In what could be a preview of the 2012 presidential race, Sarah Palin and Barack Obama will share a stage together this Saturday night in Washington, Politico has learned. The Alaska governor and former GOP vice presidential nominee, making her first trip to the nations capital since the election, will join the president at the Alfalfa Dinner, a venerable gathering of the citys political elite.
The president is scheduled to address the black tie crowd at the Capital Hilton. Palin spokesman Bill McAllister said in an email that Palin would be speaking at the dinner.
An Alfalfa Club member, however, said that no speech by the Alaska governor was planned.
The duo would not, though, be heard by the general public. By tradition, the old world gathering, now in its 96th year, bars reporters. Quotes from the rostrum do, however, tend to find their way out to reporters in the lobby.
Its a light-hearted affair, with political types playfully roasting themselves and one another. The dinner is put on by the Alfalfa Club, an exclusive list of about 200 movers and shakers whose only purpose is to throw the annual dinner on the last Saturday of January. The name is honor of a plant known to do anything for a drink.
Comprised of mostly older white men, the group didnt induct women until 1993. Blacks were only welcomed in the 1970s.
Presidents, though, almost always attend and speak.
And aside from the real thing, club members always nominate a mock candidate for the highest office in the land. The nominee is then required to give an acceptance speech.
Should Palin be this years lucky nominee, shell be in good company: Three honorees have actually gone on to actually become president Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush.