Alaska pols try to cope with Palinmania

Palin’s greatest problems in Alaska, as in the rest of the country, seem to be with her fellow Republicans. “What did I say about her during the campaign when somebody asked me if she was qualified?” asked state Rep. John Harris, taking a moment to ponder his own question, smiling. “Oh, I said something like ‘She’s old enough and a registered voter.’ ” Another smile.

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A former speaker of the state House, Harris believes that Palin and her team need to improve relationships with legislators.

“A lot of people around here see it as the Eva Peron syndrome — Sarah being Evita,” said Larry Persily, a top aide to Mike Hawker (R), co-chairman of the state House’s Finance Committee. “She doesn’t care about the political establishment, but the people in the streets love her.”…

Asked how Palin deals with the perception that months of ridicule have irreversibly turned her into what one Alaskan GOP legislator calls “Dan Quayle with a ponytail,” Balash confidently responds that she displays political skills that no other Republican on the national scene has shown an ability to match. “She walks into a room, and things change,” he said. “She just has that ‘it’ — whatever that ‘it’ is.”

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