SOLO: "We're going to shake things up," she tells the crowd.
CARSON CITY, Nev. -- Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin made her first solo campaign appearance outside her home state Saturday, sticking largely to a speech that has boosted her popularity among Republican faithful but drawn criticism for containing misstatements.
The Alaska governor repeated her claim to have killed the now-famous "Bridge to Nowhere," which her running mate, Arizona Sen. John McCain, has derided as wasteful pork. Palin first approved of the project. She turned against it only after it proved to be a political embarrassment.
"We're going to take our case for reform, that needed reform in D.C., to voters of every background, every party, no party," she said. "We're going to shake things up."
Palin spoke less than 20 minutes at the late Saturday event in a roller hockey rink. She drew a loud and boisterous crowd eager to get their first look at the previously unknown candidate who's brought a fresh energy to the McCain bid.
A group of roughly 5,000 broke into chants of "Drill, baby, drill!" and "Sarah! Sarah!"
"We are going to drill now to make this nation energy efficient," she said. "You're right; drill, baby, drill!"
Palin's first steps alone on the trail without McCain have been cautious. After a morning rally in Anchorage, she flew to Reno, Nev., and drove 30 miles to the sleepy state capital, the sort of small community she is expected to win over.
The rally was the only public event planned in Nevada before Palin headed to Denver. She had no events scheduled today and is expected to rejoin McCain on the campaign trail this week.
Palin's bid to become the first female vice president and her appeal as America's latest "everywoman" have remained key elements of her stump speech. She repeated her hopes "to break a glass ceiling once and for all" and was introduced by Nevada Lt. Gov. Brian Krolicki as a "hockey mom with attitude."
In the cavernous outdoor rink, where women appeared to outnumber men, Palin claimed to see her counterparts.
"I think I'm looking at a whole lot of other hockey moms for McCain out here!" she said before introducing "Alaska's first dude," her husband, Todd.
The governor has limited her public appearances and chances to mingle with voters or reporters since leaving McCain's side earlier in the week. She returned to Alaska to say goodbye to her son, Track, whose U.S. Army unit is deploying to Iraq.