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More On Sarah
Cross-posted at Chris of Rights
First, it’s worthwhile pointing out that the let-wing blogs are abuzz with speculation that there’s an embezzlement scandal brewing related to Governor Sarah Plain’s (R-AK) time as Wasilla’s Mayor and a company called Spenard Building Supplies.
There’s very little information on this and quite a bit of uninformed speculation, but there’s some information here. At this point in time, there’s nothing about this on any reliable news source. There’s not even anything on the talk page on her Wikipedia entry. So, we’ll classify this as RUMOR for now.
Second, the last election cycle showed us (unfortunately) that the Presidential election cycle is no longer just one year. It’s two. Or more. Now, the office turnover in AK is in December, so if she stayed through her term, she’d be there through the end of 2010. But, given the way she likes to do things, it’s apparent that she wouldn’t even start the political machinery moving until then. That may be too late to start in the next election cycle. Particularly if you’re way out in the middle of nowhere in Juneau, AK, and disliked by the party elite.
She may have well seen this as the best way to begin her campaign for higher office. She mentioned “unconventional” and “no politics as usual” several times in her speech. Politics as usual and convention is to continue holding and not doing the job you’re holding while running for your next job.
And that’s the easy and simple response to anyone who calls her a “quitter”.
If, running for higher office is, in fact, what she’s doing, and not resigning due to a scandal.
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Comments
The fact that it was expedient for her to quit does not
The fact that it was expedient for her to quit does not somehow magically absolve her of the charge of being a quitter.
current issue
I hope that the resignation of Palin won’t hide the fact that many are still having trouble with their finances. The idea used to be for Americans to rack up a lot of debt to buy a lot of silly junk, but now more of us are thinking about debt relief. Since the recession hit, the lending crash, and job loss started to point out the vulnerability of everyone except the super rich folks that created said recession, more people have been thinking about debt relief, and it's led to a lot of people setting up an emergency account, for emergency funds. Cash is king, and the more you have for a case of emergency is a good idea – most experts recommend 6 to 8 months of salary in savings, so you don't need installment loans for debt relief.