Sarah Palin Endorses Jeff Flake In Arizona Senate Race

Palin Throws Support Behind Jeff Flake
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Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin threw her support behind GOP Rep. Jeff Flake, who faces a tough primary against businessman Wil Cardon in the U.S. Senate race.

"The United States Senate needs a leader like Jeff Flake," she said in a statement released by the Flake campaign. "Jeff is a proven conservative crusader, and today I am proud to announce my support for his campaign to become the next U.S. Senator from the great state of Arizona."

"Throughout his tenure in Congress, Jeff has been a consistent leader against the federal government's out of control spending," she continued. "Jeff is known for his media releases titled 'Just How Broke Are We?' where he brings home the reality of what our unimaginable $15 trillion debt really means in everyday terms."

Flake thanked fellow Republican Palin for the endorsement in a press release.

Cardon, a Republican who is self-funding his campaign, has attacked Flake's past support for comprehensive immigration reform as a way to question his conservative credentials. His touting of Palin's endorsement is likely an effort to shore up his reputation.

(Palin hasn't always chosen the insurgent candidate; she recently endorsed Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) who prevailed over a challenge from a Tea Party candidate in a primary race in his reelection bid.)

Following the Aug. 28 primary, the winning Republican candidate in Arizona will face Richard Carmona, who is running unopposed in the Democratic primary for that Senate race.

Carmona's campaign seized on the Palin endorsement. "This endorsement shows Congressman Flake is hitting the panic button in a primary he used to lead by 50 points," said Carmona spokesman Andy Barr in in an email. "Sarah Palin once railed against the good old boy network in Washington -- and yet she just endorsed a career politician and lobbyist who 'lied' about his term limits pledge, has used campaign contributions to pay himself $90,000 and was a registered foreign agent for a uranium mine partially owned by Iran."

A representative from Rep. Jeff Flake's office could not be immediately reached for comment.

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Before You Go

Tea Party Statements
'2nd Amendment Remedies'(01 of06)
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During Nevada's 2010 Senate election, an audio clip surfaced of Sharron Angle raising "Second Amendment remedies" as a viable solution to take when "government becomes out of control."The Tea Party-backed hopeful ultimately proved unsuccessful in her campaign to unseat Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. (credit:Getty)
'I Do Not Wear High Heels'(02 of06)
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Ken Buck, a Tea Party-backed contender who ultimately fell short in his bid to unseat Democratic Sen. Michael Bennet in Colorado, made headlines in 2010 when he quipped that people should vote for him "because I do not wear high heels."
'I Am Not A Witch'(03 of06)
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Christine O'Donnell captured headlines in 2010 with a now-infamous campaign ad in which she tells voters, "I'm not a witch." She says, "I'm nothing you've heard. I'm you."O'Donnell was defeated in her campaign for Senate in Delaware by Democratic Sen. Chris Coons. (credit:Getty)
Scientists For Creationism?(04 of06)
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Rep. Michele Bachmann said in October of 2006, "There are hundreds and hundreds of scientists, many of them holding Nobel Prizes, who believe in intelligent design." (credit:AP)
Democrats = Communists?(05 of06)
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HuffPost's Jen Bendery reported in April of this year:
As many as 80 House Democrats are communists, according to Rep. Allen West (R-Fla.).West warned constituents at a Tuesday town hall event that he's "heard" that dozens of his Democratic colleagues in the House are members of the Communist Party, the Palm Beach Post reported. There are currently 190 House Democrats.West spokeswoman Angela Melvin later defended West's comments -- and clarified to whom West was referring."The Congressman was referring to the 76 members of the Congressional Progressive Caucus. The Communist Party has publicly referred to the Progressive Caucus as its allies. The Progressive Caucus speaks for itself. These individuals certainly aren't proponents of free markets or individual economic freedom," Melvin said in a statement to The Huffington Post.
(credit:AP)
Welfare Prison Dorms?(06 of06)
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The AP reported in August of 2010 on then-New York gubernatorial candidate Carl Paladino:
Throughout his campaign, Paladino has criticized New York's rich menu of social service benefits, which he says encourages [undocumented] immigrants and needy people to live in the state. He has promised a 20 percent reduction in the state budget and a 10 percent income tax cut if elected.Asked at the meeting how he would achieve those savings, Paladino laid out several plans that included converting underused state prisons into centers that would house welfare recipients. There, they would do work for the state - "military service, in some cases park service, in other cases public works service," he said - while prison guards would be retrained to work as counselors."Instead of handing out the welfare checks, we'll teach people how to earn their check. We'll teach them personal hygiene ... the personal things they don't get when they come from dysfunctional homes," Paladino said....Paladino told The Associated Press the dormitory living would be voluntary, not mandatory, and would give welfare recipients an opportunity to take public, state-sponsored jobs far from home."These are beautiful properties with basketball courts, bathroom facilities, toilet facilities. Many young people would love to get the hell out of cities," Paladino he said.He also defended his hygiene remarks, saying he had trained inner-city troops in the Army and knows their needs."You have to teach them basic things - taking care of themselves, physical fitness. In their dysfunctional environment, they never learned these things," he said.