Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Crash class for Palin with world leaders

Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin met yesterday with the Afghan president, Hamid Karzai, in New York. Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin met yesterday with the Afghan president, Hamid Karzai, in New York. (Henny Ray Abrams/associated press)
By Farah Stockman Globe Staff / September 24, 2008
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NEW YORK - Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin threw herself into a crash course in diplomacy at the United Nations yesterday, beginning her first of two days of meetings with foreign leaders, including Afghan president Hamid Karzai, Colombian president Álvaro Uribe, Pakistani president Ali Asif Zardari, and Iraqi president Jalal Talabani.

The meetings with Palin, who had never met a foreign head of state before and who traveled outside North America for the first time last year, were designed to bolster her foreign policy credentials and introduce her to close US allies with whom she would work if she became vice president.

But the carefully orchestrated visits also highlighted the degree to which John McCain's presidential campaign will go to shield the first-term Alaska governor from the press. Until CNN threatened to withdraw its pool camera crew, Palin's aides initially banned reporters, who are traditionally allowed to briefly view private diplomatic meetings that are being photographed, and are sometimes allowed to ask questions.

Palin - who was escorted by Randy Scheunemann, John McCain's top foreign policy adviser, and Steve Biegun, a former National Security Council member - met with Karzai yesterday for about a half hour. He said later at the Asia Society: "I found her quite a capable woman. She asked the right questions on Afghanistan. She was concerned and she said how can she help, so I'm very pleased with that meeting."

Reporters were allowed in for less than a minute, and heard the self-proclaimed "hockey mom" of five discussing Karzai's only child, who was born in January 2007.

"What is his name?" Palin asked, according to a pool report.

Karzai replied that the boy's name is Mirwais, which means "The Light of the House."

"Oh, nice," Palin responded.

Walter Russell Mead, a historian with the Council on Foreign Relations, said the meetings were likely to be more like courtesy calls than serious talks, given the uncertainty about whether McCain will win the presidency, and how much influence Palin would have over foreign policy in his administration. "We're not going to be talking about deep negotiations here," he said.

Biegun told reporters that Palin realizes that she is not yet in the White House: "Rather than make specific policy prescriptions, she was largely listening, having an exchange of views and also very interested in forming a relationship with people she met with today."

After meeting with Karzai, during which aides said she discussed the need for more troops in Afghanistan, Palin traveled by motorcade to the Colombian mission to the UN, where she met with Uribe and talked about a proposed US-Colombian Free Trade Agreement, which McCain and Palin support but Obama opposes, according to Biegun.

Then Palin met with former secretary of state Henry Kissinger at his consulting firm's offices for what was perhaps her most substantive meeting of the day. Palin talked for more than an hour with Kissinger, who tutored President Bush during his first White House campaign and has kept in close contact with him through his presidency.

Kissinger and Palin spoke about Russia, Iran, and China, Biegun said. In recent weeks, Kissinger has stated that he believes the United States should meet with Iranian leaders without preconditions - the position that has been taken by Democratic nominee Barack Obama and that McCain has repeatedly ridiculed.

Kissinger walked Palin to the doorway of his building and watched her motorcade drive away, but declined to answer reporters' questions about what advice he had given.

Today, Palin is set to meet with Talabani, Zardari, Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh, and Bono, the rock star who has been an activist on Africa issues. With McCain, she is also slated to meet the leaders of Georgia and Ukraine. Asked what Zardari knew about Palin, an aide to Zardari said: "Everybody knows about her. . . . She is a much-talked-about woman these days."

The aide said the Pakistani leader was also expecting to meet Democratic vice presidential nominee Joe Biden in New York. But Biden, who has been on the Senate foreign relations committee since 1973, did not travel to the UN yesterday. Biden has already spoken with or met all the foreign leaders on Palin's schedule, including Zardari in a meeting in February in Islamabad.

Palin's visit caused a stir in New York. Passersby trying to catch a glimpse formed small crowds outside the offices where she held her meetings. Outside Kissinger's building on Park Avenue, Jackie Taliaferro, a 34-year-old executive head-hunter who wore an "Obama Rocks" button, said she did not believe Palin's whirlwind meetings would give her enough foreign policy experience to qualify her to be next in line for the presidency.

"She's going to talk to Dr. Kissinger to pick his brain on foreign policy," Taliaferro said. "Good luck."

But Lynne Timmes, a 26-year-old songwriter in an "I love you Sarah" T-shirt, said Palin just needed a little "brushup" on foreign policy.

When Palin finally emerged from the meeting, Timmes yelled, "I love you, Sarah." But her compliment was drowned out by another woman protesting Palin, who shouted: "Women's rights will stand."

Schwarzenegger Says He Will Veto Calif. Budget

California Governor Sets up Historic Showdown with Lawmakers

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Gov. Arnold Schwartzenegger
(ABC News)

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger made an extraordinary pledge Tuesday to veto the state budget because he said the long-overdue spending plan lawmakers approved hours earlier lacked long-term fiscal reforms and would burden taxpayers.

If Schwarzenegger follows through on his threat, it would mark the first time in modern history that a California governor would veto a state spending plan.

"I think nothing is more important than getting our fiscal house in order, and I promise the people of California that I will not stop until the job is done," Schwarzenegger said during a Capitol news conference.

State lawmakers refused to back down, saying they were prepared to override Schwarzenegger's pending veto. The bill was expected to be delivered to the governor's desk Wednesday morning and vetoed as soon as that day. The Assembly and Senate are likely to convene Thursday.

Schwarzenegger Signs Calif. Budget 85 Days Late

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Arnold Schwarzenegger
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger announced that he would veto a state budget plan approved by the Legislature, but after a compromise, agreed to sign.
(Rich Pedroncelli/AP Photo)

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed the most overdue state budget in California history Tuesday, skipping the usual fanfare because he said the Legislature's efforts on the $144.5 billion spending plan were nothing to celebrate.

Nearly a quarter of the way through its fiscal year, the state finally has freed up billions of dollars to pay medical clinics, nursing homes, daycare centers and contract vendors. The 85-day impasse stemmed from a partisan legislative standoff over how to close California's $15.2 billion deficit.

The governor signed the budget bills in his office, rather than the Capitol rotunda where budgets are usually signed.

"Why I didn't feel like celebrating in the rotunda is that it is inexcusable to have a budget that's three months late," Schwarzenegger said after signing the budget before a small gathering of local officials. "It's three months late because both of the parties stayed in their ideological corners and refused to come out."