ABC News: Strains Between McCain and Palin Aides Go Public

Report: Palin's Wardrobe Is to Be Audited by GOP
By KATE SNOW

Nov. 6, 2008 —

Now that the defeated team of Sen. John McCain and Gov. Sarah Palin
have gone their separate ways, the knives are out and Palin is the one
who is getting filleted.

Revelations from anonymous critics from within the McCain-Palin
campaign suggest a number of complaints about the Alaskan governor:

* Fox News reports that Palin didn't know Africa was a continent and
did not know the member nations of the North American Free Trade
Agreement -- the United States, Mexico and Canada -- when she was
picked for vice president.

* The New York Times reports that McCain aides were outraged when
Palin staffers scheduled her to speak with French President Nicholas
Sarkozy, a conversation that turned out to be a radio station prank.

* Newsweek reports that Palin spent far more than the previously
reported $150,000 on clothes for herself and her family.

* Several publications say she irked the McCain campaign by asking to
make her own concession speech on election night.

The tension is likely to continue or get worse. Lawyers for the
Republican National Committee are heading to Alaska to try to account
for all the money that was spent on clothing, jewelry and luggage,
according to The New York Times.

Reports of agitation between the two camps bubbled up in the final
weeks of the campaign as Barack Obama began pulling away and the GOP
duo was unable to regain the momentum.

But those reports are no longer in the rumor stage as McCain loyalists
are now blasting away at the Alaska governor, who was a favorite of
the Republican right during the campaign, but was cited in numerous
polls as a reason why many Americans wouldn't vote for the Arizona
Republican.

Perhaps the most dangerous allegation for Palin are reports in The New
York Times and Newsweek that when she was urged by McCain adviser
Nicole Wallace to buy three suits for the Republican convention and
three suits for the campaign trail, she went on the now-infamous
shopping spree at swank stores like Saks Fifth Avenue and Neiman
Marcus.

A Republican donor who agreed to foot a majority of the expenses was
stunned when he received the bill, Newsweek reported. Both the Times
and Newsweek report that the budget for the clothing was expected to
be between $20,000 and $25,000. Instead, the amount reported by the
Republican National Committee was $150,000.

That wasn't the whole tab, however, according to Newsweek. The
magazine claims that Palin leaned on some low-level staffers to put
thousands of dollars of additional purchases on their credit cards.
The national committee and McCain became aware of the extra
expenditures, including clothes for husband Todd Palin, when the
staffers sought reimbursement, Newsweek reported.

McCain Aide Calls Palin Family 'Wasilla Hillbillies'

There is one comment in particular from a McCain aide that guaranteed
to heighten friction between the two camps. The angry aide described
the Palin family shopping spree to Newsweek as "Wasilla hillbillies
looting Neiman Marcus from coast to coast."

It's unclear how much McCain knew about the clothing debacle. Reports
suggest that he was kept out of the loop for fear that he would not
approve.

Both Newsweek and The New York Times say McCain and Palin had little
contact with each other.

"I think it was a difficult relationship," one top McCain official
confided to The New York Times. But a high level McCain adviser told
ABC News that the two had a good working relationship.

"He likes her," this senior McCain adviser said last week. "He's had
no problem with her. He's very appreciative of what she's done."

The adviser said McCain and Palin talked at least once a day. He also
said McCain frequently joked about how large Palin's crowds were
compared to his.

However, press accounts today suggest that Palin rubbed many of the
McCain aides the wrong way. On election night when it was clear that
McCain would be giving a concession speech instead of an acceptance
speech, Palin approached McCain with a speech in hand hoping to make
her own concession speech, according to published reports.

Vice presidential candidates traditionally leave the spotlight to the
top of the ticket on election night and McCain aides made it clear to
Palin that she would be a spectator that night, not a speaker, The New
York Times reported.

And when McCain and Palin split up in Arizona Wednesday, the personal
differences were stark.

McCain drove himself home in a Toyota sport utility vehicle. Palin's
departure was a grander event. She left with an entourage of 18 family
members and friends and a Secret Service detail, heading to the
airport in a motorcade stretching more than a dozen vehicles, flanked
by a dozen more cops on motorcycles.

Interview Prep Lacking, McCain Staffers Say

McCain aides had numerous complaints about Palin. She was unwilling or
unable to find the time and energy to prep for her disastrous
interview with Couric. And when she did study, she astonished her
handlers by her unsophisticated views.

She didn't know Africa was a continent, according to Newsweek. Fox
News revealed that during her cramming, she couldn't name the three
countries that belong to the North American Free Trade Agreement: the
United States, Canada and Mexico.

Questions followed Palin home to Alaska. She was asked about some of
the accusations from anonymous sources when she landed there late
Wednesday.

Asked about the Fox report that she did not know the NAFTA members or
that Africa was a continent, Palin said, "If they're an unnamed
source, that says it all. I won't comment on anyone's gossip based on
anonymous sources. That's kind of a small of a bitter type of person
who anonymously would charge that I didn't know an answer to a
question. So until I know who's talking about it, I won't have a
comment on a false allegation."

Palin Insists She's No Diva

When pressed on what went wrong with the campaign, she said, "I
certainly am not one to ever waste time looking backwards."

She defended herself against the notion that she is to blame for the
failure of the McCain-Palin ticket.

"I don't think anybody should give Sarah Palin that much credit, that
I would trump an economic, woeful time in this nation that occurred
about two months ago, that my presence on the ticket would trump the
economic crisis that America found itself in a couple of months ago
and attribute John McCain's loss to me," Palin told reporters in
Arizona Wednesday.

"Now, having said that, if I cost John McCain even one vote, I'm sorry
about that because John McCain I believe is the American hero. I had
believed that it was his time. & He being so full of courage and
wisdom and experience, that valor he just embodies, I believe he
would've been the best pick, but that is not the Americans' choice at
this time."

She also rejected the characterization that she was a "diva" on the
campaign trail, as one anonymous McCain adviser told CNN.

"If only people, y'know, come on up and travel with us to Alaska and
see this 'diva' lifestyle that I supposedly live or would demand,
because it's just false," she said.

Asked about her national political ambitions, she said, "I have not
given it any thought in the context of making any kind of decisions at
all, so no, just happy to be back here."

In one of her favorite coffee shops in Wasilla Tuesday morning, Palin
summed it up this way: "Forever, I'm going to be Sarah from Alaska."

Copyright (c) 2008 ABC News Internet Ventures
-- 
Jim Devine /  "Nobody told me there'd be days like these / Strange
days indeed -- most peculiar, mama." -- JL.
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