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Sarah Palin, the AIP, and the Extremist Fringe

So McCain and Palin want to smear Obama with guilt by association over his non-relationship with Bill Ayers, eh?

Well, perhaps more attention ought to be paid to Palin’s long and ongoing relationship with the extremist Alaska Independence Party (AIP) and its leaders. And perhaps Palin ought to be asked why she has associated — and rather closely (she was a card-carrying member of the AIP) — with extremists who not only support secession from the U.S. but who have “[forged] alliances with outright white supremacists and far-right theocrats,” who are “[affiliated] with neo-Confederate organizations,” and who are pro-gun, anti-government, militia-supporting nuts.

Specifically, as Max Blumenthal and David Neiwert show in a fantastic piece at Salon that is an absolute must-read, Palin’s rise to prominence, both in Wasilla and Juneau, was facilitated in large part by two prominent right-wingers, Mark Chryson (a former AIP chairman) and Steve Stoll (a John Birth Society activist). “Both Stoll and Chryson not only contributed to Palin’s campaign [for mayor of Wasilla] financially, they played major behind-the-scenes roles in the Palin camp before, during and after her victory.” And the support has been mutual, with Palin actively seeking to advance their agenda.

Read the entire piece. Here’s a key passage:

“With Sarah as a mayor,” said Chryson, “there were a number of times when I just showed up at City Hall and said, ‘Hey, Sarah, we need help.’ I think there was only one time when I wasn’t able to talk to her and that was because she was in a meeting.”

Chryson says the door remains open now that Palin is governor. (Palin’s office did not respond to Salon’s request for an interview.) While Palin has been more circumspect in her dealings with groups like the AIP as she has risen through the political ranks, she has stayed in touch.

When Palin ran for governor in 2006, marketing herself as a fresh-faced reformer determined to crush the GOP’s ossified power structure, she made certain to appear at the AIP’s state convention. To burnish her maverick image, she also tapped one-time AIP member and born-again Republican Walter Hickel as her campaign co-chair. Hickel barnstormed the state for Palin, hailing her support for an “all-Alaska” liquefied gas pipeline, a project first promoted in 2002 by an AIP gubernatorial candidate named Nels Anderson. When Palin delivered her victory speech on election night, Hickel stood beaming by her side. “I made her governor,” he boasted afterward. Two years later, Hickel has endorsed Palin’s bid for vice president.

Just months before Palin burst onto the national stage as McCain’s vice-presidential nominee, she delivered a videotaped address to the AIP’s annual convention. Her message was scrupulously free of secessionist rhetoric, but complementary nonetheless. “I share your party’s vision of upholding the Constitution of our great state,” Palin told the assembly of AIP delegates. “My administration remains focused on reining in government growth so individual liberty can expand. I know you agree with that… Keep up the good work and God bless you.”

So… are the gloves really off? If McCain and Palin want to wallow in the gutter with Ayers-related smears, with outright lies meant to tarnish Obama’s character, should we not then bring up, say, the Keating Five scandal and, well, much of what we’ve learned about Palin, including her very real association with the AIP?

Should we not counter their lies with the truth?

Because, as I have said many, many times:

AMERICANS DESERVE TO KNOW THE TRUTH ABOUT SARAH PALIN.

(Cross-posted from The Reaction.)

  • "(she was a card-carrying member of the AIP)"

    Incorrect. She's always been a Republican. Todd was a member, however, for several years.
  • lurxst
    Correct, I think she was only married to a card carrying member.

    Obama will not bring this up, although I am sure his campaign can appreciate the web mutterings. He seems to be staying focused on the issues with little need for extreme character attacks on McCain.

    I am more interested in the story behind her house possibly being built with free labor from the contractor she hired to build her town's hockey rink. Shades of Ted Stevens, anyone. Her state legislature has already leveled its judgement of ethical violations against her. Inconceivable?


    http://www.villagevoice.com/2008-10-08/news/the...
  • StockBoySF
    Card carrying member or not Sarah Palin nevertheless strongly supports the AIP (when she spoke at their convention a few months ago she said they were doing a great job). What's interesting is that some members of the AIP DID think she was a member.... So while she may have been a registered Republican, clearly her sympathies are elsewhere.

    I'm glad the Obama isn't going down this road in bringing up Palin's AIP ties. I think it's just another piece of evidence that Obama understand that he will need to unite the US behind him as president. He also recognizes that he is the president of ALL the people, including those he disagrees with him. Unfortunately I doubt that many people will even notice. It is a fresh change from Bush who divided the country for his own political gain and the world too with his "You're either with us or against us" attitude.

    Besides without this story being widely disseminated now, if Palin runs for prez in 2012 then her Republican opponents will have a field day with this... It will be fresh and new....
  • kritt11
    Its true, Stockboy

    . I think the reason Bush is so widely reviled has more to do with his divisive persona, than his actual policy blunders. You get the feeling that he believed he only needed to be responsive to the "Good Americans" ie conservative Republicans. He stuffed his administration and federal offices with them and nominated them for judgeships. Even the Honors program at Justice was subject to this bias.

    Obama's appeal lies his ability to offer leadership to all Americans and give them something besides a narrow partisan agenda to vote for.
  • AustinRoth
    Another poorly researched, lying, piece of shit hit piece by Michel Stickings. Of course, why should we expect anything else from him?
  • DLS
    "Palin, the AIP, and Stickings." Substitute "Moderate" (on this site) for "Stickings" if desired. Equivalence noted.
  • PWT
    I like the way Mr. Stickings references his own writings to prove his point that the connection between Mr.s Ayers and Obama is a 'non-relationship'. He follows this up with a lengthy quote from Salon, a notably unbiased publication. It would be cute to see this kind of work from a seventh grader, but, Mr. Stickings is like most children, the older they get, the cuter they 'aint.
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