Sarah Palin’s father-in-law had no idea she would resign as Alaska’s governor


Former Vice Presidential candidate Sarah Palin resigned as the governor of Alaska on Friday before the holiday weekend in the US. Palin said she was resigning because she wanted to avoid the “lame duck” status she would have held before the next Gubernatorial election in November, and transferred power to her Lieutenant Governor. She easily could have run for re-election, but it’s thought that she’s choosing to enter politics on a national level again, and there’s speculation that she might run for President in 2012. Still, it makes you wonder what motivated her to quit, seemingly abruptly.

Palin’s father-in-law told People Magazine that he had “no idea” that Sarah was going to resign. This is a kind of cute story about how he caught the biggest salmon of his life on Friday, yeah right, and then got the unexpected news.

On the night before Sarah Palin resigned as governor of Alaska, her husband Todd Palin dialed the cell number of his father, Jim. “Sarah’s making an announcement tomorrow. Can you be there?”

Jim Palin was more than 200 miles away in Kenai, preparing for a salmon fishing trip with friends. He had no clue why his son was calling, or the nature of the announcement. “I didn’t know what was coming and I didn’t ask,” he said. “I couldn’t get back because I had a commitment. If I had been home, I would have been there,” he says.

Early the next morning, Jim went fishing and landed his biggest salmon yet – a 60-lb. King. Then a little after 11 a.m. he got another whopper – news that his famous daughter-in-law was quitting her job as governor of Alaska. “Wow!” he said after reading the bulletin on his email. “We had no idea it was coming. Nobody seemed to know; they’re extremely private people.”

Jim, who along with his wife Faye, joined Todd and Sarah on the campaign trail last fall when Palin was running for vice president on the GOP ticket with John McCain, says he wasn’t privy to the details that went into Sarah’s decision.

“Obviously, Sarah and Todd had thought it through and as far as the future lies, and based on what she said, I feel confident they have several options available to them and we will support them in whatever they do,” he says. At the very least, he says, Palin will have the freedom to speak without the specter of ethics complaints lingering. “If she’s not in office, they can’t file frivolous ethics complaints against you. That becomes a waste of time and money,” he says.

[From People]

That last line, “frivolous ethics complaints,” may explain why Palin resigned so suddenly, but we’ll have to wait and see if there’s more than just the investigation into her dismissal of the Public Safety Commissioner. Celebrities usually announce divorces and breakups on Fridays because we’re all anxious to go home and they get the least coverage. Add a holiday weekend in there and people are even less likely to talk about your announcement. It seems uncharacteristic of Palin to time something for the least amount of publicity, especially if she plans a return to national politics. She was upset over that joke by David Letterman about her daughter, but that was a few weeks ago and it’s all died down now. Palin didn’t shy away from the controversy and went on the Today Show denouncing the joke. Is this going to be all we’ll hear about Palin’s resignation, or will more information come out soon?

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.

21 Responses to “Sarah Palin’s father-in-law had no idea she would resign as Alaska’s governor”

Comments are Closed

We close comments on older posts to fight comment spam.

  1. lisa says:

    I have a suspicious mind. Something is up. But besides that I think she likes the attention. Look at the Letterman rant. We had not seen much or heard much about her until that. She just got another taste..and I’m sure she was over the moon when her words caused those nuts to picket outside his studio. She must have been on cloud nine. I don’t like her, but I do think she is obsessed with the media spot light. And the thing I dislike most is she always plays the victim.. Poor me, look how they pick on me. check out the letter she posted on her facebook page. pathetic.. and to think this woman was so close to leading this nation..I cringe when I allow my mind to go there. But get ready she is coming to tv screen, newspaper, magazine and talk show near you..

    Sorry..

  2. Vibius says:

    Pretending the lame-duck excuse was 100% true and she were to run for president. Would we be electing her to a 2 1/2 – 6 1/2 year term instead of the normal 4-8?

  3. geronimo says:

    Palin return to national politics

    I can’t think of a less welcome and more odious five-word combination than the above.

  4. Kath Jaynes says:

    What a maverick…

    faith & family. Sarah, I’d have to say it’s politics as usual when a successful politican quits because shes a woman, and because her place is at home with her kids.

  5. Kaiser says:

    It’s been said before, but it’s worth repeating – she’s never completed any elected or appointed position. She always resigns. She doesn’t give a sh-t about governing or working.

  6. stellapurdy says:

    With any luck this will be the last we ever see or hear from her.

  7. Bodhi says:

    Nobody likes a quitter Sarah…

  8. Praise St. Angie! says:

    the timing on this surprised me too.

    if she wanted more time in the spotlight, she would have made the announcement today, when most people are back at work after a long weekend, and are reading the news (and catching up on what they missed).

    What CB said was right; announcements made on a Friday are usually done on purpose to avoid as much publicity as possible.

    so, why would an attention-loving politician like Palin make a concerted effort to avoid the spotlight?

    I’m with Lisa…I have a suspicious mind, something is up…and I think whatever that something is, it’s not a GOOD something which is why she did this on the DL.

    but it seems her reason was “they won’t listen to me anyway since I’m a lame duck so I may as well not even try”?

    what if EVERY politician did that? including each and every POTUS? Nice dedication to your job, Sarah. Doesn’t say much about her commitment to her constituents.

  9. Codzilla says:

    I agree with those who think a major scandal is getting ready to surface, and she was just trying to stay ahead of it with her resignation.

  10. HEB says:

    I think she resigned because she’s going to be indicted

  11. El Predicto says:

    The Quitta from Wasilla

  12. TaylorB says:

    The ‘lame duck’ excuse was ‘lame’ to say the least. And the speculation that she was under too much media scrutiny yet is gearing up for a 2012 run is absurd, if she can not take the heat that she is getting now she is in for a very rude awakening if she attempts to go for POTUS, it will be exponentially worse, any person who has ever run in the primaries will tell her that.

    I felt really sorry for her after watching the rambling press conf. on friday it seems like she is feeling pretty beat down. I wish her good luck in her future endeavors and hope all the best for her and her family they have had a difficult year.

    That being said, I suspect Codzilla is probably right, she is trying to cut off a scandal at the pass.

  13. sarcra says:

    I think there must be something scandalous underneath all this. Can’t see any other reason why she would resign.

  14. anastasiabeaverhausen says:

    Nothing she said in that speech made sense. A point guard doesn’t pass the ball then LEAVE THE GYM! Her spokeswoman later just repeated the same nonsensical stuff.

    None of it made any sense. Which tells me they’re dancing all around the truth. Whatever happened to the old classic “I want to spend more time with my family” and leave people to speculate, as they will anyway? Why muddy the waters with all these weird lies about how she wants to lead by not leading?

    So weird. I have several friends in Alaska who are relieved to be done with her and sincerely hope she moves on to other things and not doing anything in their state. Apparently she didn’t do much as governor anyway.

    I just want her to go away, she’s one of the dumbest public figures I’ve seen in a while, and that’s saying a lot! She certainly doesn’t forward the cause of women in high office.

  15. K says:

    I can see why she resigned. The way people treat her is terrible. I personally would not want to put up with it anymore.

    America should really be ashamed of itself for the way they treated her (and her family). There is no justification for it.

  16. the original kate says:

    palin was treated the same as any VP nominee – no worse, no better. every politician’s closet is rummaged for skeletons and if she can’t take it don’t run. she should go back to selling snowmobiles in wasilla.

  17. sonny says:

    she is so uneducated!!! why would anyone want an idiot with no knowledge of the law RUNNING A POWERFUL COUNTRY??

  18. TaylorB says:

    K,

    While she did get her share of grief it wasn’t as if the others weren’t pounded on as well, just ask Hillary Clinton (certain media people used to call her 12 year old daughter the ‘Whitehouse dog’), the difference is that Ms. Clinton chose not to publically take umbrage and engage those people so it went away. Pres Bush was bashed daily for years bY comedians and pundits and he did the same thing, he publically ignored it. Palin, on the other hand, was reactionary thus giving credence to the people who poked at her and they lapped it up and kept it coming, it was ‘fun’ for them to see if she would fly off the handle and give them more fodder.

    I am not saying that she wasn’t often times unfairly criticised, she certainly was, but she wasn’t the exception to the rule, it goes with the territory of running for national office, the outcome really depends on how you react. Ignore it and it becomes a non-story, fighting it is like trying to nail jello to a tree…a futile endeavor that ends up making you look even worse in the end.

  19. MaiGirl says:

    I agree, TaylorB. Instead of letting all those criticisms go, she just proved them all right by reacting in such an unseasoned manner. We called her a hick, so she acted like one. I can’t imagine that her resignation is anything but a way to duck out of some controversy. While I can never accurately predict what the Republicans will do, I imagine that this is the death of her political career….or at least, it should be!

  20. Annie says:

    God willing Maigirl, it will be.

    It’s definitely all so fishy to me and frankly, she does not get my sympathy vote. Her family? Yes. But I agree with those who think she’s trying to do some clean up work for a future potential scandal.

    And yes, I noticed that she never completes a term…scary thought that she could’ve been VP isn’t it?

  21. aleach says:

    Well, I dont feel sorry for how the “liberal media” treated her or her family. She paraded her special needs baby & her pregnant teenage daughter all over the country. “Look what I got! But dont talk about them in the news! OFF LIMITS!” puhhh-leeze.
    God, I can just imagine what would have happened if she were elected VP. We sure dodged a bullet there.
    And, as awful as it sounds, if there happend to be some sort of scandal on here I would just laugh & laugh. Get this self-rightous idiot to shut up for good.