Alaska Senator Ted Stevens, currently on trial for corruption also has a favorable rating in my state of Alaska and is winning in the polls for re-election. I am inclined to think my state of Alaska is a wee bit different from most states. I am betting that in most states, the indicted Senator would have more of an uphill battle to have a favorable rating. Same with Sarah Palin.
Politics here are different than anything else in this country. In my short 13 years here, we've had a (Republican) candidate (he won the primary) for Governor with proven ties to the Chicago mafia who was paying for his candidacy, a legislator (and friend of Palin for 30 years) who moved to Oregon and continued representing his district for two terms, a candidate for State Senate who convinced many Alaskans the state had sold part of itself to Russia and a Governor (the man Sarah Palin defeated) whose chief of staff is now a convicted felon and whose court of supporters (four Republican legislators so far) are in prison for selling their votes to the oil industry.
I don't think you want to use this state as the benchmark for what the average American would support--including Governor Palin. She has a high favorable rating partly because politics here are so surreal. As the saying goes, "the odds are good, but the goods are odd..."
Alaska is not totally alone....
Federal indictments are not enough to keep one Louisiana politician from seeking re-election.
U.S. Rep William Jefferson garnered enough votes Saturday in his New Orleans based Congressional District to secure a spot in a November fourth runoff.
The 66 year old Congressman faces a December trial on charges that he took bribes, laundered money and misused his congressional office.
Jefferson made national news in 2006 when Federal investigators found $90,000 hidden in his freezer. But when people went to the polls they seemed to look beyond the charges.
A run-off election win would pit Jefferson against a little known Republican in a general election December 6.
Okay...many.


