BY David Saltonstall
DAILY NEWS SENIOR CORRESPONDENT
The pit bull in lipstick has hung up her collar—for now.
Sarah Palin quit her job as governor of Alaska on Sunday, leaving behind a trail of ethics investigations, legal bills and unanswered questions about her future.
She went out swinging against the reporters she thinks undermined her.
"You represent what could and should be a respected and honored profession," Palin said in her farewell speech. "How about, in honor of the American soldier, ya quit making things up?"
As she officially handed over the gubernatorial reins to Lt. Gov. Sean Parnell, Palin said, "I feel it is my duty to avoid the unproductive, typical, politics-as-usual, lame duck session in one's last year in office."
"With this decision, I will be able to fight even harder for you, for what is right and for truth," she said.
Bizarrely, Palin warned Alaskans to beware of "delicate, tiny, very talented celebrity starlets" coming to battle gun rights. "Hollywood needs to know: We eat, therefore we hunt," she declared.
If Palin has a plan, she and her family were keeping mum yesterday. "We'll play it by ear," ex-First Dude Todd Palin told Politico.com. "We'll take a little breather and go from there."
What's known is that the former Republican vice presidential nominee - who remains deeply popular in many conservative circles - is expected to speak at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in California next month.
She has said she plans to write a book, and she has vowed to campaign for political candidates from coast to coast and build a right-of-center coalition to "effect change."
- More coverage from the New York Daily News.




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jERRY of VA 4:34PM August 10, 2009
Seventeen-Year-Old Girl Who Sees the Truth of NJ 6:04PM July 28, 2009
Ann G of IA 5:50PM July 28, 2009