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Monday, March 3, 2014

ANY AMERICAN STILL GIVING TO THE RNC AFTER THIS DOESN'T LIKE ANYONE OUTSIDE THE COUNTRY CLUB..

ANY AMERICAN STILL GIVING TO THE RNC AFTER THIS DOESN'T LIKE ANYONE OUTSIDE THE COUNTRY CLUB..

RNC OMITS SARAH PALIN FROM WOMEN'S HISTORY MONTH TRIBUTE

Saturday, the Republican National Committee (RNC) released astatement in honor of Women’s History Month in which they highlighted women trailblazers, mentioning some prominent women in the Republican Party. Conspicuously absent, however, was former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin.

Republicans “played a leading role in securing women’s right to vote,” Chairman Reince Priebus and Co-Chairman Sharon Day wrote, adding that Susan B. Anthony joined with other suffragists to pass the 19th Amendment, which was finally accomplished in 1919.
Boasting a unique role Republican women have played, they stated:
Republican women have a history of being trailblazers, breaking ground and glass ceilings--from Margaret Chase Smith, the first woman to be elected to both the House and the Senate, to the nation’s first Latina governor, Susana Martinez of New Mexico and the country’s youngest sitting governor, Nikki Haley of South Carolina.
Palin was the first woman ever selected to run on a GOP presidential ticket, as well as the first female governor of Alaska and youngest governor--male or female--of Alaska. 
Since her spot on the 2008 ticket, Palin has helped get Republican women elected by making key endorsements that brought both support and finances--women such as Susana Martinez and Nikki Haley, two women the RNC praised in their statement.
It is most commendable for the RNC, often accused of waging a “war on women,” to pay tribute to Women’s History Month, just as they recognized Black History Month in February. But Palin's omission from the tribute is surprising.

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