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Politics Politics Feature

Frist Seconds Palin on Switching “Maverick” McCain’s Venue

Former U.S. Senator Bill Frist on Thursday put a positive spin on
the non-conformist aspects of “the maverick, the radical John McCain.” Said Frist at the Tennessee delegation’s breakfast meeting: “I had to put up with John McCain every single
day, and it was hard.” But he professed himself to be in agreement with Sarah Palin’s
advocacy in her Wednesday night speech of “tak[ing} the maverick out of the Senate and putting
him in the White House.”

Response to Wednesday night’s speech by GOP
vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin drew unanimous raves from members of the
Tennessee delegation, both on the floor of the arena when the speech was being
given and afterward.

At Wednesday’s morning-after breakfast of the Tennessee
delegation, 7th District congresswoman Marsha Blackburn said Palin’s
address would help to make this “the reddest of red-state years in Tennessee”
and vowed to do what she could to defend Palin against expected attacks from
“the liberal media.”

Tennessee Republican chair Robin Smith saw Palin as “a
Ronald Reagan in heels,” and praised Palin for expressing “our values – he
values of family, God, faith.”

Speakers at the breakfast were also looking forward to
Thursday night’s acceptance-speech finale by John McCain, now the Republican
presidential nominee after Wednesday night’s official roll call.

In his remarks, 3rd District congressman Zach
Wamp focused on the unprecedented journey, “the most dramatic in our history,”
of McCain from his cloistered one-room cell at the “Hanoi Hilton” in Vietnam to
the White House.

And former U.S. Senator Bill Frist put a positive spin on
the non-conformist aspects of “the maverick, the radical John McCain.” Said the
former Senate majority leader: “I had to put up with John McCain every single
day, and it was hard.” But he professed himself to be in agreement with Palin’s
advocacy in her speech of “tak[ing} the maverick out of the Senate and putting
him int he White House.”

Frist also told some extended anecdotes about Democratic
presidential nominee Barack Obama’s tenure in the Senate, which overlapped with
his own. Frist characterized Obama a something of a self-aggrandizer more
interested in logrolling interplay with the media than with policy matters as
such.

As an ironic counterpoint to that, Frist predicted that
this year’s presidential contest between McCain and Democrat Barack Obama will
based more on personality than on issues.

–Jackson Baker