imageBy Mike Huckabee

You almost have to feel sorry for all the reporters and leftwing bloggers who spent the weekend slogging through 24,000 pages of Sarah Palin’s old emails from her years as Alaska governor. They thought they were going on the ultimate Alaskan safari, hunting for anything remotely scandalous or uninformed or even ungrammatical that they could attack Gov. Palin with. But to their shock and grief, their partisan animosity backfiired. So far, aside from some justifiable anger about unfair attacks on her family, they’ve found nothing but thousands and thousands of dry government emails, to and from a perfectly-competent chief executive. You know, I used to be a governor. I know how deadly dull those emails must be to anyone who wasn’t involved in the business they concerned. That’s why I almost feel sorry for the people who volunteered to read them. Or I would, if it didn’t serve ’em right for trying so hard to play “gotcha.”

Oh, they did discover some emails that were ridiculous, loopy and downright insane. Problem is, those came from their own side. Some people were actually so discombobulated by Gov. Palin’s nomination as Vice President, they emailed her rants that included death threats. I hope those were investigated with even half the fervor that was put into examining Sarah Palin’s spelling.

From The Huckabee Report

You May Also Like

Human Events Doing a Little Jam Polling for Rick Perry

Governor Rick Perry of Texas just got a gift horse. Push polling…

Tony Perkins Endorses Ted Cruz for President

Ted Cruz for President campaign announced the endorsement of Tony Perkins. Perkins is the Family Research Council’s (FRC) longest serving president.

Reince Priebus Wonders If DNC Delegates Can Vote Their Conscience

RNC Chair Reince Priebus on CNN wondered if Democratic National Convention delegates could vote their conscience to rectify Hillary Clinton’s nomination.

Why Justin Amash Shouldn’t Seek the Libertarian Party Nomination

Adam Graham: Justin Amash would provide Americans a greater service by starting a new political party that can appeal to a broad-based coalition.