Among the numerous Sarah Palin mini-scandals that have
trickled into public view in the last few days, one of the more disturbing is
Palin's appearance last January on the Bob and
Mark Show, where she sat back and listened to the DJs describe Republican State
Senate President (and cancer survivor) Lyda Green, whom Palin had bumped heads
with in the legislature, as "a cancer. She is nothing but a very jealous woman.
I'm going to say what I wish you could say: Lyda Green is a bitch, and she
needs to go away, because she is a cancer on the state of Alaska."
But Lyda Green, it turns out, had some interesting observations
about Sarah Palin too when I spoke to her on the phone today. Few in the state
of Alaska
have had a better view of Palin's governing style. Green has known Palin since
1994. Both, in fact, are from Wasilla. "When she was elected governor," Green
told me, "I thought this would be a unique opportunity for the senate president
and governor to be from the same small town in Alaska. I foresaw great things happening.
But it became clear that wouldn't be the case." Immediately upon entering the
governor's mansion, Green says, Palin displayed a disturbing pattern. "The
thing that was most telling about her style was a lack of ability or desire to
present a piece of legislation and then work on amendments," Green says. "It
was basically ‘Here's what I want, and here's how it's going to be.'"
Green traces Palin's meteoric political rise back to her
role as a surrogate for former Governor Frank Murkowski during his 2002
campaign. In return, Palin was appointed Chair of the Alaska Oil and Gas
Conservation Commission. "That commission is generally for geologists and
engineers, not the wife of a BP worker," Green says. "It's a very deep
intellectual exercise, and she was appointed Chair."
Palin made her mark by reporting ethics violations by fellow
commissioner and Republican Party chairman Randy Ruedrich. But her role as a
whistle-blower left her on the outs with the party establishment. Green says
Palin felt betrayed. "She came back to Wasilla and didn't go out much. She
became very pensive," Green says. "Then all of a sudden, she's running for
governor." It was her ability to exploit the corruption issue--her ability to run
as both a Republican and an outsider--that helped her win. "She's a very good
campaigner," Green says. "People look at her and see the person they want her
to be. She's very good at that."
But her sudden appointment as John McCain's VP has left
Green flabbergasted. "She's qualified because she's old enough and a citizen.
Is she prepared and ready? I really think there's a lot of doubt there. There's
a picture I have in mind of someone to be VP, and it's someone with a greater
variety of service--a little better background and experience. I wake up and I
think about this and I think, ‘This can't be.' It's just surreal."
I asked Green about the steady drip of drama that's been
trickling out in recent days. Does she expect any more revelations? "I wouldn't
be surprised," she says somewhat evasively. "I would have thought the campaign
would found out about all of it by now. But in a town this size, there aren't
many secrets."
As for the Bob and Mark interview, Green was "shocked and
surprised that she would not respond to something so harsh, and even be on the show in the first place." Green
says. "It's not a forum for a governor. I think she went to high school with
one of the hosts; and they're very big supporters of the governor. When she
called to apologize, she said ‘I hope you didn't misunderstand the radio show.'
And I said, ‘No, I understood perfectly.'"
--Eric Zimmermann