John
McCain
tapped
little-known
Alaska
Gov.
Sarah
Palin to
be his
vice
presidential
running
mate on
Friday
in a
startling
selection
on the
eve of
the
Republican
National
Convention.
In an
announcement,
the
campaign
said
that
Palin,
who has
been
governor
less
than two
years,
"has the
record
of
reform
and
bipartisanship
that
others
can only
speak
of."
"Her
experience
in
shaking
up the
status
quo is
exactly
what is
needed
in
Washington
today,"
the
campaign
said.
can
National
Convention.
Two
senior
campaign
officials
had
disclosed
McCain's
decision
a few
hours
before
the
Republican
presidential
nominee-to-be
and his
newly-minted
running
mate
appeared
at a
rally in
swing-state
Ohio.
Palin,
like
McCain,
is a
conservative
with a
maverick
streak
who has
shown a
willingness
to clash
with
others
in her
own
party. A
self-styled
hockey
mom and
political
reformer,
she has
been
governor
of her
state
less
than two
years.
Palin's
selection
shocked
numerous
Republican
officials.
At 44,
Palin is
a
generation
younger
that
Sen.
Joseph
Biden of
Delaware,
who is
Barack
Obama's
running
mate on
the
Democratic
ticket.
She is
three
years
Obama's
junior,
as well
— and
McCain
has made
much in
recent
weeks of
Obama's
relative
lack of
experience
in
foreign
policy
and
defense
matters.
In
making
his
pick,
McCain
passed
over
several
more
prominent
prospects
who had
figured
in
speculation
for
months —
Minnesota
Gov. Tim
Pawlenty,
former
Massachusetts
Gov.
Mitt
Romney
and
former
Pennsylvania
Gov. Tom
Ridge
among
them.
Palin
flew
overnight
to an
airport
in Ohio
near
Dayton,
and even
as she
awaited
her
formal
introduction,
some
aides
said
they had
believed
she was
at home
in
Alaska.
She is a
former
mayor of
Wasilla
who
became
governor
of her
state in
December,
2006
after
ousting
a
governor
of her
own
party in
a
primary
and then
dispatching
a former
governor
in the
general
election.
More
recently,
she has
come
under
the
scrutiny
of an
investigation
by the
Republican-controlled
legislature
into the
possibility
that she
ordered
the
dismissal
of
Alaska's
public
safety
commissioner
because
he would
not fire
her
former
brother-in-law
as a
state
trooper.
The
timing
of
McCain's
selection
appeared
designed
to limit
any
political
gain
Obama
yields
from his
own
convention,
which
ended
Thursday
night
with his
nominating
acceptance
speech
before
an
estimated
84,000
in
Invesco
Field in
Colorado.
Public
opinion
polls
show a
close
race
between
Obama
and
McCain,
and with
scarcely
two
months
remaining
until
the
election,
neither
contender
can
allow
the
other to
jump out
to a big
post-convention
lead.
McCain
has had
months
to
consider
his
choice,
and has
made it
clear to
reporters
that one
of his
overriding
goals
was to
avoid a
situation
like the
one in
1988,
when Dan
Quayle
was
thrown
into a
national
campaign
with
little
preparation.
Palin
has a
long
history
of
run-ins
with the
Alaska
GOP
hierarchy,
giving
her
genuine
maverick
status
and
reformer
credentials
that
could
complement
McCain's
image.
Two
years
ago, she
ousted
the
state's
Republican
incumbent
governor,
Frank
Murkowski
in the
primary,
despite
having
little
money
and
little
establishment
backing.
She has
also
distanced
herself
from two
senior
Republican
office-holders,
sen. Ted
Stevens
and Rep.
Don
young.
Both men
are
under
federal
corruption
investigations.
She had
earned
stripes
— and
enmity —
after
Murkowski
made her
head of
the
Alaska
Oil and
Gas
Conservation
Commission.
From
that
post,
she
exposed
ethical
violations
by the
state
GOP
chairman,
also a
fellow
commissioner.
She and
her
husband
Todd
Palin,
have
five
children.
The
latest,
a baby,
was born
with
Down
syndrome.