Palin says Katie Couric annoyed her

Oct 03, 2008 14:17

Part of this interview is already posted here, here's the rest of it.

Do Over! Palin Answers Katie Couric's Questions…to Fox News' Carl Cameron (She Reads The Economist, She Says)

October 03, 2008 2:52 PM

In a post-debate interview today with Fox News' chief political correspondent Carl Cameron, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin provided some of the answers that seemed to elude her in her past interview with Katie Couric.

Cameron told her that some observers, pleased with her debate performance, asked "Where was this Sarah Palin in the interview with Katie Couric?"

"Ok, I'll tell you honestly," Palin said, "the Sarah Palin in those interviews is a little bit annoyed because it's like, man no matter what you say you're going to get clobbered. If you choose to answer a question you are going to get clobbered on the answer. If you choose to try and pivot and go on to another subject that you believe that Americans want to hear about you get clobbered for that too."

Palin said "in those Katie Couric interviews I did feel that there were a lot of things that she was missing in terms of an opportunity to ask what a vice presidential candidate stands for -- what the values are represented in our ticket. I wanted to talk about Barack Obama increasing taxes which would lead to killing jobs, wanted to talk about his proposal to increase government spending by another trillion dollars. Some of his comments that he has made about the war that I think may in my world disqualifies someone from consideration as the next commander in chief….I wanted to talk about things like that. So I guess I have to apologize about being a little annoyed, but that is also an indication of being outside that Washington elite, outside of the media elite also and just wanted to talk to Americans without the filter and let them know what we stand for."

"So, at the risk of annoying you," said Cameron, "when you are asked, 'What do you read, which papers and magazines?' You didn't answer it. Or, you said, 'I have all kinds of resources.'"

"Right, right, right," said Palin.
"Well, what do you read?" asked Cameron.

"I read the same things that other people across the country read, including the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal and The Economist and some of these publications that we've recently even been interviewed through up there in Alaska. Because, of everything that we're doing with oil and gas, a lot of the investment publications especially are interviewing us, asking us how are being so successful up there in contributing to our nation's step towards energy independence…

"My response to her, I guess it was kind of flippant. But, I was sort of taken aback, like, the suggestion was, 'You're way up there in a far away place in Alaska, do you know that there are publications in the rest of the world that are read by many?' And I was taken aback by that because I don't know, the suggestion just was a little bit of perhaps we're not in tune with the rest of the world."

Cameron then asked another Couric question that Palin didn't answer, about Supreme Court decisions that she disagrees with other than Roe v Wade. "As a conservative, there are some in the Republican Party who would expect a vice presidential nominee to understand judicial conservatives and to have something that they might object to," Cameron said.

"And that's fair, right and on that one, true I shouldn't have been so flippant and just sort of brushed aside that," Palin said, "because it was an important question and I should have answered it and yeah I can cite a lot of cases that I absolutely disagree with the Supreme Court on."

She elaborated: "A recent one Kennedy v Louisiana where the Supreme Court will tell a state that they can't impose the death penalty even on the heinous crimes of repeat child rapists that a state its rights were taken away by the Supreme Court and we would not be able to decide for ourselves whether the death penalty in a case like that could be implemented or not. That one I'm certainly not a supporter of that decision."

Palin also mentioned the Kelo case also with the eminent domain -- that affects me as Governor. It affected me as a mayor also. Property rights are so precious in this nation and for the Supreme Court to have sided with government instead of the people, the property owners on that -- that was frustrating. Another one that personally affecting me also the Exxon Valdez oil spill. The siding with the oil companies, they decimated Alaska's coastline and much of our fisheries and much of our coastal communities' livelihoods of people who live there and they sided with Exxon on the punishment -- the punitive damage that was to be awarded, Exxon won on that one and in a sense that was frustrating."

Palin, asked about her relationship with the media, said "what I need to do is commit to not be so annoyed and impatient with mainstream media. And I will make that commitment because I do understand that that is how I speak to the American people. In a position like this I speak to you and through you and that way that message is received by American people. So I apologize for the the, I guess, flippant response that I gave through that interview on a couple of questions.

"But I would ask also then that the media tries a little bit harder also," Palin went on. "And that this is a two-way street that there is fairness, just objectivity and fairness and truth. That's all Americans ask for."

"Objectivity?" Cameron asked. "Fairness?"

"As we send our young men and women overseas in a war zone to fight for democracy and freedoms including freedom of the press, we've really got to have a mutually beneficial relationship here with those fighting the freedom of the press and then the press though not taking advantage and exploiting a situation perhaps they would want to capture and abuse the privilege. We just want truth, we want fairness, we want balance." (She says in an interview with Faux Noise.  STFD ho)

- jpt

source

I believe the term for back-tracking of these proportions is "A day late and a trillion dollars short."  Everything about this interview is pathetic, from her back-tracking to complete lack of respect.

fox news, katie couric, sarah palin / palin family, supreme court, cbs

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