Updated: Thursday, 12 Nov 2009, 8:39 PM CST
Published : Thursday, 12 Nov 2009, 8:35 PM CST
NEW YORK (AP) - The rumors are true, according to Sarah Palin: The McCain-Palin
campaign was not a happy family.
In Palin's new memoir, "Going Rogue," she confirms reports of
tension between her aides and those of the 2008 Republican
presidential candidate, Sen. John McCain. The vice presidential
candidate confirms that she had wanted to speak on election night,
but was denied the chance and says she was kept "bottled up" from
reporters during the campaign.
Palin also writes harshly of CBS anchor Katie Couric, whom
she describes as "badgering" and biased. Palin's series of
interviews with Couric were widely regarded as disastrous, leaving
the impression of an ill-informed candidate who was unsuited for
the job.
The 413-page book with 16 pages of color photos but no index
comes out Tuesday, Nov. 17. The Associated Press was able to
purchase a copy Thursday. "Going Rogue," with a first printing of
1.5 million copies, has been at or near the top of Amazon.com and
other best-seller lists for weeks, ever since publisher
HarperCollins announced that the book had been completed quickly
and the release date was being moved up from next spring.
The book follows Palin from childhood to her departure last
summer as Alaska governor. It includes much of what her admirers,
and detractors, expected: tributes to family, faith and patriotism,
and attacks against the media and other perceived opponents.
She writes about the "jaded aura" of professional campaign
aides and how McCain's entourage limited her access to the media,
leading to allegations - unfounded, she says - that she was
avoiding reporters.
In the months leading up to her July resignation as Alaska
governor, her legal bills had mounted to more than $500,000, fueled
mostly by what she called frivolous ethics complaints. What
appeared to upset her most, though, was that about $50,000 of the
legal bills was her share of the expenses for being vetted for the
VP nod, Palin writes. She said no one had ever informed her that
she would have to personally take care of any expenses related to
the selection process.
Palin writes that when she asked officials at the Republican
National Committee and what was left of the McCain campaign if they
would help her financially, she was told the bills would have been
paid if McCain had won, but since he lost, the bills were her
responsibility.
Trevor Potter, general counsel for the McCain campaign, told
the AP the campaign had never asked Palin to pay a legal bill. "To
my knowledge, the campaign never billed Gov. Palin for any legal
expenses related to her vetting and I am not aware of her ever
asking the campaign to pay legal expenses that her own lawyers
incurred for the vetting process." Potter said that if Palin's
personal lawyer billed her for any work related to her vetting, "We
are unaware of it. It was never raised with the campaign."
Written with Lynn Vincent, "Going Rogue" is folksy in tone
and homespun. For example, Palin says her efforts to award a
license for a massive natural gas transmission line was turning a
pipe dream into a pipeline. She writes in awe about how the McCain
campaign had hired a New York stylist who had also worked on
Couric.
Taken aback by all the fussing, she wondered who was paying
for the $150,000 worth of fancy clothes given to her and her family
by the campaign. Also, Palin did not like the forced makeover, and
said she wondered at the time if she and her clan came across as
"that" unpresentable. Family members were told the costs were being
taken care of, or were "part of the convention." The designer
clothing, hairstyling and accessories later grew into a
controversy.
Palin shares behind-the-scene moments when the nation learned
her teen daughter Bristol was pregnant, how she rewrote the
statement prepared for her by the McCain campaign - only to watch
in horror as a TV news anchor read the original McCain camp
statement, which, in Palin's view, glarmorized and endorsed her
daughter's situation.
She writes that the incident made it clear to her that McCain
headquarters was in charge of her message. She said when she tried
to find out what the McCain camp would and would not allow her to
say, chief campaign strategist Steve Schmidt told her to simply
"stick with the script."
Palin laments that she wasn't allowed to bring up loads of
family members to the stage while McCain gave his election night
concession speech, the vice presidential candidate having found out
minutes earlier that she wouldn't be permitted to give her own
speech.
She writes at length about Couric. She says that the idea to
meet with Couric came from McCain campaign aide Nicolle Wallace,
who told Palin that Couric - also a working mother - liked and
admired her. It would be a favor to Couric, too, whom Palin
notes had the lowest ratings of the network anchors.
She alleges that Couric and CBS left out her more
"substantive" remarks and settled for "gotcha" moments, and that
Couric had a "partisan agenda" and a condescending manner. Couric
was "badgering," biased and far easier on Palin's Democratic
counterpart, Joe Biden, the book states.
Palin writes warmly of her childhood and her mother's
"nurturing, hospitable" personality. Her priorities were set early
- faith, hunting, current events and sports (she even dreamed of
being a broadcaster alongside Howard Cosell). She remembers being a
voracious reader, favorites including John Steinbeck's "The Pearl"
and George Orwell's "Animal Farm." Long before Tina Fey parodied
her on "Saturday Night Live," Palin enjoyed watching the show as a
girl.
She will be interviewed by Oprah Winfrey and Barbara Walters,
among others, for her book. Her tour, which begins next week in
Grand Rapids, Mich., will skip major cities in favor of smaller
localities.