Ms. Palin took the stand on Wednesday, but with late afternoon approaching, Judge Jed S. Rakoff adjourned for the day after her lawyer had questioned her for roughly 15 minutes, touching only on biographical points about her political career and life in Alaska.
Ms. Palin explained that she was now spending most of her time in her hometown, Wasilla, Alaska, where she was “holding down the fort” as a single mother raising a child with special needs. Her lawsuit claims that The Times acted recklessly in writing and publishing the editorial in 2017 that incorrectly linked a mass shooting in Arizona to her political rhetoric. The Times corrected the article the morning after it was published.
The bulk of Wednesday’s proceedings were consumed by the second and final day of testimony from James Bennet, the former editor of the opinion section of The Times, who also is named as a defendant in Ms. Palin’s suit.
Mr. Bennet said under questioning from a lawyer representing The Times that it was never his intention to blame Ms. Palin for the 2011 mass shooting outside Tucson, Ariz., that wounded Gabrielle Giffords, then a Democratic member of Congress, and left six others dead.
Mr. Bennet said his use of the phrase “the link to political incitement was clear” — which he inserted into the editorial as he edited it — was meant as a critique of the overheated political rhetoric of that moment.