Posted on 02/04/2008 8:20:41 PM PST by JRochelle
Of all the possible Super Tuesday outcomes, one is more certain than any other: Mike Huckabee will not carry the state of Utah.
In large part its because Mitt Romney, a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the man credited with saving the Salt Lake City Olympics, is more popular here than in any other state.
But the other reason is that overwhelmingly Mormon Utah has taken a profound dislike to the Southern Baptist preacher best known for his nice-guy persona.
The wellspring of Huckabee hate is a now-famous Dec. 16 New York Times Magazine interview in which the former Arkansas governor, in an innocent voice, is reported to have asked, Dont Mormons ... believe that Jesus and the devil are brothers?
To Mormons, Huckabees eyebrow-raising question represented not only a gross distortion of their beliefs but also a carefully calculated move by a Christian politician who surely knew better.
Huckabees remark prompted Romney to call the comments just not the American way on NBCs Today show.
Huckabee quickly apologized, saying that Romneys Mormonism had nothing to do with whether he should be president. With that, the candidates and the national media moved on to other topics.
In Utah, however, all was not forgiven.
There is a feeling that Huckabee has exploited a lot of the anti-Mormon sentiment, said LaVarr Webb, a political consultant and publisher in Utah.
The feeling is that he would certainly know the answers to these questions that hes been asking sometimes, said Chuck Gates, assistant managing editor of Utahs Deseret Morning News.
According to Webb and other state political insiders interviewed by Politico, many Mormons maintain that Huckabees apology did not go nearly far enough.
Quin Monson, assistant director of the Center for the Study of Elections and Democracy at Brigham Young University, says many observers believe that evangelicals have rejected Romney, and that Huckabee is aiding and abetting that. ... Hes egging it on.
As it turns out, this isnt the first time that Huckabee has rubbed Utahans the wrong way. In the summer of 1998, then-Arkansas Gov. Huckabee, along with fellow national church leaders, attended the National Southern Baptist Convention in Salt Lake City.
At the time, the decision to hold the event in the shadow of the Mormon Tabernacle was viewed by many Mormons as an insulting stab directed at the very heart of the LDS church.
Worse, according to an account published in the Salt Lake Tribune during the convention, some 2,000 messengers of the Southern Baptist Convention went door to door in Utah and proselytized, armed with questionnaires and their personal belief in Jesus Christ as their savior.
Because of his participation in that convention and because of his theological background, many Utahans believe that Huckabee has been deeply disingenuous throughout the campaign not just in one well-publicized interview in his approach toward the issue of Romneys Mormon faith.
The Huckabee campaign did not respond to e-mail and phone requests for comment.
The Baptists choice of Salt Lake City was a deliberate one, said James Guth, a leading authority on the influence of religion in politics and professor at Furman University.
The Baptists intended to create a new mission field. Mormons and the Southern Baptists, he explained, are members of competing missionary religions.
It used to be that the Mormons were in Utah and Southern Baptists were in the South, Guth said. Now, Mormons are all over the world, and Southern Baptists want to be all over the world.
Aside from the issue of clashing faiths, there is a more practical component to Huckabees unpopularity.
There is a widespread belief, not just in Utah but among many Romney partisans, that Huckabees long-shot and lingering candidacy is serving little purpose other than to siphon votes from Romney, Utahs adopted son, by splitting the conservative vote against John McCain.
Theres just the feeling that if we really wanted to unite behind a conservative candidate, we would unite behind Romney, said Dave Hansen, former campaign manager for Sen. Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah).
You cant force [Huckabee] out, but all things considered, I think there are a lot of conservatives who wish he were not still in the race.
In the unlikely event that Huckabee does capture the Republican nomination, his Utah baggage could come back to haunt him.
In the deeply red state where President Bush still maintains some of his highest approval ratings, a place that has ranked as the most Republican state in the nation in six of the past eight presidential elections, a BYU poll released Monday reveals that Huckabee would pull off the seemingly impossible.
As GOP nominee, he would lose the state of Utah in a hypothetical matchup with Democrat Barack Obama, 58 percent to 42 percent.
Romney, by contrast, would defeat Obama 69 percent to 31 percent. McCain would also win against Obama, though by a more modest 55 percent to 45 percent.
Still, there are limits to how much Utah dislikes Huckabee: In a head-to-head matchup with Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton, Huckabee wins handily, 60 percent to 41 percent.
If we were to take that at face value we'd have to also believe Mormon men have no testicular fortitude, and that's just not been their reputation heretofore.
BTW, The Huck siphons Evangelical votes from McCain.
“Utah’s Mormons loathe Huckabee”
I do not loathe Huckaliar, I just find him unpalatable as a POTUS candidate. I even find him unpalatable as a candidate to be Juan McAmnestys’ VP.
The McCain of 2003 who was for the war.
The McCain of 2004 for the war against how it was run.
The McCain of 2005 for the war but wanted 250,000 more American boots on the ground
The McCain of 2006. Fathers the Baker Commission. Wants to cut a political deal with Iran and Syria so the USA could slink away from Iraq
The McCain of 2007. Presidential Campaign dead in the water. McCain has surrogates fraudulent start claiming HE was the real father of the Surge strategy.
Will the real John McCain please stand up?
Get that man's address.
Count, you are so rare they don’t believe you are real!
LOLOL
“Mormona”
Is that like a Presbyteriana?
Gee, no bias against Mormons in that title. A true Mormon or Jew or Catholic would loathe no person.
The McCain of 2003 who was for the war.
The McCain of 2004 for the war against how it was run.
The McCain of 2005 for the war but wanted 250,000 more American boots on the ground
The McCain of 2006. Fathers the Baker Commission. Wants to cut a political deal with Iran and Syria so the USA could slink away from Iraq
The McCain of 2007. Presidential Campaign dead in the water. McCain has surrogates fraudulent start claiming HE was the real father of the Surge strategy.
Will the real John McCain please stand up?
Not to beat you up: it just makes no sense....as they say doesn’t pass the smell test.
What I don't like most about McCain is that we'll all have to buy brown shirts if we have to go out and support that guy.
Frankly, I prefer the bear chested look, and warmer weather!~
We are talking about someone who wants to command our sons. They better be right in the head. Huckabee is not, or is McCain. Not much of a choice left.
“who is ahead or within a few points of McCain in virtually every poll?”
While I believe the race is fairly close, Romney is certainly not within a few points in “virtually every poll.”
The RCP national average has McCain leading by 18.3%, and that’s an average of 8 polls.
Only idiot liberals like Politico could say this with a straight face.
At the time, the decision to hold the event in the shadow of the Mormon Tabernacle was viewed by many Mormons as an insulting stab directed at the very heart of the LDS church.
If the Methodists or the Greek Orthodox church held their convention next to a Baptist center, would the Baptists see it as "as an insulting stab directed at the very heart of the church"? I don't think so.
What?
BS. I loathe Hillary. And Rudy.
Nothing wrong with loathing.
“A folksy Minister “
That folksy politician won two elections for lieutenant governor and continued to win elections to serve another 10 or 11 years as governor.
The Mormon bishop and priest only served one single term as a governor.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.