ST.
PAUL, Minn.--Sarah Palin is about to become a very busy woman. After
hitting the highest of highs tonight--delivering a vice-presidential
acceptance speech in St. Paul's Xcel Center amid the roar of 18,000
Republican admirers--she'll immediately plummet back to earth. The task
at hand: learning the ins and outs of John McCain's domestic, economic
and national-security policy portfolios at the feet of his top issue
advisers.
According to Douglas Holtz-Eakin, McCain's domestic guru, the laborious
process of tutoring Palin, who has less national experience than
the vast majority of her veep predecessors, will start "tomorrow" in "a
hotel room somewhere in sunny Minneapolis" and continue on the trail
for the next several weeks. "I was thrilled to be back in our beautiful
Crystal City [Va.] headquarters, but that may be over," Holtz-Eakin
told a panel of NEWSWEEK reporters and editors over lunch this
afternoon. "What we have to do is take all our accumulated policy and
John McCain's entire Senate history and get her comfortable with the
campaign"--a process that will involve "telling her about the strong
contrasts we see with the Obama-Biden ticket and how we want to present
our policies most effectively." A squad of former Bushies (Tucker
Eskew, Steve Biegun) and major McCain policy people (Randy Scheunemann,
Joe Donahue, Ed O'Callahan) will also be involved. "That McCain guy is
on his own," Holtz-Eakin joked.
As the first governor in 40 years to run for the vice-presidency--not
to mention someone who had no serious contact with Team McCain until
late this summer--Palin presents her new policy tutors with a unique
challenge: how to familiarize a national and campaign newcomer with 15
to 20 issues in the course of a few brief weeks. Asked how well he
knows McCain's newly-minted running mate, Holtz-Eakin admitted that
he's only spoken to her once, having helped prep her for a surrogate
appearance several months ago. "It was an entirely pleasant brief," he
said. "She asked good questions." At this point, however, he's
reluctant to "characterize her views" beyond the broad strokes already
covered by campaign talking points--energy, reform, balancing the
Alaska budget--and he confessed that "we still don't know everything
she's thought about in terms of policy positions." "l'll have to learn
from [this]," he said. In fact, Holtz-Eakin left open the possibility
that McCain himself might learn a thing or two as well--perhaps even on
drilling in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Reserve, a proposition
Palin supports. "The campaign's position is not drilling in ANWR," he
said. "But for all I know, she may try to move John McCain on this.
She's got her position, they talk and I wish her well."
Overall, Holtz-Eakin is confident than Palin can handle the pressure.
"She's eager to learn the material," he says. "She's a person who's
shown a great capacity to do many things. She's bright and committed to
it." And there is at least one thing he does know about Palin's
policy process: she likes to get her information on "big index cards."
His team is preparing a batch as we speak.
Pressed to say whether Palin will make herself more available to the
media after getting "up to speed"--she's only appeared in public once
since joining Team McCain last Friday and has yet to take incoming fire
from the political press corps--Holtz-Eakin said "there's no reason for
us to have any hesitation about her answering questions that the
American people care about." "You'll get to know her," he promised.