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Politics | 10/22/2008 12:25 pm

Palin to Women: Obama Would've Picked Hillary if He Really Cared About You

By The Staff at wowOwow.com
© AP

If Barack Obama was serious about respecting women, he would have picked Hillary Rodham Clinton as his running mate.

That was Sarah Palin’s argument Tuesday when she addressed a crowd in southern Nevada. The Republican vice-presidential hopeful tried to woo women voters and show a little bit of her feminist side, essentially calling Obama a hypocrite who fails to treat women as equals.

"Our opponents think that they have the women’s vote all locked up, which is a little presumptuous, since only our side has a woman on the ticket," Palin said. "When the time came to make a decision, somehow Barack Obama just couldn’t bring himself to pick the woman who got 18 million votes.”

She painted Obama’s selection of Sen. Joe Biden, D-DE, as his running mate as yet another instance of a male boss passing over a qualified female: "The qualifications are there, but the promotion never comes."

The Alaska governor also said: “Why wasn’t Sen. Clinton even vetted by the Obama campaign? Why did it take 24 years – an entire generation – from the time that Geraldine Ferraro made her pioneering bid until the next time that a woman was asked to join a national ticket?”

The Las Vegas Review-Journal reports that the emphasis on women’s issues marked a departure from Palin’s usual rhetoric, perhaps in part because she was stumping in a part of the state where Democrats heavily outnumber Republicans and where Clinton handily beat Obama in the state’s January 19 Democratic primary caucuses.

"For the women in this audience and across the country, are you ready to break the highest, hardest glass ceiling in America?" Palin shouted to thunderous cheers. McCain officials say more than 7,000 people attended that event.

"Jerry the Plumber" showed up to the rally, as did "Wendy the Plumber’s Daughter," "Sandra the Homeschool Mom" and "Michael the Student."

They were among the ranks of what might now be called "Sarah’s Army" — conservative and proudly wearing that Average Joe, "pro-American" label — who lined up for blocks to cheer Palin on. The San Francisco Chronicle says there’s just something about Palin that continues to fuel her popularity among the conservative grassroots.

Joining Palin on stage were Lynn Forester de Rothschild, a former member of the Democratic National Committee and former Clinton supporter; Elaine Lafferty, a former editor of Ms. magazine; and National Organization for Women officials from California and Oregon. NOW has officially endorsed Obama.

Palin also criticizes Obama’s treatment of his female employees, saying the women on his Senate staff "get just 83 cents for every dollar the men get  … You’ve got to ask, what is with that?”

The Review-Journal, however, notes that women on Obama’s staff don’t get less pay for the same work, according to Senate records.

"Sen. Obama has fought for equal pay for an equal day’s work, while Sen. McCain has suggested that women don’t get equal pay because they need more education and training," Obama campaign senior strategist Anita Dunn said in a statement. "While Sen. Obama has proposed a plan to help working women, the McCain-Palin campaign offers just more negative attacks and distortions."

Palin also called for "a tax code that doesn’t penalize working families," especially single mothers, and laws that provide women with opportunities. "Working mothers need an advocate, and they will have one when this working mother is working for all of you," she said.

The former mayor of Wasilla, AK, also compared a local woman, owner of La Madonna restaurant and a local GOP activist, to “Joe the Plumber,” the Ohio man who questioned Obama recently about his plans to raise taxes and became a conservative celebrity overnight.

Palin also said if McCain is elected to the White House, she would work for women across the globe.

“I intend to advance that creed in our own nation and beyond because across the world, there are still places where women are subjugated and persecuted as they were in Afghanistan, places where they’re bullied and brutalized and murdered in honor killings, places where women are sold like commodities in the nightmare world of the sex trade, and places where baby girls are unwelcome as a matter of state policy and their mothers are forced to have abortions,” Palin said.

“Now no one person, no one leader, can bring an end to all of those ills, to all of the injustices inflicting upon women, but I can promise you this, if I am elected, these women, too, will have an advocate and a defender in the 47th vice president of the United States.”

Palin is often seen as the McCain campaign’s attack dog – a usual role for vice-presidential candidates.

Speaking in Ohio Wednesday, she said: “I guess that the looming crisis that most worries the Obama campaign right now has gotta be Joe Biden’s next speaking engagement.”

Palin was referrinmettg to Biden’s weekend remarks, when he said Obama, if elected, was sure to be presented with an international crisis that would test his “mettle.”

Those remarks had Obama campaign surrogates trying to defend the comments and Obama. Even former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright jumped in on the defense.

“The real problem is that these warnings by Joe Biden are similar to his earlier assessment of Barack Obama in the primary,” Palin said Wednesday, noting that Biden – who ran for president himself in the primary — formerly said Obama wasn’t up to the job and that “the presidency is not something that lends itself to on-the-job training.”

116 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

elaine s
Here is Moose-alini trying to play women with the same cynicism, that all women will support a woman, regardless of how unqualified she is (as in the case of Palin), or how unacceptable she is to the presidential candidate (as in the case of Hillary). He didn’t chose her, in my opinion, because of all the twisted, Palin-like misinformation she spewed at and about him during her campaign. This does not mean he does not respect and fully support women! I have no doubt he will have plenty of women in his administration and he wil continue to support women, minorities, the diadvantaged and disposessed and make us all a better people and a better country as President.
By elaine s on 10/22/2008 12:55 pm
iris odonata
Oh Elaine: Moose-alini. Hee Hee Hee Hee, Har Har. Thank you for a laugh out loud moment. Now on to read the postings. Thing about moose: they tread familiar paths, unconcerned about human boundaries, property rights or other damage they might cause. Also, they do not do well in captivity. As, the escape from handlers in Colorado and unrehearsed press conference recently demonstrated. Our illustrious (?) Alaskan governor has gotten a taste of the lower 48’s attention. Don’t think she’s going quietly back onto the tondra. Injoy
By iris odonata on 10/22/2008 1:46 pm
Ro H
Awww, Elaine - simply because they are both dumb animals please don’t compare her to a mOose. I think Mooses, or is it Meese? lol I think they are kind sweet looking. Dumb maybe, but sweet. Standing and chewing their cud just like a cow, all day long… eh?
By Ro H on 10/24/2008 2:22 am
Denise Gamache-Seymour
Elaine, you are so right, I couldn’t have phrased it better and more to the point. I said, “I will not vote for McCain and Palin, I will not cut my nose off to spite my face!” We, you and I and many others, know that, that is what has been happening. Women who are seaking revenge will actually vote for McCain and Palin, not to better our country but to seak revenge for Hillary. This sad and ignorant, at its best, attempt is just further reinforcing the idea that we as women are too emotional to rule and help run the country. It is a slap in the face to women and their progress for equality in this country. I just wanted to say that you are correct. Obama will further the cause for women, and I know Michelle will undoubtedly remind him to do so as well (chuckle). His earlier involvement further supports his view of women and equality, it isn’t some new trumped up tactic or statedgy to get ellected. I feel as though this is our cue to be alert, to listen and to decide that he is the one, and we shouldn’t throw this opportunity away, for we surely will regret it. I also, think that our nation is loaded with very intelligent, level headed, brilliant people who would never on a whim vote for a man or women that they didn’t intellectualize or believe would do the job that they want done. We should give our country credit and realize that those leaders have chosen their leader and the rest of us should agree with so many of them and not be afraid to vote for Obama. Our last 8 years have been “fear” oriented, and we need to let the healing process happen and be healed and dare to move on, with caution but without an overwheliming fear that has been bestilled upon us.
By Denise Gamache-Seymour on 10/29/2008 10:53 am
EKA -
OH Pulleezzee ! At my age I usually don’t wish for time to go any quicker, but I hope these next 13 days FLY by so all this crap will be over. He didn’t pick Hillary because of Bill’s foreign intanglements which the Repub’s would have had a field day with. Sarah Palin doesn’t represent me, have anything in common with me and has nothing to say to me. Please go home soon, and take your fancy outfits with you !
By EKA - on 10/22/2008 1:15 pm
Ro H
He didn’t pick Hillary because she didn’t want it, and realizes she can do so much more good in the Senate. Duh
By Ro H on 10/26/2008 3:13 pm
Dana Jae
halle-hell-lujah to that, EKA. Need these days to be OVER with and on to the real work of fixing our national ills.
By Dana Jae on 10/26/2008 10:46 pm
Denise Gamache-Seymour
LOL< Eka, right on the button with this comment. Hey, I love nice clothing, I love moose and I love the Polar bears. She, unfortunatetly loves one out of the three, the clothing. She doesn’t represent you , or me or Hillary. She is a great big slap in the face to women and their long hard fight for equality. Kudos to you, I still am baffled about the statement you made about Bill’s foreign entanglements with the Repub’s. I do not know if you are aware of the fact that she went out of her way to fight the attempt to put the polar bears on the endangered species list? That effort, coupled with the unempathetic reactin to Joe Biden on their debate, the one where he broke down in tears, and she just went on without even so much as a sign of empathy, that reinforced my vote. I was going to vote Obama, still I said, wow, that women is so fake and shallow. I hope the days go by faster, I cannot wait to get to the polls and vote it’s this tuesday for me and I will be there, happily and readily. I am pro-life and Cathelic and he’s got my vote, I wouldn’t put anything past McCain and Palin, or is it Palen, Or Painlin, lol, to alture everything they claim they will do.
By Denise Gamache-Seymour on 10/29/2008 11:01 am
Denise Gamache-Seymour
LOL< Eka, right on the button with this comment. Hey, I love nice clothing, I love moose and I love the Polar bears. She, unfortunatetly loves one out of the three, the clothing. She doesn’t represent you , or me or Hillary. She is a great big slap in the face to women and their long hard fight for equality. Kudos to you, I still am baffled about the statement you made about Bill’s foreign entanglements with the Repub’s. I do not know if you are aware of the fact that she went out of her way to fight the attempt to put the polar bears on the endangered species list? That effort, coupled with the unempathetic reactin to Joe Biden on their debate, the one where he broke down in tears, and she just went on without even so much as a sign of empathy, that reinforced my vote. I was going to vote Obama, still I said, wow, that women is so fake and shallow. I hope the days go by faster, I cannot wait to get to the polls and vote it’s this tuesday for me and I will be there, happily and readily. I am pro-life and Cathelic and he’s got my vote, I wouldn’t put anything past McCain and Palin, or is it Palen, Or Painlin, lol, to alture everything they claim they will do.
By Denise Gamache-Seymour on 10/29/2008 11:01 am
EKA -
Re.Bill Clinton - read this article http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2008/07/clinton200807 I’ve read that the Obama campaign was aware of Bill’s entanglements and decided that choosing hillary would open up all that stuff and decided it was not worth it. SIX days to go ….. see ya later Sarah !!!
By EKA - on 10/29/2008 11:41 am
Elizabeth Bennett
One of the reasons I have heard for his not picking her was that she polled with high negatives—something Palin may now know about, with Palin’s negatives exceeding even Hillary Clinton’s at 47% in the WSJ poll. But truly, they met right after the primaries and discussed it. I never got the feeling that Hillary Clinton really wanted to be vice president. She wanted to be president.
By Elizabeth Bennett on 10/22/2008 1:16 pm
f p
I agree Elizabeth—VP would not have been enough for the Clinton communal ego—she wanted to be pres and I think honestly that she would not have succeeded—her negativity index in the polls was substantial.
By f p on 10/23/2008 9:07 am
Susan B
Good try, but I’m not buying it. As if having a woman on the ticket = support for women’s issues. Not! We’ve talked and talked and talked this point to death on this site. There are many who felt that giving Hill the VP spot would be akin to throwing her a bone. Many others who took his choice as a slap in the face to Hillary. As a Hillary supporter, I had mixed feelings. Perhaps it was a tactical mistake to choose Biden, but I wouldn’t take it for a misogynist mindset. I mean, if the guy really thought that way, he would’ve never married a woman like Michelle — and she wouldn’t have him. Regardless of what Sarah says, I know that the conservative viewpoint on women’s issues doesn’t reflect my own. I’d never believe for a minute that they’re true advocates for women in the workplace or anywhere else. All you have to do is look at their platform, or review their track record.
By Susan B on 10/22/2008 1:19 pm
Denise Gamache-Seymour
Yes Susan B, you are right, and Obama has the track record and McCain doesn’t. Sarah doesn’t even care about starving Polar bears. I am not a huge animal advocate, I do love them though. I believe that a women who simply doesn’t care about things in her own state would not care about the country as a whole! With her ways and her values we would be in debt up to our ears! She seems like a very unprofessional and shallow person. I think we would have to be totally senile, and ignorant as heck to believe she could represent the American women’s ideals.
By Denise Gamache-Seymour on 10/29/2008 11:08 am
Chips AHoey
well, she needed something new - her diatribe on him being a terrorist wasn’t working so they came up with this - next?
By Chips AHoey on 10/22/2008 1:19 pm