Plus lots of "he said, she said"
Tensions between McCain and Palin camps come to light
Al Grillo / Associated Press
Workers
pack up the McCain-Palin campaign headquarters in Anchorage. Aides to
McCain on Wednesday disclosed new details about Palin?s expensive
wardrobe purchases and other conflicts.
McCain aides talk about the Republican vice presidential nominee's wardrobe controversy and other issues.
By Maeve Reston and Seema Mehta
November 6, 2008
Reporting
from Phoenix -- Sarah Palin left the national stage Wednesday, but the
controversy over her role on the ticket flared as aides to John McCain
disclosed new details about her expensive wardrobe purchases and
revealed that a Republican Party lawyer would be dispatched to Alaska
to inventory and retrieve the clothes still in her possession.
Tensions have simmered for much of the last month between aides loyal
to McCain and those loyal to Palin, but they boiled over after the
Republican nominee's defeat, as both sides spoke freely -- though
anonymously -- about the wardrobe controversy and other conflicts.
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Two aides to McCain and two to Palin discussed the tensions but asked
that their names not be revealed, saying they were not comfortable
speaking openly about internal operations.
The miscommunication and quarrels between the two camps lasted into
Tuesday night, said McCain aides familiar with the situation. Palin
arrived at the Arizona Biltmore planning to deliver a speech before
McCain's concession speech, they said, but was told by senior McCain
aides Steve Schmidt and Mark Salter that it would not be appropriate.
Fox News reported Wednesday that Palin's lack of knowledge on some
topics also strained relations. Carl Cameron reported that campaign
sources told him Palin had resisted coaching before her faltering Katie
Couric interviews; did not understand that Africa was a continent
rather than a country; and could not name the three nations that are
part of the North American Free Trade Agreement -- the United States,
Canada and Mexico.
For weeks, the McCain-Palin campaign has dealt with the fallout from
the disclosure that the Republican National Committee was billed for
$150,000 in wardrobe purchases for the Palin family -- a discovery that
was widely ridiculed and undercut Palin's hockey mom appeal.
Several McCain aides said they had recently discovered that Palin's
traveling staff had used personal credit cards to spend as much as
$20,000 to $30,000 on additional wardrobe items for Palin.
Palin and her press aides were traveling back to Alaska on Wednesday
and could not be reached for comment. But one aide earlier told
Newsweek: "Gov. Palin was not directing staffers to put anything on
their personal credit cards, and anything that staffers put on their
credit cards has been reimbursed, like an expense."
The original $150,000 in purchases was revealed in late October after
the release of the September and October Federal Election Commission
filings by the Republican National Committee. Those reports revealed
that more than $75,062.63 was spent at Neiman Marcus, $49,425.74 at
Saks Fifth Avenue and $5,102.71 at Bloomingdale's around the time of
the Republican National Convention in early September.
The campaign has said that many of those clothes were returned.
But McCain aides said Wednesday that spending on Palin's wardrobe
continued well after the convention, with one custom-made outfit
showing up around the time of her "Saturday Night Live" appearance on
Oct. 18.
As first reported by Newsweek on Wednesday, McCain aides said some of
that money was spent on clothing for Palin's children and husband,
Todd, who may have received between $20,000 and $40,000 in wardrobe
purchases. The money also included thousands of dollars in shoes.
Several aides also said the items included jewelry, but a Palin aide
disputed that.
Top McCain aides Schmidt, Rick Davis and Nicolle Wallace were
flabbergasted by the magnitude of the spending as the receipts began
trickling into the Republican National Committee, aides said.
Wallace had arranged for a stylist to shop for Palin before the
convention because the Alaska governor did not have a chance to return
home after she was selected as McCain's running mate.
Aides familiar with the campaign's internal discussions said Wallace
and other top aides authorized the purchase of three outfits for Palin
to wear during convention week and three ensembles for the campaign
trail. But cost was to be kept to no more than $25,000 to $35,000.
When Schmidt learned that Palin's staff was putting clothing purchases
on personal credit cards, aides said he called them to stop it.
Palin aides tell a different story. Several close to the governor said
Wednesday that Palin was outraged by the amount of money being spent on
her clothing and that she was naive about what the clothes cost.
"The very first day of shopping, there was a $14,000 price tag and . .
. she was absolutely shocked," one of the Palin aides said.
Palin was not pleased by what had been selected for her, the aide said,
adding that "a lot of that stuff that was purchased was never worn by
her -- that was by her choice."
When the shopping spree hit the press, she appeared frustrated, telling
audiences that she wears a lot of her own clothing and hadn't asked for
the lavish purchases.
Resentments had started to brew earlier. Palin was not comfortable with
the team of handlers sent by party headquarters to manage her
appearances, and there were frequent conflicts between the staff at
headquarters and her traveling staff. Palin felt constrained by the
fact that she had little decision-making power, and questioned the
directions being given to her by the campaign, an aide said.
In an interview with CNN on Wednesday, Palin denied that there were
tensions with the McCain camp. But that is at odds with accounts from
aides on both sides. The strain worsened, the aides said, after Palin
was recorded talking to a Canadian comedian who pretended to be French
President Nicolas Sarkozy.
Campaign staffers said McCain's top aides were blindsided by the call,
which they said was approved by Palin foreign policy aide Steve Biegun.
McCain aides said the Palin camp did not notify McCain's senior staff
or the State Department about the supposed contact. Outraged, Schmidt
organized a conference call. He demanded to know who had arranged the
call, and questioned why anyone would have agreed to such an unusual
request and then failed to clear it with top staff, McCain aides said.
Biegun immediately took responsibility. In an interview Wednesday, he
said some aides at McCain headquarters were in fact aware of the call,
and that it had been on the schedule for "a couple days."
"I was fooled," he said. "No one's going to beat me up more than I beat myself up for setting up the governor like that."
Reston and Mehta are Times staff writers.
Re: GOP lawyers heading to AK to collect Palin Wardrobe
God, I love wardrobegate. It is just so trashy and extravagant.
I suspect the truth lies somewhere in the middle. Palin did modify state expense reports after toting her children along with her everywhere on state business, so I have no doubt she went overboard on the shopping spree. That said, this is a ton of money and I don't really think any one person (or even one family) could possibly spend that much on clothing all by themselves.
I dunno... let me loose in Nieman Marcus to buy suits and shoes and I think I could come close. Especially if it was for my family (well, DH & me, I guess).
Sorry for wonky text.
I think it's funny that they send lawyers out to get clothes!
I know! The mental picture is quite amusing.
I'm with you! LOL. I could do some SERIOUS damage at a high-end department store if someone else paid the bill. I might even be able to do all that damage in the shoe and handbag department alone.
I'd feel awfully guilty about it. But I could do it
Anyone else really, really curious to see all those clothes??
I admit that she did look really fabulous these last few weeks.
Yes, many of the clothes were indeed fab.
I particularly liked a pair of black boots she was wearing one day. They hit just below the knee and the heel was perfection. I want those damn boots! I wonder if the GOP will "donate" them to me...