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Jason Recher, a spokesman for Palin, said Friday that Palin respects the differing opinions but is sticking by her choice. "The governor is never one to go with the flow," Recher said. "She is a very independent person, and she shakes things up in establishments
-- including grassroots establishments -- all the time." Dawn Wildman, whose San Diego-based Southern California Tax Revolt Coalition has about 2,000 members, said she has been fielding calls and emails from tea partiers who feel betrayed by Palin's endorsement. "My first thought when I heard about the endorsement was, wow, I guess she doesn't plan to run in 2012," Wildman said. Wildman said there was consensus among her fellow activists when it came to supporting DeVore. "I think most of us see Palin as a company girl now, meaning the GOP," Wildman said. "For her to endorse Fiorina wasn't terribly shocking. I think what's more interesting is that Palin tries to suggest she aligns herself with the tea party movement but is clearly out of touch with what the tea party movement is saying in California." In Fairbanks, Alaska, tea partier Rita Heidkamp said she has no personal position on the California endorsement. But it's Palin's choice to make, and no one else's, said Heidkamp, whose group
-- the Fairbanks 912 Project -- organized a local tea party tax day rally. "She should endorse whoever she thinks is the best candidate," Heidkamp said. "That's her right and her responsibility."
[Associated
Press;
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