As Sarah Palin relaunches her image for the next stage of her political career, there’s a small set of advisers who are shaping the former governor’s policy positions and public persona.
The group, a brain trust of sorts, includes Randy Scheunemann, the lobbyist who advised McCain on foreign policy and was one of the architects of the Iraq War, and Kim Daniels, a little-known conservative attorney who specializes in “rights of conscience” health care issues.
While Palin is leaving the door open to a 2012 presidential run, even as her poll numbers look grim, it’s not totally clear to what end the brain-trusters — some paid, some not — are working.
For now, they are cementing their positions of influence in Palin’s world as she sells books, gives $100,000 speeches, and hits the campaign trail for Republicans around the country.
No matter what Palin is planning to do next, it’s worth examining who it is that has her ear.
Many of the names we’re going to look at were first reported by the New York Times in a recent Palin profile. Here goes:
Randy Scheunemann
The chief foreign policy adviser to the McCain presidential campaign, Scheunemann was a campaign ‘08 favorite of TPMmuckraker. Classic Scheunemann attack lines from 2008 include this one on Iraq: “Senator Obama seems to think losing a war will help him win an election.”

Known for his early and vocal support for the Iraq War — including as the founder of Committee for the Liberation of Iraq and a longtime ally of Ahmed Chalabi — Scheunemann brought unwanted scrutiny to the McCain campaign on several occasions, including for his work for the government of Georgia.
He runs a Washington lobby shop called Orion Strategies, and his clients have included not only Georgia, but also the government of Taiwan and the National Rifle Association.
Scheunemann is now a paid foreign policy adviser to Palin; he even traveled to Hong Kong with her last September for a foreign policy speech in which she went after President Obama on selective defense program cuts and took a hard line against “a China where the government suppresses the liberties its people hold dear.”
It’s also worth noting he recently hired Michael Goldfarb away from the Weekly Standard, though it’s not clear whether Goldfarb will be working the Palin account.
Kim Daniels
Paid $21,000 by Palin’s PAC in the second half of 2009, Daniels is a Maryland attorney who, according to the Times, prepares a daily briefing for Palin. But she has a markedly private profile compared to someone like Scheunemann.
Daniels has been identified as an attorney with the Thomas More Law Center, a conservative legal group that aims to be “the sword and shield for people of faith.” The firm is “dedicated to the defense and promotion of the religious freedom of Christians, time-honored family values, and the sanctity of human life.”
Politico describes Daniels as an expert in health care “rights of conscience” issues. She has testified around the country opposing efforts to make the morning-after pill available at drug stores and regulate pro-life pregnancy centers.
Daniels is now Palin’s personal domestic policy czar.
Fred Malek

An extremely successful private equity investor who served as an aide to President Nixon (and famously played a central role in the Nixon Jew-counting episode in the early 1970s), Malek describes himself as a friend of Palin. The Times reports that he has been advising Palin on “political matters.” He has appeared in her corner on TV multiple times.
In a post on his personal blog, Malek describes meeting Palin when he was finance chair for the McCain campaign. “I do admire her and feel she is filling a need in this country like few other political leaders,” he writes.





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