New York Daily News

JUST A HUMBLE SINGLE MOM

Palin tells libel jury of her quiet life in rural Alaska

- BY MOLLY CRANE-NEWMAN

GOP firebrand and ex-Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin described herself to a Manhattan jury on Wednesday as a single mom leading a quiet life far from the national stage in a snowy mountain town in the Last Frontier.

“Holding down the fort in Wasilla, in Alaska — it’s not supereasy conditions living up there, but I’m used to it, and I don’t complain about it,” Palin testified at her civil defamation trial against The New York Times.

“Single mom now, and my youngest child, he has special needs, so my life revolves around him — his name is Trig — and his schooling and his therapies,” she said.

“And my dad is there. I help take care of my dad. He’s elderly.”

Palin, 57, is suing the Times over an editorial she says libeled her by linking an incendiary graphic distribute­d by her political action committee to the murderous actions of a mass shooter.

Testifying for less than 15 minutes on the trial’s fifth day, the 2008 Republican vice presidenti­al candidate, Alaska’s first female governor and its youngest, ran jurors through her infamous political résumé. Palin is expected to continue testifying on Thursday.

After a stint on the Wasilla

City Council and two terms as mayor, Palin said she ran for governor of Alaska to tackle “crony capitalism” and corruption in the oil industry.

Palin was asked by her lawyer Ken Turkel: “Did your life change when you became a candidate for the vice presidency?”

“I don’t think they were prepared for me, necessaril­y, because I was new to the national stage,”

Palin said. “But, it was an amazing experience to get to travel around the country and meet so many amazing people and just see the beauty of America and offer myself up in the name of public service at that level.”

The trial adjourned for the day soon after Palin began her testimony.

Palin must prove that the Times and its former opinion editor James Bennet acted with “actual malice” to win the case that First Amendment experts worry could upend decades of legal precedent and press freedoms.

Published in the aftermath of a mass shooting at a congressio­nal baseball practice in Alexandria, Va., the editorial ran in the Times’ print edition under the headline “America’s Lethal Politics” on June 14, 2017.

The editorial noted that the baseball field shooter, James Hodgkinson, was a Bernie Sanders supporter who bitterly opposed President Donald Trump, and argued that heated political rhetoric led to real-world bloodshed.

It also said Palin’s PAC contribute­d to an atmosphere of heated political rhetoric that led to a 2011 shooting in Arizona in which Jared Lee Loughner killed six people and grievously wounded former Rep. Gabby Giffords (D-Ariz.).

Palin’s SarahPAC did so, the editorial suggested, via a graphic which the editorial wrongly said put crosshairs over depictions of several Democratic members of Congress.

But in reality, the graphic issued by SarahPAC put the targets over congressio­nal districts on a U.S. map. And there was never evidence that Loughner, who was profoundly mentally ill, had ever seen the graphic.

The Times contends the mistake was honest and corrected without delay. Bennet, who no longer works for the paper, testified to inputting the inaccuraci­es during a heavy-handed edit.

“This is my fault,” he said.

 ?? ?? Former vice presidenti­al hopeful Sarah Palin said Wednesday she’s focused on her special-needs son and her elderly dad.
Former vice presidenti­al hopeful Sarah Palin said Wednesday she’s focused on her special-needs son and her elderly dad.

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