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Permit me a grim, but realistic thought. John McCain seems like a very healthy man for a 73-year-old, but he's still 73. In August he turns 74. He wants to run for another six-year term. Hayworth has an uphill climb, and Sarah Palin's backing will probably help McCain with Arizona conservatives who might be tempted to look at other options.
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No matter how the Far Left batters Sarah Palin, it appears the only ones they convince are themselves. After Sen. John McCain announced that Gov. Palin would campaign for him in Arizona, he increased his lead over former Congressman J.D. Hayworth by a 53% to 31% margin. In November, a Rasmussen Report showed that the two candidates were....
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Sen. John McCain last week gave a full-throated defense of his politically risky pick of former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as his running mate in the 2008 presidential race, suggesting that he may even invite her to Arizona to help him campaign for re-election to a fifth term.
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Michelle Malkin - Pay attention: In the afterglow of the Massachusetts Miracle, there are flickers of peril for the right. I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but like Paul Revere's midnight message, consider this warning a cry of defiance, and not of fear. Conservatives have worked hard to rebuild after Big Government Republican John McCain's defeat. But McCain isn't going gently into that good night.
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In her debut as a Fox News analyst, Sarah Palin quickly demonstrated that she will be a one-trick pony — a demagogue with shocking double standards. She lashed President Obama with ad hominem bromides, but dismissed criticism of her as “gossip” and a “bunch of b.s.” Palin has been trying to find a place to fit in ever since her surprise elevation as John McCain’s vice presidential candidate during the 2008 election. During the interview, Palin said sinking approval numbers for President Barack Obama reflect “an uncomfortableness” some Americans feel toward his administration. No subtle hints of racism intended, of course.








