Palin Smacks Down NBC's Lauer: GOP Ticket Will Be 'Clobbered' By 'Lamestream Media'
On Tuesday's NBC Today, co-host Matt Lauer pressed Sarah Palin on
whether the Republican nominee should pick a vice presidential running
mate with more experience than she had in 2008. Palin hit back:
"I would say it doesn't matter if that person has national level
experience or not, they're going to get clobbered by the lamestream
media, who does not like the conservative message." [Listen to the audio]
Lauer denigrated Palin's qualifications as he asked: "When you were
plucked from obscurity in 2008 you'd been Alaska's governor about two
years. You didn't have any real experience on the national stage....Do
you think, if Mitt Romney's the nominee, he should choose someone with
more experience on the national battlefield than you had at the time?"
Palin issued a warning to her fellow Republicans:
The GOP ticket, to tell you the truth, Matt, doesn't know what's coming. They don't know what's going to hit them in terms of double standards being applied to them and the positions that they hold, and the records that they are running on, from, you know, personal family issues to anything else. There will be that double standard applied no matter who it is.
Concluding the segment, Lauer took a parting shot as he referenced
Palin's guest hosting the show in the next hour: "And I want to mention
to people, you are going to stick around and join us for our 8:00 hour,
which technically makes you part of the lamestream media for that hour. I
just want you to know."
On Monday, The Media Research Center's Geoff Dickens detailed some of the worst Today show bias against Palin over the years.
Here is a transcript of the April 3 exchange:
7:10AM ET
(...)
LAUER: If Mitt Romney is the nominee, one of the first real major
decisions he'll have to make is on a vice presidential candidate. When
you were plucked from obscurity in 2008 you'd been Alaska's governor
about two years. You didn't have any real experience on the national
stage, and in this era of intense media scrutiny, you took some lumps.
You had mixed results, as we all know. Do you think, if Mitt Romney's
the nominee, he should choose someone with more experience on the
national battlefield than you had at the time?
PALIN: Well, you know, I would put up my record as a CEO of a city, of a
state, as an oil and gas regulator, up against any of the other
potential GOP vice presidential nominees last go-around. So you know,
I'm proud to stand on my record as a private sector, and a public
servant CEO.
LAUER: But if you were advising Mitt Romney, would you say go out and get someone who is battle tested on a national level?
PALIN: I would say it doesn't matter if that person has national level
experience or not, they're going to get clobbered by the lamestream
media, who does not like the conservative message. And it doesn't matter
if that person has been a known commodity to the mainstream, lamestream
media or not.
The GOP ticket, to tell you the truth, Matt, doesn't know what's
coming. They don't know what's going to hit them in terms of double
standards being applied to them and the positions that they hold, and
the records that they are running on, from, you know, personal family
issues to anything else. There will be that double standard applied no
matter who it is.
What I would advise Mitt Romney, or whomever the nominee would be is,
don't necessarily play it safe, and do just what the GOP establishment
expects them to do. And that is, to get somebody kind of just going
along to get along, not willing to go rogue and shake it up and say that
we need relentless, and we need sudden reform of our government to put
it back on the side of the people.
LAUER: Governor Sarah Palin. Governor, thank you very much. I appreciate it.
PALIN: Thank you.
LAUER: And I want to mention to people, you are going to stick around
and join us for our 8:00 hour, which technically makes you part of the
lamestream media for that hour. I just want you to know. Nice to have
you here.
PALIN: Thank you so much.
-- Kyle Drennen is a news analyst at the Media Research Center. Click here to follow Kyle Drennen on Twitter.