ST. PAUL, Minn. — Since Sunday night, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin has been holed up in her suite in the Hilton Minneapolis while a parade of Sen. John McCain’s top advisers have briefed her on the nuances of his policy positions, national politics and, above all, how to introduce herself to the national audience she will address tonight at the Republican convention.
Sitting around a dining room table, the McCain team has talked to her about Iraq, energy and the economy, but has focused on what she should say in her speech, struggling almost as hard as she has to prepare for what will be, along with a debate in October, her main opportunity to shape the way she is viewed by voters.
Not anticipating that McCain would choose a woman as his running mate, the speech that was prepared in advance was “very masculine,” according to campaign manager Rick Davis, and “we had to start from scratch.”
Aides to McCain and Palin were still debating elements of the speech, according to several GOP sources, including whether the governor should make reference to her 17-year-old daughter’s pregnancy. On Tuesday, Levi Johnston, the high school student Palin has said her daughter plans to marry, left Alaska to join the Palin family at the convention.
In the speech, Palin is likely to emphasize her areas of policy expertise, particularly energy and political reform, rather than focusing on her biography or gender.
An initial version of the address, which speechwriter Matthew Scully started crafting a week ago, included plenty of attacks aimed at Democratic nominee Sen. Barack Obama along with ample praise for McCain, aides said. But they said Palin’s speech will focus more on substantive matters.
“There’s an expectation that she doesn’t have a depth of knowledge on issues,” said McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds. “That’s absurd.”
Talk to us
> Give us your news tips.
> Send us a letter to the editor.
> More Herald contact information.
