Is Sarah Palin the implacable pit
bull of government reform, lipstick and all? The latest Republican campaign commercial pictures her in heroic terms at the side of John
McCain as one of the “original mavericks,” declaring that she “stopped
the Bridge to Nowhere.”
As Congressional Quarterly points
out, in its impeccably nonpartisan style, Palin continued to campaign
enthusiastically for the “Bridge to Nowhere” long after McCain and
others first exposed the project three years ago. Indeed, she literally
campaigned for the Ketchikan project while running for governor in
2006, evidently because she believed that her support would draw votes
in southeastern Alaska.
By then Congress had already repealed any requirement that the state
spend any money on the project, but she didn’t care. “Part of my agenda
is making sure that Southeast is heard,” she said during a campaign
visit to Ketchikan in October 2006. “That your projects are important.
That we go to bat for Southeast when we’re up against federal
influences that aren’t in the best interest of Southeast.”
According to the Ketchikan Daily News, she then went on to denounce the bridge’s opponents: “We need to come to the defense of southeast Alaska
when proposals are on the table like the bridge and not allow the
spin-meisters to turn this project or any other into something that’s
so negative.” Those awful “spin-meisters” presumably included the
senator from Arizona, who was leading congressional opposition to the project.
At least Palin’s belligerence toward any one who questioned Alaska’s right to enormous shares of the federal budget was consistent. During
her tenure as mayor of Wasilla, then with a population of approxi
mately 6,000, she hired a lobbyist—the former Senate chief of staff to
Stevens—who was dedicated to bringing back pork from Capitol Hill. That
effort produced between $6 million and $7 million in annual ear marks
for the little town, making its residents among the most fortunate
recipients of federal largesse in the nation.
A scam like the
Bridge to Nowhere was merely business as usual, except bigger.
Has she reformed herself since then? When pressed, the McCain campaign explains that although she supported the Ketchikan project until well after her election as governor, she came to realize that earmarks are “bad” and that reform is imperative. That revised claim would be more persuasive, however, if she had not continued to support Alaska’s other bridge to nowhere until as recently as last June.
Oh, didn’t you
know that there were originally two bridges to nowhere? The second
bridge is to be built in Palin’s own home region of Matanuska-Susitna,
designed to connect the Knik Arm peninsula (and Wasilla!) to the city of Anchorage. Excoriated
in precisely the same breath as the Ketchikan bridge by McCain in 2005,
the Knik Arm bridge would actually be at least twice as expensive, with
the latest estimate clocking in at approximately $1 billion.
So far, Ms. Palin has not “stopped” that second bridge to nowhere, perhaps because those Washington
spin-meisters haven’t generated as much negative publicity about the
Knik Arm project. Instead she has ordered a “review” of its prospects
and costs because, as she admitted in an interview with the Anchorage Daily News last June, the Alaskan congressional delegation no longer has enough clout.
“You
know, it was assumed that the feds would be paying for the project,”
she said. “Well, things have changed there on the federal front,
haven’t they?” So they have. Whether Palin has changed is another question entirely.
Two years ago, she portrayed herself as a
straight-talking populist who supported the Ketchikan bridge. Now she
portrays herself as a straight-talking populist who stopped the same
bridge.
In New York City, this kind of behavior is known as “trying to sell the Brooklyn Bridge.” Is America buying?
© 2008 Creators Syndicate Inc.
What’s your take? Write: editor@shepex.com or comment on this story online at www.expressmilwaukee.com.
Fall 2008 Human Trafficking Awareness Week
Become Aware and Take Action
Come Join Trafficking Ends with Action for Fall 2008 Human Trafficking Awareness Week. Monday Dec. 1st "Trafficking in South East Asia." Tuesday Dec. 2nd "Human Trafficking: Two Sides of the Same Coin." Thursday Dec. 4th "Gina Allende Speaks on Human Trafficking in Wisconsin." All events will be held in the UWM Fireside Lounge starting at 7pm an