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E-mails illustrate Huckabee strategy (on Smoker Ban)
Arkansas Democrat Gazette ^ | May 7, 2006 | SETH BLOMELEY

Posted on 10/29/2007 4:11:12 PM PDT by Eric Blair 2084

In the days leading up to last month’s special legislative session, Gov. Mike Huckabee’s office pushed to restrict public comment on his smoking ban bill, and the governor prepared to publicly shame legislators who opposed it.

“An ad doesn’t help unless it’s personal,” Huckabee wrote in a March 31 e-mail.

There were no public hearings on the bill prior to the special session, but politics swirled behind-the-scenes for two weeks in late March as Huckabee sought to rein in legislators to his point of view, according to documents obtained in a Freedom of Information Act request by the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

More than 1, 200 pages of e-mails supplied by the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences and the state Department of Health and Human Services show that, despite the wide margins of passage for the bill, gathering support for it wasn’t an easy task.

The e-mails, many labeled as being from the governor and those who answer to him, also illustrate how involved Huckabee can be in legislation he wants passed, despite his being criticized by some at the Capitol for too often being detached from policy debates.

A few days before the session, Huckabee officials believed they were short of supporting votes in the House, and his deputy chief of staff, Kelly Boyd, urged Huckabee to organize rallies to embarrass legislators opposing the bill.

“TEFRA their asses,” Boyd wrote March 31.

Boyd was referring to the public scathing Huckabee received in 2002 over the administration’s plan to eliminate a Medicaid program, called TEFRA, for developmentally disabled children when state spending had to be cut because of a slump in revenue growth. Boyd said anti-smoking supporters could learn from the tactics employed by Medicaid advocates four years ago.

Huckabee replied to Boyd: “Good ideas.”

Boyd also opposed giving the proposal a public airing in a committee meeting before the special session.

“You only want legislators hearing your side of the story,” Boyd wrote Health and Human Services Director John Selig on March 23.

Act 8 of 2006 bans smoking in most workplaces throughout Arkansas. Exceptions include nursing homes and restaurants and bars that serve and employ only people 21 and older. It goes into effect July 21.

Two hours after Huckabee signed the bill April 7, Selig sent an e-mail congratulating his staff for their work. He told them the governor gave them the “formidable challenge” of gathering enough support in less than two weeks. The desire to have a “profound health impact” on Arkansas drove his staff, he wrote.

“It made for some long days and some frazzled nerves, and until today, we didn’t know if victory would be ours,” Selig wrote.

Huckabee, a Republican, is exploring a possible 2008 run for president based largely on his health advocacy.

He took a role in managing public relations strategy for the proposal.

In a March 21 e-mail, the governor said he didn’t want promotional “talking points” that said the proposal would “ban smoking.” Instead, he directed they “say it will provide a safe and clean breathing environment.”

The same day, Joe Quinn, Huckabee’s policy director, wrote the governor about the American Cancer Society’s strategy for passing the bill. The “first phase” involved an “under the radar” lobbying effort of legislators serving on the committees that would consider the bill. A broader public relations campaign would come after that.

The following day, Boyd complained to Quinn about Quinn’s use of the phrase “anti smoking” in a previous e-mail to the governor.

“I think you should feel honored to the be the first person to place a dollar in the ‘smoking’ kitty since you failed to heed my earlier warning about the requirement to use ‘clean air’ instead of ‘& %$ * $ & %’ when referring to this issue,” Boyd wrote.

Quinn responded, “Put a jar on your desk. I will bring you a dollar.”

Later that day, Huckabee Chief of Staff Brenda Turner admonished Quinn for spending too much time on the issue, especially since she wanted governor’s staff to focus on the education bills. The primary issue for debate during the special session was to respond to the state Supreme Court on public school funding.

“Joe, this feels like this is being coordinated from our office when I actually prefer that the lead be taken by [state health officer ] Joe Thompson and the DHHS folks,” Turner wrote.

On March 23, Boyd wrote Selig that he opposed placing the smoking ban on the agenda for a meeting March 27 of the House and Senate Public Health, Welfare and Labor Committees.

“Why give the bill more shots and more public airing ?” Boyd said. “All you are going to get is folks who oppose the bill coming in and giving legislators something to think about. You have enough resources at your disposal to visit with each individual legislator numerous times during the next week. You only want legislators hearing your side of the story and going to committee is about as opposite a way to do that as I can think of.”

Huckabee, through a spokesman, said Friday, “There was no attempt that I’m aware of to limit discussion” on the bill. He said there was “every attempt” made to “fully discuss the issue.”

Boyd on March 24 told Selig it wasn’t good enough to get commitments to vote for the bill; they had to extract promises not to amend it.

“I hear a rumor that a run will be made to amend it to ban all smoking in Arkansas,” Boyd wrote. “Likely [or ] not, those folks at Cancer and some of the [health division ] folks will think this is the best idea since sliced bread. All they will be doing is killing the bill.”

Three days later, Rep. David Johnson, D-Little Rock, wrote Thompson that the key to the bill passing would be the change of heart by Republican legislators who voted against a smoking ban bill in 2005. The bill was tailored to restaurants, not workplaces in general, and Huckabee didn’t actively support it. That bill failed.

“Without Huckabee’s lobbying,” Johnson wrote. “I wouldn’t be surprised to see a similar fate for this bill.”

On March 29, Thompson sounded uncertain of success in an e-mail to Turner.

“Tide is turning but may not have time to solidify support,” he wrote.

Thompson counted 25 yes votes in the House, 26 short of passage.

But the next day Thompson wrote Huckabee that he had had a “good day” and had gained nine more commitments in the House, particularly from the House speaker-designate, Rep. Benny Petrus, D-Stuttgart. Thompson told the governor that Southland Greyhound Park in West Memphis “desperately wants an exemption.” He said he told the track’s lobbyist that could be arranged if the lobbyist was able to persuade more House Rules Committee members to vote for the bill.

Huckabee replied that “we’re gaining steam” but demanded staff get “firm commitments” from legislators, especially Rep. Denny Sumpter, D-West Memphis. Three years ago, Huckabee alleged Sumpter broke a pledge to support a sweeping reorganization of state government, something Sumpter has denied.

“Get Sumpter’s in blood,” Huckabee wrote Thompson. “He can’t be trusted.”

The same day Huckabee thanked Rep. Steve Harrelson, D-Texarkana, who has recently been chosen as Democratic leader for 2007, for supporting the bill.

“I’m so very proud of you !” Huckabee wrote. “I am indebted to you and hope to find ways to show it. With 99 more like you, we’d take Arkansas to the top !”

The morning of March 31 brought a flurry of e-mail hours before Huckabee issued the proclamation for the special session to start three days later.

At 6: 34 a. m., Selig e-mailed Huckabee saying that Petrus “may need some massaging by you.”

Two minutes later, Huckabee responded that local health officials needed to be more involved.

“The more docs and health care pros that do this from back home, the better,” he wrote.

At 6: 57 a. m., Boyd chimed in: “Bus in folks by hundreds.”

Boyd called for daily news conferences on the Capitol steps, during which legislators’ names would be announced as supporting or opposing the bill.

“Imagine Benny Petrus’ angst if two or three of his constituents stand up there in front of the cameras and call him out on this,” Boyd added. “There are five good days to do this... calling these guys out individually will scare them to death... watch them sweat... wear their butts out publicly. My recommendation ? TEFRA their asses. HARD. If we don’t embarrass and separate them, we won’t win. Go for the jugular and make them bleed where it hurts worst, in their home districts with their own constituents.”

Huckabee, using his alternate e-mail account (jetsdad@arkansas. gov, a reference to his dog, Jet ), replied, “Good ideas. I agree that an ad doesn’t help unless it’s personal. A better approach is a large ad or poster with a list of those who support, those who don’t and the undecided. With a question that says ‘ Will you vote for your health or the tobacco lobbyists. ’”

Boyd responded to Huckabee, “We need to constantly think TEFRA. You were on the receiving end and we all clearly remember how un-fun that was. It is time to use what we learned.”

Those kinds of events didn’t happen. There was a news conference the week before the session and a rally on the first day of the session, but they didn’t try to shame any individual legislators.

Petrus said last week he wasn’t aware of Huckabee and Boyd talking about or implementing any such tactics. He said the e-mails didn’t bother him.

“They went all out, didn’t they ?” Petrus said after being shown the e-mails by the Democrat-Gazette. “Full-court press. They ain’t bashful about what they put in [e-mails ] are they ? I’ll just say it’s humorous. [Huckabee ] worked the hell out of [the smoking bill ].”

He said the only problem he had with the way the administration was pushing the smoking ban was that a lot of local state health officials were lobbying their legislators. He questioned whether that was proper.

Huckabee said Friday through a spokesman that the strategies described by Boyd weren’t “appropriate or necessary.

“ There were many discussions with numerous organizations, advocates and legislators, as to the importance of passing the bill, but support for the bill grew on its merits and by the time of the session there was a comfortable margin of votes for passage in both houses,” Huckabee said.

On April 2, a Sunday and the day before the session started, Kevin Dedner, the Arkansas lobbyist for the American Cancer Society, wrote Thompson with several concerns about the wording of the bill.

Thompson wrote back that he’d deal with it in the morning.

“Cancer is a key partner,” Thompson told Dedner. “I need to ask, however, that your national folks extract themselves from trying to micromanage — we are now in a political fight. Is national cancer on board with this bill and the political process we are going to undertake or not ?”

The following morning, Dedner replied that the suggested changes, while minor, had potentially far-reaching consequences if not made.

“No other organization has invested the type of resources we have into this effort and it seems borderline insulting for our recommendations to be discounted,” Dedner wrote. “I have worked like crazy to hold the national tobacco [control ] community together... to keep them from fighting this bill. You owe us this.”

Thompson replied that most of the suggested changes were minor and would be made.

“We are cool,” Dedner replied.

Also that Sunday, Boyd emailed Huckabee saying he believed the bill was eight to 10 votes short in the House and was even short in the Rules Committee. Huckabee said he was confident enough votes would be there. “I really feel we’ll get them,” the governor replied.

It passed the Senate, 30-4 on April 4 and the House, 63-32 on April 6.

At 7: 40 a. m. April 8, the day after he signed the bill, Huckabee wrote Selig and Thompson that he was considering staging an “Eat and Breathe Easy Day” when the law takes effect. On that day, he would encourage people to eat out and “choose healthy items from the menu.”

Huckabee wrote that he hoped a “record revenue day for restaurants” would result because he wanted to “build some bridges” with restaurant owners and their lobbyists, “at least the reasonable ones,” who had opposed the bill.

He then listed several promotional ideas, including “discard the ashtray photo ops” at various businesses.

“The air already smells better on this beautiful Saturday !” Huckabee said.


TOPICS: Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: fascism; huckabee; nannystate; nazi; pufflist
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To: Eric Blair 2084

The Libertarian Party looks better and better.


61 posted on 10/30/2007 8:15:58 AM PDT by NaughtiusMaximus ("The stool pigeon is the coming race." - Jack Black, <i>You Can't Win</i>)
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To: The Ghost of Rudy McRomney
He’s a republican version of Clinton, IMO.

And IMO opinion as a life long Arkansan, you are correct. Or as another FReeper stated, "He's just another Slick Willie with a theology degree."

62 posted on 10/30/2007 8:23:26 AM PDT by OB1kNOb (Support Duncan Hunter for the 2008 GOP presidential nominee. He is THE conservative candidate!!)
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To: Eric Blair 2084
Historians have noted that in spite of Hitler's having laid out his entire game plan in Mein Kampf, most of the world chose to turn a blind eye and deaf ear until it was hit upside the head by the inevitable.

Huckabee, a Republican, is exploring a possible 2008 run for president based largely on his health advocacy.

Here we have the messianic Huckabee announcing his preposterous philosophy for a Presidency of the United States, his strategy revealed in this article for all to see.

That this guy would have any supporters at all illustrates how far the infantilization of the country has spread.

63 posted on 10/30/2007 8:45:50 AM PDT by Madame Dufarge
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To: Doe Eyes

“There’s no way to rule innocent men. The only power any government has is the power to crack down on criminals. Well, when there aren’t enough criminals, one makes them. One declares so many things to be a crime that it becomes impossible for men to live without breaking laws. Who wants a nation of law-abiding citizens? What’s there in that for anyone? But just pass the kind of laws that can neither be observed nor enforced nor objectively interpreted and you create a nation of law-breakers.”

Ayn Rand, “Atlas Shrugged”


64 posted on 10/30/2007 8:53:39 AM PDT by CSM ("Dogs and beer. Proof that God loves us.- Al Gator (8/24/2007))
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To: Wheee The People

“snivelin’ is un-manly.”

Ah, but crying to the government for control of another man’s property is OK? Ah, I see......


65 posted on 10/30/2007 8:57:51 AM PDT by CSM ("Dogs and beer. Proof that God loves us.- Al Gator (8/24/2007))
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To: Madame Dufarge; Mears

As Mears said “He doesn’t want smokers, he won’t get them”. Payback is a bitch. Public serpents need to learn that they can’t kick 25% of their voters out into the cold and still win.


66 posted on 10/30/2007 11:19:34 AM PDT by Eric Blair 2084 (Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms shouldn't be a federal agency...it should be a convenience store.)
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To: pissant
But Al Gore says smoking is a cause of Global Warming.

No need to fight a two-front war against freedom when virtually every human activity can be criminalized by the utopians.

Life was so messy when it was in technicolor, I can't wait for the comforting grayness to settle over everything so that I'll never have to make choices again.

I mean, what if I took the wrong fork in the road and didn't live forever?

Mommy, I'm scared.

67 posted on 10/30/2007 11:21:36 AM PDT by Madame Dufarge
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To: ari-freedom
California is not the first state to pass this type of law. Maine banned smoking in prisons in 2000. The result: assaults quadrupled. In addition to Maine, some prisons in California had already banned smoking before the new policy took effect. According to the Los Angeles Times, the ban on tobacco at Folsom State Prison has sent tobacco prices skyrocketing; a tin that went for $11 in May is now worth $200. The same article reports that there is already a network of tobacco brokers, middlemen and enforcers assigned to collect debts from smokers. One prisoner was quoted saying that tobacco was going to cost more than illegal drugs.

Prison smokescreen

68 posted on 10/30/2007 11:50:14 AM PDT by Madame Dufarge
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To: Eric Blair 2084

Huck’s not a conservative despite what some duped Freepers suggest.


69 posted on 10/30/2007 11:51:13 AM PDT by RockinRight (The Council on Illuminated Foreign Masons told me to watch you from my black helicopter.)
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To: Eric Blair 2084

I always find it astonishing that politicians can kick sand in the face of the roughly 40 million smokers in the US.

Can you imagine Huckabee in the same room as Winston Churchill or FDR or Teddy Roosevelt? They would have laughed themselves sick(or tossed him out of the room).

I wouldn’t vote for an Arkansan anyway———I rememember Bill


70 posted on 10/30/2007 1:26:58 PM PDT by Mears
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To: Mears
Can you imagine Huckabee in the same room as Winston Churchill or FDR

No, they both smoked....:-)

71 posted on 10/30/2007 1:35:16 PM PDT by Madame Dufarge
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To: Mears

Can you imagine Huckabee in the same room as Winston Churchill or FDR or Teddy Roosevelt?
-
no, because they are dead.


72 posted on 10/30/2007 1:38:21 PM PDT by ari-freedom (I am for traditional moral values, a strong national defense, and free markets.)
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To: ari-freedom
no, because they are dead.

And both smoked.

Hmmm. Smoking causes death!

73 posted on 10/30/2007 1:44:58 PM PDT by VeniVidiVici (No buy China!!)
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To: ari-freedom
the country pays more for medicaid because of this.

That's what the $250 BILLION Master Settlement Agreement extortion of the tobacco companies was supposed to pay for. Instead, it paid for roads, sewers, rescuing kitties from up in trees...ANYTHING except "Medicaid for the poor smokers." Talk to your local politicians. They're the ones who squandered the money swiped from the smokers.

BTW, there's NO WAY I'd vote for a pro-illegal nannystatist like Huckabee.

Regards,

74 posted on 10/30/2007 1:46:59 PM PDT by VermiciousKnid
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To: VermiciousKnid

that’s what happens when other people are paying for other people


75 posted on 10/30/2007 2:08:32 PM PDT by ari-freedom (I am for traditional moral values, a strong national defense, and free markets.)
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To: Mears

Yep. I never want to see another prez from Arkansas -ever.


76 posted on 10/30/2007 2:09:27 PM PDT by The Ghost of Rudy McRomney ("Vote Hillary - the unanimous choice of vacuous Liberal newsreaders!")
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To: ari-freedom

Oh, I hear that! I’d be happy as a clam if we did away with Medicaid entirely.

Regards,

PS: I suppose there MIGHT be a case made to provide for the TRULY disabled...the mentally retarded, etc. But everyday medical care for regular folks? Socialist nonsense.


77 posted on 10/30/2007 3:58:42 PM PDT by VermiciousKnid
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To: Eric Blair 2084; Gabz
He's a total Food Gnatzie, too. Some Conservative!
78 posted on 10/30/2007 4:29:31 PM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin (Save The Earth. It's The Only Planet With Chocolate.)
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To: Eric Blair 2084
All of the Mormons I know, and I know a lot of them, are ideal citizens.

I took the local Bishop's wife to see my son in a play in Los Angeles last week. It was a Charlie's Angels spoof starring 3 Mexican transvestites as 'Chico's Angels'. A very funny play in the basement of a gay bar.

The Bishop's wife thought the play was funny, although she was a little shook-up by all the attention my son, playing the token straight hottie/ murder suspect, received from the gay guys in the audience. She wondered if it bothered me. It doesn't bother me a bit. Live and let live. I am only bothered by the gays who want to deny me my freedom of speech. I don't care what people do, as long as they don't care what I do.

79 posted on 10/30/2007 5:16:09 PM PDT by Zevonismymuse
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To: Eric Blair 2084

Dunno if its true, but I’ve heard many death row inmates are barred from smoking.


80 posted on 10/31/2007 8:51:00 AM PDT by swarthyguy (USAma FreedomDay - Day 2247. Who loves ya, baby!)
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