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No matter, Republican strategists said. Yes, it's an embarrassment. No, it is not a roadblock. "It's such a parochial situation," said Michael Baselice, a pollster for Republican Gov. Rick Perry of Texas, whom Palin endorsed in the March primary. "There's a lot of good talk and fodder about endorsements; ultimately, it comes down to candidates with a message." And voters in the states that hold early caucuses and primaries will have long forgotten the Alaska results. "It really doesn't mean anything up here," said Rich Killion, a Republican pollster who is not working for a 2012 candidate. "New Hampshire voters aren't going to pay attention to intramural or interfamily affairs in someone else's backyard." But don't expect Palin and Murkowski to forget their sparring. Palin repeatedly used her online accounts to tweak Murkowski during the campaign but had no immediate reaction Wednesday.
"Though Joe decisively defeated the incumbent senator in the primary, and though she conceded the race to him, she reneged on her primary vow to not contest the will of the people," Palin wrote in an earlier post. "She is now running a write-in campaign bankrolled by Beltway special interests." In another, she asked if Murkowski would try to shut down her Facebook page by going to court, something Murkowski never considered. But the statement allowed Palin to cast herself
-- and Miller -- as victims. "Lisa, you can sue me if you want (you won't be the first). But I will not be intimidated from speaking my mind. Your intimidation just empowered us liberty-loving Alaskans," Palin wrote. "Are you really that out of touch?"
[Associated
Press;
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