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Gov. Sarah Palin resigns


Last Update: 7/03 7:11 pm
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Republican vice presidential nominee, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, speaks at a campaign stop at the Bangor Airport, Thursday, Oct. 16, 2008, in Bangor, Maine. (AP)
Republican vice presidential nominee, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, speaks at a campaign stop at the Bangor Airport, Thursday, Oct. 16, 2008, in Bangor, Maine. (AP)

WASILLA, Alaska (AP) -- Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin made a surprise

announcement Friday that she is resigning from office at the end of

the month without explaining why she plans to step down, raising

speculation that she would focus on a run for the White House in

the 2012 race.

The former Republican vice presidential candidate hastily called

a news conference Friday morning at her home in suburban Wasilla,

giving such short notice that only a few reporters actually made it

to the announcement. State troopers blocked late-arriving media

outside her home, and her spokesman, Dave Murrow, finally emerged

to confirm that Palin will step down July 26. He refused to give

details about the governor's future plans.

"Once I decided not to run for re-election, I also felt that to

embrace the conventional Lame Duck status in this particular

climate would just be another dose of politics as usual, something

I campaigned against and will always oppose," Palin said in a

statement released by her office.

Lt. Gov. Sean Parnell will be inaugurated at the governor's

picnic in Fairbanks at the end of the month, Murrow said.

Palin was first elected in 2006 on a populist platform. But her

popularity has waned as she waged in partisan politics following

her return from the presidential campaign. Her term would have

ended in 2010.

Palin said she planned to make a "positive change outside

government," without elaborating. She also expressed frustration

with her current role as governor.

"I cannot stand here as your governor and allow the millions of

dollars and all that time go to waste just so I can hold the title

of governor," Palin said.

Later, on Twitter, she promised supporters more details: "We'll

soon attach info on decision to not seek re-election ... this is in

Alaska's best interest, my family's happy ... it is good. Stay

tuned"

Palin's decision even took Parnell by surprise. He said he was

told on Wednesday evening, and was not aware that any presidential

ambitions were behind the move.

Palin emerged from relative obscurity nearly a year ago when she

was tapped as then Republican presidential candidate John McCain's

running mate.

She was a controversial figure from the start, with comedian

Tina Fey famously imitating her elaborate hairstyle and folksy

"You betcha!" on "Saturday Night Live."

Most recently, she led a public spat with "Late Show" host

David Letterman over a joke he made about one of her daughters

being "knocked up" by New York Yankees baseball player Alex

Rodriguez during the governor's recent visit to New York. Palin's

18-year-old daughter, Bristol, is an unwed, teenage mother.

Letterman later apologized for the joke.

Palin's family and the ridicule they endure being in the public

eye was part of her decision. She complained that her 14-month-old

son, Trig, who was diagnosed with Down's syndrome, had been

"mocked and ridiculed by some mean-spirited adults recently." She

didn't elaborate.

Palin campaigned on ethics reform in the 2006 election,

defeating incumbent Gov. Frank Murkowski in the Republican primary

and a former two-term Democratic governor, Tony Knowles, in the

general election.

She enjoyed an extended honeymoon with lawmakers and voters

alike. Her popularity was in the 80 percentile range, even though

that fell after the bruising, partisan presidential campaign.

Palin's delivery of two weeks' notice rattles a Republican Party

plagued with setbacks in recent weeks, including extramarital

affairs disclosed by two other 2012 presidential prospects, Nevada

Sen. John Ensign and South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford.

Ensign, a member of the Christian ministry Promise Keepers,

stepped down from the Senate Republican leadership last month after

admitting he had an affair for much of last year with a woman on

his campaign staff who was married to one of his Senate aides.

Ensign later disclosed he had helped the woman's husband get two

jobs during the affair.

A government watchdog group, Citizens for Responsibility and

Ethics in Washington, wants the Senate ethics committee and the

Federal Election Commission to investigate.

Just days after news of Ensign's affair broke, Sanford admitted

an affair with a woman in Argentina. Some lawmakers are now calling

for his resignation. Before the admission, Sanford had been missing

from the state for five days visiting his lover. He had slipped his

security detail, lied to his staff about where he was and failed to

transfer power to the lieutenant governor in case of a state

emergency.

Sanford admitted he also saw the mistress during a state-funded

trip to Argentina last year. He promised to reimburse the state for

part of the trip's costs. The state Commerce Department said the

trip itinerary originally included only Brazil, but the governor

requested economic development meetings in Argentina.

The GOP troubles seem to have left two prominent 2012 prospects,

former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and 2008 presidential hopeful

Mitt Romney, unscathed, however.

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