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Palin facing voters who doubt her readiness
Comments 0 | Recommend 0NEW YORK - Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah
Palin enters her debate tonight with Democratic rival Joe Biden
as many voters harbor serious doubts about her readiness for the
nation's highest office.
An AP-Gfk poll released Wednesday found
that just 25 percent of likely voters believe Palin has the right
experience to be president. That's down from 41 percent just after the
GOP convention, when the Alaska governor made her well-received debut
on the national stage.
Tonight's debate in St. Louis gives
Palin a chance to overcome the doubts in a 90-minute showcase, her
first lengthy give-and-take session since joining the GOP ticket with
presidential candidate John McCain.
McCain on Thursday dismissed
suggestions that he was upset with campaign staff for holding back
Palin from extensive questioning by reporters and voters and not
letting her be herself on the campaign trail.
"We let Sarah be
Sarah. She's smart, she's tough, she's been in debates before," McCain
told "Fox & Friends" on Fox News Channel. "The American people ...
the more they see of her, the more they love her, and I'm confident of
that at the end."
Palin has granted just a handful of interviews
and has often appeared to be uninformed about national issues. McCain
and other Republicans have criticized the questions that produced this
impression as "gotcha journalism."
In a CBS News interview aired
Wednesday she criticized the Supreme Court's Roe v. Wade decision that
legalized abortion but was unable to name any other Supreme Court
decision she disagreed with, though she said there were other decisions
that divided Americans.
"I think it should be a states' issue not
a federal government, mandated, mandating yes or no on such an
important issue," said Palin, who opposes abortion except in cases
where the pregnancy threatens the woman's life.
Asked what other Supreme Court decisions she disagrees with, she replied:
"Well,
let's see. There's, of course, in the great history of America rulings
there have been rulings, that's never going to be absolute consensus by
every American. And there are, those issues, again, like Roe v. Wade
where I believe are best held on a state level and addressed there. So
you know, going through the history of America, there would be others
but ...."
Asked again to name another decision she disagreed
with, Palin replied: "Well, I could think of, of any again, that could
be best dealt with on a more local level. Maybe I would take issue
with. But you know, as mayor, and then as governor and even as a vice
president, if I'm so privileged to serve, wouldn't be in a position of
changing those things but in supporting the law of the land as it reads
today."
In a separate CBS interview, Biden said Roe v. Wade was a
good decision "because it's (as) close to a consensus that can exist in
a society as heterogeneous as ours." Asked to name high court rulings
he disagrees with, Biden cited the decision that struck down a law
giving abused women the right to sue their tormentors in federal court.
Meantime,
the Democratic National Committee has e-mailed news stories to
reporters describing Palin's able performances in Alaska gubernatorial
debates in 2006, part of the party's effort to dispel the notion that
Palin is a sub-par debater.
One Republican saw the debate as a chance for Palin to dispel doubts about her.
"People
will have a chance to see her from beginning to end without being
edited," former Sen. Fred Thompson, R-Tenn., told CBS' "The Early Show"
on Thursday.
"We've all had bad days," Thompson said, "and she's
had some bad moments in some of these interviews, just like the rest of
us have had."
Palin has been preparing at McCain's retreat in
Sedona, Ariz. Biden has prepped near his home in Wilmington, Del.,
though he went to Washington for Wednesday night's vote on the economic
rescue package.
The 90-minute televised debate at Washington
University in St. Louis will be moderated by PBS anchor Gwen Ifill.
Ifill herself was criticized by some conservatives because she is
writing a book, "The Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of
Obama," on how politics in the black community have changed since the
civil rights era. She has said she has yet to write the chapter on
Obama and questioned why people think it will be favorable toward the
Democrat.
"Frankly, I wish they had picked a moderator that isn't
writing a book favorable to Barack Obama," McCain told Fox News on
Thursday. "But I have to have confidence that Gwen Ifill will treat
this as a professional journalist that she is."






