Palin repeats 'no thanks' bridge account
ALBUQUERQUE, Sept. 7 (UPI) -- Republican vice presidential
nominee Sarah Palin, speaking in Albuquerque Saturday, defended her
record on congressional earmark spending as governor of Alaska.
Palin was responding to comments earlier in the day by
Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama, who told a town hall
meeting in Indiana Palin supported earmarks when she was mayor of
Wasilla, Alaska, before opposing them as governor.
Palin said she was "surprised" Obama raised the subject, ABC
News reported.
"I didn't think he'd want to go there," she said. "Our
opponent has requested nearly $1 billion in earmarks in just three
years. That's about a million dollars, about a million dollars for
every working day."
Palin then repeated a claim she has made often since
Republican nominee John McCain announced her as his running mate --
that she "told the Congress thanks but no thanks on that 'Bridge to
Nowhere.'" Palin did not mention that she supported the bridge
during her campaign for governor, ABC said.
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