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Palin Goes on Attack at Republican Convention

As vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin said in her hotly anticipated speech Wednesday night at the Republican National Convention, the only difference between a hockey mom and a pit bull is lipstick. And the Log Cabin Republicans who gathered at a downtown Minneapolis hotel to watch her dig her teeth into Barack Obama were all too pleased by the bloody spectacle.


As vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin said in her hotly anticipated speech Wednesday night at the Republican National Convention, the only difference between a hockey mom and a pit bull is lipstick. And the Log Cabin Republicans who gathered together at a downtown Minneapolis hotel to watch her dig her teeth into Barack Obama were all too pleased by the bloody spectacle.

Since she was announced as John McCain's running mate last Friday, Palin, the governor of Alaska, has had a rocky road, to say the least: the revelations that her unmarried daughter is pregnant and that her husband was once arrested for drunken driving, the criticism about her experience or lack thereof, the doubts about her ability to withstand the heat of the national spotlight. But on Wednesday night at the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul, Minn., Palin proved that she has what it takes to help the Arizona senator win the White House.

"I thought the speech was excellent," said Log Cabin member David B. (who wouldn’t give his last name because he works in Hollywood and said that being known as a Republican there would hurt his career). He was one of several dozen Log Cabin members and fellow gay Republicans who took in Palin's talk on several television screens in a sleek room at the boutique Graves Hotel, across from the Target Center, where Rage Against the Machine was playing a special RNC concert. (Cops in riot gear stood on the street, lest there be a repeat of the chaos that occurred after the band's show at the 2000 Democratic convention in Los Angeles.) The viewing party was sponsored by Log Cabin and the Gay and Lesbian Victory Fund, along with Gill Action Fund and AT&T.

Whether you liked it or not, Palin's speech, carefully crafted over the previous 48 hours with a team of McCain advisers, was effective in its attack-dog approach, the customary role for a running mate. She homed in on Obama again and again, from every angle. His past as a community organizer in Chicago's south side? "I guess a small-town mayor is sort of like a 'community organizer,' except that you have actual responsibilities," Palin said. She brought up Obama's "bitter" quote, saying that "in small towns we don't quite know what to make of a candidate who lavishes praise on working people when they're listening and then talks about how bitterly they cling to their religion and guns when those people aren't listening. We tend to prefer candidates who don't talk about us one way in Scranton and another way in San Francisco."

In typical Republican fashion, she tore into Obama's patriotism -- "This is a man who can give an entire speech about the wars America is fighting, and never use the word ‘victory,’ except when he's talking about his own campaign" -- his national-security strategy -- "Terrorist states are seeking nuclear weapons without delay, and he wants to meet with them without preconditions" -- and she claimed that his economic plan would "increase the tax burden on the American people by hundreds of billions of dollars." And she managed to criticize Obama's legislative record and his celebrity appeal in a single powerful blow: "Listening to him speak, it's easy to forget that this is a man who has authored two memoirs but not a single major law or reform -- not even in the state senate."

She also served notice to the Washington establishment, particularly its mouthpiece, the media: "Here's a little news flash for all those reporters and commentators: I'm not going to Washington to seek their good opinion -- I'm going to Washington to serve the people of this country."

The crowd on the Xcel floor, which gave her an ovation that lasted minutes when she walked on to the podium, lapped up every zinger, cheering and raising signs saying "Palin Power" or "Hockey Moms 4 Palin." Many delegates shouted "zero" at any mention of Obama's name -- or his purported lack of experience or his tenure in the Illinois legislature. And, of course, there were plenty of "USA! USA!" chants.

The group at the Graves Hotel, however, was decidedly more reserved, though most smiled throughout Palin’s speech -- and a few lines, like "There's only one man in this election who has ever really fought for you," garnered enthusiastic applause.

"She's a mainstream Republican, not a Phyllis Schlafly who invokes God all the time," David B. said of Palin. "She seems open-minded, not an ideologue." Even though she's against gay rights? David preferred to talk about McCain in response, saying people vote for the top of the ticket and that the senator's "had many openly gay friends, including [former U.S. representative] Jim Kolbe. They're personal friends." He added that McCain opposed the Federal Marriage Amendment.

There was at least one gay Democrat in the room who also had praise for Palin's speech: Charles Carlson, an alternate Minnesota delegate to last week’s Democratic National Convention in Denver. "It was scripted, but it was well done," the Minneapolis resident said. "She was very aggressive, but with a feminine image." Apparently, that’s just what the McCain campaign wants. (Sean Kennedy, The Advocate)

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Reader Comments
  • Name: Jerry
    Date posted: 9/6/2008 2:58:00 PM
    Hometown: Dallas

    Comment:

    God help us

  • Name: PJM
    Date posted: 9/5/2008 6:19:00 PM
    Hometown: Glasgow

    Comment:

    Please do not call Palin a feminist. I'm British, I remember Thatcher all too painfully, and I can assure you that Palin may break the Glass Ceiling but she i sure to triple-glaze it behind her. I pity you all if the Republicans get to the White House

  • Name: Robert Goodman
    Date posted: 9/5/2008 4:12:00 PM
    Hometown: Los Angeles

    Comment:

    O.k., it's official: the Republicans have completely lost their minds--and Log Cabin Republicans are the most insane of the lot.

  • Name: Pete
    Date posted: 9/5/2008 3:24:00 PM
    Hometown: Studio City, California

    Comment:

    I'm trying to think what appalls me more: the far right-wing platform of McCain/Palin, or Log Cabin Republicans who support them. Probably the latter.

  • Name: Sara
    Date posted: 9/5/2008 9:18:00 AM
    Hometown: Carrollton, GA

    Comment:

    Sarah Palin seems like a nice enough woman, to our faces at least. She will only try to set our country back a few decades by trying to overturn Roe v. Wade and banning gay marriage. LRC must really hate themselves if they can justify this. BTW Robert in Shakopee, what do battered housewives have to do with gay people? Did you even read this article, or just skip to the things that you wanted to see? LRC stands for Log Cabin REPUBLICANS not Democrats, so they obviously don't give any money to Dems. Bill Clinton wasn't who they voted for. Go back to your trailer and hug your rifle for dear life; McCain's going down.

  • Name: kris
    Date posted: 9/5/2008 3:24:00 AM
    Hometown: ohio

    Comment:

    i could never join or support the lcr. one thing they fail to mention is that the federal ban on gay marriage went down dut to a higher percentage of democrats wanting to vote it down than the republicans. it their party had a landslide sweep in the senate you could be sure that the vote tally for the amendment would have surely gone up due to the fact that the religious right dominates the republican primaries in most states. it's the more dem leaning states in the northeast that are paving the way with civil unions/marriage rights. we all know utah & the south(the republican leaning states) haven't passed any civil unions/marriage bills since vermont opened the door. they're not going to either until the courts or the federal congress take up the issue. from '94-'06,newt's congress didn't pass anything "pro-gay".with the dems keeping congress this year & obama in the driver's seat we stand to make faster civil rights gains than ever before.

  • Name: Brian Summers
    Date posted: 9/4/2008 11:18:00 PM
    Hometown: Chicago

    Comment:

    The Republican ticket has never looked worse. The plain and simple fact is this: a vote for McCain is to accept 4-8 years of a man who is just as bad, if not FAR worse, than the backwards no-nothing piece of human trash we have sitting in the Oval Office right now. How ANY gay man or woman can seriously support or believe in this man is plain and simply beyond my rational understanding. Understand this: if McCain gets elected, all the positive strides we've made towards equality are going to fly right out the proverbial window. Don't believe me? Wait and see for yourself. With an old-worlder like McCain, who wants to keep everything about society the way it's always been, it WILL almost certainly happen.

  • Name: Jason
    Date posted: 9/4/2008 12:59:00 PM
    Hometown: Phoenix

    Comment:

    Sarah Palin lied when she stated that Barack Obama has never authored bills in the Senate. They may or may not have been passed (thanks George), but Barack Obama has actually authored several bills. As a Christian, Sarah Palin, I expect you not to lie about people - as it is disobeying one of the Ten Commandments. Thank you.

  • Name: justin White
    Date posted: 9/4/2008 12:01:00 PM
    Hometown: singapore

    Comment:

    This is the first article I've ever read in your magazine. I'm english have lived in Singapore for 18 years and have a malay boyfriend of 5 years. I'm saddened by your article as it appears to let Palin and Mc Cain off the hook. It's time you got out (of your borders) a bit more and looked at the world and America from a more balanced perspective. Only then will you understand why as Obama puts it so simply America needs change!

  • Name: CHris Sullivan
    Date posted: 9/4/2008 11:43:00 AM
    Hometown: Chicago, IL

    Comment:

    Palin is another nut job, in the same vein as Ann Coulter. Any GLBT person who would vote Republican this year should seek out some serious therapy, they are cleary self-loathing homosexuals, able to rationalize anything. Her speech was motivational for those who don't care for the facts. Heck, Hitler was able to motivate his masses - it didn't mean he wasn't a nut job. Palin is a VERY disturbed woman - but nontheless an ideal choice for a very distrurbed party. Any credibility that McCain might have had has been wped away by this pitiful VP choice. "Gay Republicans"? Same thing as "Jews for Hitler" or "Blacks for the KKK" - it all amounts to the same thing. Shockingly ignorant GLBT people whose self-esteem is so low, that they can manage to rationalize choosing someone who is so cleary and unquestionable bad for them. Sad, tragic people - yet, it is always the "enemy within" that causes the most harm.



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