealousy. This is why men don’t take us seriously. Margo doesn’t like Sarah Palin, I don’t like Sarah Palin. That does not mean that I am in any way, shape or form jealous of her. I am thrilled that she is no longer in charge of anything, and I am relieved, not jealous.
You are correct Desiree…that would be petty. But that is not what I did…I read the complaint, the words that were used and I came to the conclusion that some were not based on the issues at hand, but were very personal attacks.
That leaves one to assume jealously. Men have good reason at times, when we justify their views with our own words.
Well Lym…you have your opinion…such as it is…but the last sentence negated your point. If you were talking about Palin’s little boy, Trig…that comment exemplifies the ugliness and sickness of heart that Palin has had to face.
So please, please…run for office. Dog catcher would be a good place to start, government pay…benefits…
Miss your point. My point is this little guy’s mother is overworked & absent frequently. Maybe I’m a bit old fashioned for an under 40, but I feel a child should have his/her mother available. A special needs child even more so & he needs stability, not traipsing around the country (when he does go with her).
BTW, I am a physician who is taking a break to raise my kids…