Morning Brief: Palin shoots, scores in RNC speech
Top Story
Vice-presidential nominee Gov. Sarah Palin of Alaska wowed convention-goers with a hard-hitting speech Wednesday at the Republican National Convention in Minneapolis-St. Paul.
Calling herself "just your average hockey mom," Palin described her roots in small-town America and delivered a withering attack on Sen. Barack Obama, the Democratic nominee. "I guess a small-town mayor is sort of like a 'community organizer,' except that you have actual responsibilities," she said in one of the speech's many applause lines.
Wednesday capped a brutal series of news cycles for Palin, who has faced intense scrutiny in the press for everything from her qualifications to her daughter's teenage pregnancy. Nonetheless, "a star was born last night," Bill Kristol writes in a glowing review of Palin's debut for the Weekly Standard. The Wall Street Journal's Peggy Noonan predicts, "She is either going to be magic or one of history's accidents." John Dickerson of Slate warns that Palin should make Democrats very nervous.
Global Economy
Rising costs are eating into oil companies' profits. Poor guys.
Oil for October delivery is back up to $110 a barrel.
Americas
People are returning to New Orleans, but Hurricane Ike and Tropical Storm Hannah are growing stronger.
Crime has cut Mexico's economic growth by 1 percent, according to its finance minister.
Argentina's move to pay back $6.7 billion in debt is just the first step, experts say.
Asia
Thailand's foreign minister has stepped down, but the prime minister insists he won't resign. Instead, he hopes to use a referendum to defuse protests.
A leaked letter from the U.S. State Department is causing a ruckus in India.
Pakistan's government is reading the riot act to U.S. Amb. Anne Patterson over what appears to be a botched raid in Pakistani territory.
"I will work to defeat the domestic Taliban insurgency and to ensure that Pakistani territory is not used to launch terrorist attacks," vows presidential frontrunner Asif Ali Zardari in today's Washington Post.
U.S. officials doubt that North Korea is really reassembling its reactor.
Middle East and Africa
Syria's Bashar al-Assad urged the West to solve its dispute with Iran peacefully. But French President Nicolas Sarkozy, visiting Syria, warns that Iran is risking an Israeli attack.
Turkey's president plans to visit Armenia this weekend.
Europe and the Caucasus
The Irish Republican Army is no longer a threat, according to an independent monitoring report.
Ukraine's president accused the prime minister, his erstwhile ally, of plotting a "political and constitutional coup."
BP has resolved its dispute with the partners in its Russian joint venture; CEO Robert Dudley will resign.
Today's Agenda
U.S. Vice-President Dick Cheney, visiting Georgia, described Russia's invasion of Georgia "illegitimate" and reiterated the United States' strong support of Georgia's NATO bid.
The Nuclear Suppliers Group meets in Vienna to discuss the U.S.-India nuclear agreement.
The Washington Post previews John McCain's acceptance speech, which is tonight.












Unsurprisingly, her speech
Unsurprisingly, her speech was written by Matthew Scully, former speechwriter for GW Bush. I'm really surprised by the deluded pundit praise, and the fact that you guys have bought into it. She did nothing but spin and swipe. Not exactly inspiring.
I have to agree. This was a
I have to agree. This was a speech clearly intended to throw smoke over the brewing Palin crisis by taking shots at Obama, talking about positive family members and telling the media "how dare you bring up my personal life" in a voice stern enough to scare reporters.
And everyone took the bait. Real reporting goes beyond the press release, which in this case is asking why she didn't address any real issues and why it's not okay, in Palin's view, to go after her personal life when she injects that life into politics to such a degree.
Unfortunately, instead the entire press, it seems, decided to only look at the zingers, which were good, but clearly designed to get the scandals out of the headlines for a few days, which, unfortunately, worked.
Thank you for reaffirming
Thank you for reaffirming that I'm not going crazy. When I saw even FP jumping on the bandwagon, I started to wonder what was going on.
The VP Role in a Campaign
It's the VP's role in a presidential campaign to spin and swipe. What did she do (or not do) any different than Biden's speech last week?
Go back and re-read Biden's
Go back and re-read Biden's speech. He took shots at McCain, but he based them on policy differences, not the difference between community organizer and mayor. Palin didn't touch a single policy issue, which shows you what kind of VP she's going to be under McCain.
Exactly. There is a vast
Exactly. There is a vast difference between attacks based on policy and attacks based on character. Just as the McCain campaign has repeatedly had the gall to attack Obama's patriotism, they have failed to attack Obama's policies without misrepresenting them (maliciously I might add). On the other hand, I'd love someone to find one example of Obama or even Biden attacking McCain's character, patriotism, or service record.