Huckabee Watch


Archive for the ‘Arkansas’


Everything to lose

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Dawning the cover of this week’s Newsweek (as we kind of predicted), Mike Huckabee’s last few days with the press have been tumultuous, and as of noon today, everything seems to indicate this week could be worse than last.

A few noteworthy developments:

First there was the Huffington Post’s piece with Murray Waas unearthing new details in the Wayne Dumond scandal. Then on Saturday, the main Drudge headline ran an AP story of a questionnaire response in 1992. Huckabee implied those afflicted with HIV/AIDS should be quarantined. He also called homosexuality “sinful”. On Sunday he defended himself against both, but didn’t apologize. The Newsweek piece is mostly positive, but it raises some new questions about Huckabee’s past dealings with the tobacco industry. And today, the National Review carries a piece by conservative David Sanders discussing Jackson Stephens’ bankrolling a campaign against Huckabee based on his tax record, along with a diatribe on Huckabee’s foreign policy stances.

Where does all this leave Huckabee?

After reading Drudge’s Saturday headline on how “HUCKABEE WANTED TO QUARANTINE AIDS PATIENTS”, I initially thought, Wow — this is pretty radioactive stuff. Yet now I’m not so sure.

First of all, a 2:1 lead in Iowa against Romney will be hard to dent. Then we have to remember only 100,000 republicans in Iowa will show up to caucus. That number is very low. These 100,000 caucus-goers are hard line republicans. I’m still digging around for data to back this claim, but conservatives’ perceptions on HIV/AIDS and homosexuality aren’t too different than what Huckabee was saying in ‘92 (and stands by today). Huckabee could actually gain support based on his comments.  The Newsweek cover / story is a huge plus for Huckabee; anyone who isn’t taking him seriously now is just stupid.  He’s bruised at best, but still poised to win Iowa.

I’m on the edge of my seat over the latest polls in IA, NH and SC — if he gets a bump after his toughest week of press yet, he will be the nominee.

At this point, he has everything to lose.

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The Perpetually Underestimated Huckabee

Throughout my short adult life, almost every commentary I’ve heard on Huckabee came through the mouthpiece of a democrat in Arkansas. I remember attending my first Democratic Party events in high school and early college, where Huckabee was a common punching bag. Nobody took him seriously. It became my duty as a Democrat, and I learned to embrace the mockery and even began ridiculing Huckabee on my own.

The 2002 election cycle was preceded by speculation (and hope) that then-Attorney General Mike Beebe would run against Governor Huckabee. He would eventually be criticized for not taking him on that year, and instead leaving the job for then-State Treasurer Jimmie Lou Fisher. I, too, was frustrated that Beebe didn’t run, because I’d been indoctrinated to think of Huckabee as a joke. Jimmie Lou gave Huckabee a run for his money, but she ending up losing. This loss was tough, not only because I love Jimmie Lou, but because it challenged my world-view that Huckabee was a joke.

After Huckabee’s reelection in 2002, chatter began to surface that he was considering a run for president. The mere idea of this was viewed as preposterous to democrats in Arkansas — it was used by our party chairman as a joke at the Jefferson-Jackson Day Dinner to get a rise out of the crowd. Once again, I laughed at the Huckabee jokes.

When Huckabee finally announced he was forming an exploratory committee, the national press felt about the same as the folks in Arkansas: they didn’t think much of it. This would continue into the early summer with speculation of Fred Thompson’s entry. By the mid-summer of 2007, when I brought up Huckabee’s candidacy as something to keep an eye on, my out-of-state republican friends would laugh at me. Then, by the end of the summer, things started becoming interesting…

The republican straw poll in Iowa planted the seed for what we see now: an impending Huckabee sweep of the Hawkeye state. Brownback dropped, the “front-runners” didn’t participate, and suddenly the only obstacle in capturing the attention of Iowa conservatives was a well-funded, flip-flopping, Mormon, New Englander whose support was broad but never deep.

Deja vu: our “joke”-of-a-former-governor is about to win Iowa.

Clarence Page cites an astonishing figure in today’s Chicago Tribune:

Of the likely Republican caucusgoers surveyed, Huckabee scored 29 percent, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney scored 24 percent and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani scored 13 percent.

That’s got to be a jolt to Romney. He has been a front-runner for weeks in Iowa, where he has spent more than $7 million. Huckabee has spent only about $300,000. [emphasis added]

23:1 :: Romney:Huckabee.

Twenty three to one.

Huckabee has been underestimated his entire career. He’s a shock to Arkansas Democrats. He’s schooling Romney. If the Iowa media dominoes fall in ‘08 for the GOP like they did in ‘04 for the Democrats (as I think they will), he could easily be  the republican nominee.

When will Huckabee’s opponents learn to stop underestimating him?

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…and then, there was Mike Huckabee.

This project has been a long time coming…

For over a year, I’ve been nonchalantly letting political friends outside of Arkansas know they should “watch out for Huckabee.” Nearly a year later, he is overtaking Mitt Romney in some polls and maintains momentum in New Hampshire.

This blog will examine the rise of former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee, explore his past, and provide analysis of day-to-day news as it relates to his presidential campaign.

While I’m not here to grind an axe, I readily admit I’m a Democrat from Arkansas who has never been on the same team with Huckabee. That said, I can’t deny some guilty pleasure in watching a native Arkansan defy the odds.

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