Sarah Palin, 2012 Presidential Election | featured news

Sarah Palin parks ‘One Nation’ bus tour

The tweet from Mediaite was too delicious to be true. “No Joke: Sarah Palin Reportedly Quits One Nation Bus Tour Halfway Through.” The story highlighted the original report by Scott Conroy of Real Clear Politics that the former governor of Alaska who resigned halfway through her first term is pretty much done with her the “One Nation” bus tour she started with such great fanfare on May 29.

 

Palin, Bachmann 2012 feud starts early

Days after Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) snagged Ed Rollins as manager of her nascent presidential campaign, the high-profile strategist is engaged in a war of words with advisers to former Alaska governor Sarah Palin.

 

Sarah Palin Should Spend Less Time on Fox News and More Time Brushing Up on U.S. History

Sarah Palin Should Spend Less Time on Fox News and More Time Brushing Up on U.S. History

Sarah Palin joined a number of other GOP hopefuls in New Hampshire last week making the typical pre-campaign rounds. But unlike Mitt Romney, who managed to focus his speaking on the economy and his business experience, Palin decided to give her fans a brief history lesson on Paul Revere ...

 

Palin kick-starts bus tour on back of motorcycle

Palin kick-starts bus tour on back of motorcycle

Sarah Palin rumbled through Washington on the back of a Harley as she and her family began an East Coast tour Sunday that renewed speculation the former Alaska governor would join the still unsettled Republican presidential contest.

 

Palin’s magical mystery tour

So Sarah Palin is taking a field trip. The former Alaskan governor has a coach bus painted with images of purple mountain majesties and the U.S. constitution, which she plans to use to make stops in historic Northeast sites familiar to grade-school civics classes. Along the way, she plans to remind Americans that they are “one nation under God,” to appreciate the country’s “diverse cultures,” and to “discover the ties that bind Americans.”

 

Why a Palin presidential bid helps other GOP candidates

Why a Palin presidential bid helps other GOP candidates

As grumbles about the lackluster Republican presidential field grow louder, reports of the return of former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin are growing stronger.

 

Republican Nomination Poll: Romney And Palin Lead; Cain Could Be A Factor

Former Govs. Mitt Romney from Massachusetts and Sarah Palin from Alaska are fighting for the lead in national preferences for the 2012 Republican nomination after the exit of real estate mogul Donald Trump and ex-Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, according to the latest Gallup poll. But the survey also shows a new candidate who could make a difference in the race: former Godfather's Pizza CEO Herman Cain.

 

First Republican Presidential Debate Pulled Off Course But Pawlenty Emerges Relatively Unscathed

First Republican Presidential Debate Pulled Off Course But Pawlenty Emerges Relatively Unscathed

It may have been the moment when former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson extended his riff about how his reality TV show would be different from Sarah Palin’s “crawling on her hands and knees up the ice flow in Alaska.” Or perhaps it was when Rep. Ron Paul (R-Tex.) explained why not everyone would use heroin if it were legalized.

 

Donald Trump tops new 2012 poll as he steps up outreach to GOP conservatives

Donald Trump tops new 2012 poll as he steps up outreach to GOP conservatives

Donald Trump is gaining more momentum ahead of his potential 2012 presidential run. A new CNN/Opinion Research Corporation poll out today finds Trump tied with Mike Huckabee atop the field of potential GOP White House contenders. According to the poll, Trump and Huckabee both garner 19 percent support among likely GOP voters. Sarah Palin comes in second, with 12 percent, while Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich are tied atthird, with 11 percent support each.

 

Palin stays mostly out of sight for Israel visit

Sarah Palin stayed out of sight Monday during her first trip to Israel, dodging paparazzi staking out hotels and holy sites in hopes of getting a glimpse of the former Alaska governor who might run for president.

 

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