Skip navigation

Palin aims wedge between Biden, Obama

In VP debate, Alaska governor blames regulatory failure for bank crisis

Interactive video
Analyze the debate
Scan the full debate video by question and keywords
  Interactive


Explore our guide to Senate, House and gubernatorial races around the country.

  Slide shows
AP
World reacts to Obama’s victory
From the U.S. president-elect’s ancestral homes in Kenya and Ireland to his namesake town in Japan, election fever grips the globe.

  Special coverage
Video
  Full debate
Oct. 2: Sen. Joe Biden and Gov. Sarah Palin clash over issues from the economy, to Iraq, to the role of the Vice President.

MSNBC

By Alex Johnson
Reporter
NBC, msnbc.com and news services
updated 10:05 a.m. ET Oct. 3, 2008

Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin accused the Democratic ticket of flying “the white flag of surrender” in Iraq, seeking to drive a wedge Thursday night between Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama and his running mate, Joe Biden.

Facing voters for the first time in an unscripted setting in the only vice presidential debate, Palin, the governor of Alaska, recalled that during the Democratic primary campaign, Biden criticized Obama for voting against a bill that would have boosted funding for U.S. troops.

Biden, a senator from Delaware, claimed that the Republican presidential nominee, Sen. John McCain of Arizona, also voted against the troop funding bill because it included a timetable to withdraw U.S. troops. He said he had no differences with Obama on the war.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

Both candidates stumbled on some of their facts. McCain, in fact, did not vote on the bill, while Palin did not mention that Obama has supported all but that one Iraq funding measure.

Biden, who was under pressure not to seem patronizing or dismissive of his opponent, did not respond to two sharp attacks from Palin on Iraq.

First she criticized him for supporting Obama’s position votes, “especially with your son in the National Guard.”

Biden’s son Beau is scheduled to fly to Iraq with his National Guard unit Friday. Palin did not mention that she also has a young son who is in Iraq with the Alaska National Guard.

And Biden remained silent when Palin accused him of flipflopping on support for the war.

“It’s so obvious that I’m a Washington outsider and someone who’s just not used to the ways you guys operate, because you voted for the war and then you voted against it,” she said apparently referring to Biden’s support for the resolution authorizing the original 2003 invasion and his later votes to place restrictions on President Bush’s policies.

Palin blames regulatory failure for bank crisis
Interest was intense in the debate at Washington University in St. Louis, with people posting offers on Craigslist of $1,000 for a ticket to see whether Palin could find a way to sway voters who have doubts about her readiness for a national job. An Associated Press-Gfk poll released Wednesday found that just 25 percent of likely voters believed Palin, 44, had the right experience to be president.

Early in the debate, Palin appeared to diverge from one of McCain’s long-stated policies by blaming a failure of regulatory oversight for the financial crisis gripping Wall Street.

“The federal government has not provided the sound oversight” needed to protect individual investors and small business owners, Palin said.

Last month, as debate grew on legislation to bail out collapsing investment banks, McCain said he still supported the 1999 law that deregulated relations between investment banks and commercial banks.

In his answer on the financial collapse, Biden — who also voted for the 1999 bill — blamed “the economic policies of the last eight years,” calling them “the worst economic policies we’ve ever had.”

Recalling McCain’s statement that U.S. economic fundamentals were strong, Biden added: “It does point out he’s out of touch.”

Palin looks to reverse perceptions
McCain’s campaign had kept Palin on a very short leash, limiting her exposure to questions from reporters. But Palin was direct, crisp and assured, swiftly turning moderator Gwen Ifill’s questions to the topic she wanted to address and directing her answers to the television cameras.

Slideshow
Image: Sarah Palin
  Sarah Palin: Republican star for 2012?
View images of her rise from governor of Alaska to a potential presidential contender.

more photos

“I want to talk about energy,” she said at one point, deftly diverting the discussion from tax policy.

Palin blamed Obama for voting for the 2005 energy bill, which included large tax breaks for oil exploration. Palin, who was a member of Alaska’s oil and energy regulatory board at the time, complained that she had to deal with the fallout.

Asserting that Obama was now campaigning against the oil companies, she said, “The nice thing of running with John McCain is he doesn’t tell one group one thing and tell another group another thing.”

Biden countered that Obama voted against the tax breaks. Once they were added to the bill anyway, he backed the overall legislation because of its funding for alternative energy technologies.


Sponsored links

Resource guide