Palin criticizes Obama again in solo appearance
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By SARA KUGLER
Associated Press Writer
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah
Palin on Thursday took an immediate swipe at Democratic nominee
Barack Obama in her first solo campaign appearance since joining
the GOP ticket. The Alaska governor also issued a fund-raising
appeal that blamed the Democratic presidential ticket for spreading
``misinformation and flat-out lies'' about her family and her.
While the Obama campaign has raised questions about Palin's
qualifications, Obama himself has said that her family should be
off-limits.
Palin met with Republican governors Thursday and said afterward
that leading a state means you have to make decisions and not just
vote ``present.''
``We don't have a 'present' button as governor - we are expected
to lead, we are expected to take action and not just vote
'present,''' said Palin, who is in her first term as Alaska's
governor. ``So there's a big difference, of course, between the
executive and legislative branches and our experience.''
Palin was referring to Obama's days in the Illinois Senate, when
he voted ``present'' dozens of times among the thousands of votes
he cast in his eight years there. The move is common among Illinois
lawmakers, but has become a favorite Republican complaint about
Obama.
The vice presidential candidate met with the governors on the
morning after her speech to the Republican National Convention. In
the days since her selection as John McCain's running mate was
announced, questions have been raised about the 44-year-old
governor's qualifications and experience, and it was revealed that
her unmarried 17-year-old daughter is pregnant.
In a fundraising letter issued Thursday, she wrote that ``the
Obama-Biden Democrats have been vicious in their attacks directed
toward me, my family and John McCain. The misinformation and
flat-out lies must be corrected.''
Palin said Thursday that she has ``a big job cut out in front of
me running for vice president.''
``I intend to give this campaign all that I have to give,'' she
said. ``And I look forward to these 60-plus days on the trail. My
family looks forward to this, we're up for it, we're excited about
it.''
She did not take questions from reporters.
09/04/08 16:31
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