McCain picks Alaska Gov. for VP

ByABC News
August 29, 2008, 5:54 PM

DAYTON, Ohio -- Sen. John McCain stunned the political world Friday by picking Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as his running mate, making her the Republican Party's first female vice presidential candidate in history.

"She's not from these parts and she's not from Washington," McCain told a crowd of some 12,000 Republicans at a basketball arena in Dayton, extolling her work against corruption and special interests in Alaska. "But when you get to know her, you're going to be as impressed as I am."

McCain said, "she's got the grit, integrity, and good sense and fierce devotion to the common good that is exactly what we need in Washington today."

Palin, 44, said she is "honored to be the running mate."

"I know it will demand the best I have to give, and I promise nothing less," Palin said.

She later added that she and her husband Todd are celebrating their 20th anniversary. "I had promised Todd a little surprise for the anniversary present," she joked, "and hopefully he knows that I did deliver."

McCain's pick guarantees an historic election, one that will produce either the first African-American president or the first woman vice president.

Palin said she never planned to get involved in public affairs, describing herself as "your average hockey mom."

She was mayor of Wasilla, Alaska. Palin said she ran for the Wasilla City Council and later the mayor's job in order to "cut wasteful spending and property taxes," a line that drew a roar from the crowd.

She spoke of "the achievements of Geraldine Ferraro in 1984 and of course ... Sen. Hillary Clinton, who showed such determination and grace in her presidential campaign. Hillary left 18 million cracks in the hardest glass ceiling in America. The women of America aren't finished yet and we can shatter that glass ceiling once and for all!"

Barack Obama's campaign spokesman Bill Burton countered that McCain "put the former mayor of a town of 9,000 with zero foreign policy experience a heartbeat away from the presidency." Burton said in a statement that "Gov. Palin shares John McCain's commitment to overturning Roe v. Wade, the agenda of Big Oil and continuing George Bush's failed economic policies that's not the change we need, it's just more of the same."