Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Mike Huckabee wants some respect
Politico ^ | December 6, 2010 | Jonathan Martin & Ben Smith

Posted on 12/06/2010 7:35:06 AM PST by Hawk720

Dial down the deafening Sarah Palin buzz for just a moment: The most consequential decision in the 2012 Republican presidential sweepstakes could be whether Mike Huckabee decides to run again – and associates say the former Arkansas governor may well take the plunge.

If Huckabee gets in, he will unquestionably be a force to be reckoned with in the fight for the nomination. He’d be the undisputed frontrunner in lead-off Iowa, where he won by nine points in 2008. He’d be the candidate to beat in South Carolina, which he narrowly lost to John McCain two years ago in part because of a divided conservative vote. His weekly Fox show, thrice-daily radio program and Grisham-like ability to crank out a book-per-year has given him a direct media presence akin to Palin’s – but without the sky-high negatives.

And should Huckabee stay out, it would create a vacuum on the right among both religious conservatives and tea party activists that would significantly re-order the race and potentially create a larger opening for Palin. He polls well with self-identified evangelicals, women and low-income voters – all blocs that also favor Palin. And a PPP poll conducted last month found that 34 percent of Huckabee supporters said that Palin is their second choice.

Yet a potential Huckabee candidacy has been little discussed, in part because of his place well outside the Republican establishment, and in part because of a conventional wisdom that he’s enjoying his current career and income too much to risk it on a run.

Huckabee, for one, is tired of being left out of the conversation and sounds increasingly like a candidate.

(Excerpt) Read more at politico.com ...


TOPICS: News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Arkansas
KEYWORDS: arkansas; fairtax; huckananny; iowa; justsayno2huck; mikehuckabee; nannystater; politico; southcarolina
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-8081-99 next last
To: convertedtoreason; ari-freedom
Let’s nominate McCain again or even McConnell.

They have the longest record of continuous service!

Or Rangel.

61 posted on 12/06/2010 8:52:14 AM PST by Eaker (Pablo is very wily)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 18 | View Replies]

To: Responsibility2nd
Joy Behar's Favorite Republican
62 posted on 12/06/2010 8:52:40 AM PST by Servant of the Cross (I'm with Jim DeMint ... on the fringe!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 34 | View Replies]

To: wolfman23601
He is actually a good debater. His performance in the debates is the reason he was in the mix in 2008. He started out as an unknown with less than 1%.

He got his ass handed to him by Alan Dershowitz on his program this weekend. The thing I hate about Huck is if he doesn't know something, he'll resort to personal attacks.

63 posted on 12/06/2010 8:54:04 AM PST by dragonblustar ("... and if you disagree with me, then you sir, are worse than Hitler!" - Greg Gutfeld)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 44 | View Replies]

To: Ramonne

“I would like to see Huckabee run again. I did not look
closely at him last time, but would be interested in
choosing between he and Palin” ~ Ramonne

A loser is a loser. bttt

December 17, 2007, 4:00 a.m.

The Problem With Pastor Mike
Foreign-policy foolishness just won’t suffice.
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=NjgzMzYzY2Y1ZjAxNTg5YzAzNzY2MjMwOWYxNWM0ZTc=
By Peter Wehner

Former Arkansas governor and Republican presidential hopeful Mike Huckabee has written an article for Foreign Affairs magazine, the first two paragraphs of which are stunningly silly, misguided, and unfortunately for Huckabee, deeply revealing.

The two opening paragraphs read this way:
The United States, as the world’s only superpower, is less vulnerable to military defeat. But it is more vulnerable to the animosity of other countries. Much like a top high school student, if it is modest about its abilities and achievements, if it is generous in helping others, it is loved. But if it attempts to dominate others, it is despised.

American foreign policy needs to change its tone and attitude, open up, and reach out. The Bush administration’s arrogant bunker mentality has been counterproductive at home and abroad.

My administration will recognize that the United States’ main fight today does not pit us against the world but pits the world against the terrorists. At the same time, my administration will never surrender any of our sovereignty, which is why I was the first presidential candidate to oppose ratification of the Law of the Sea Treaty, which would endanger both our national security and our economic interests.

Where ought one to begin untangling this unholy mess?

Perhaps the place to begin is with his contention that America is ungenerous, which (according to Huckabee) explains the animus now directed at the United States. The fact is that the United States has sacrificed an enormous amount of blood and treasure to help other nations. Any suggestion otherwise is wrong and even offensive.

We have, for starters, liberated more than 50 million people from two of the most repressive regimes in modern history (the Taliban and the Baathist police state in Iraq). The global AIDS initiative qualifies as among the most humane and generous acts in the history of American foreign policy. We give billions in additional foreign aid, including the enormous generosity America displayed in helping Indonesia and other nations in the aftermath of the earthquake and tsunami that devastated Indonesia and other nations in December 2004.

The United States, while imperfect, ranks as perhaps the most benevolent superpower (to say nothing of its status as a benevolent nation) in human history. Unlike past empires, we are using American power and influence for great good instead of as a means of advancing oppression.

Beyond that, the belief that if we are modest and generous we will be “loved” by other nations, and that anger at America is based on our attempts to “dominate,” is both naive and foolish. Some nations (like Cuba, Syria, Iran, North Korea, and others) will oppose us because they are totalitarian states that hate our efforts to curb their ambitions and advance freedom and self-determination.

They are not the loving kind.

Other nations (like France under Jacques Chirac) will oppose us because they can’t stand the idea of a unipolar world and want to counterbalance it. And other nations (like China and Russia) will oppose our efforts to end genocide in Darfur and keep Iran from gaining nuclear weapons because of their economic interests.

Memo to Mike Huckabee: Sometimes we are despised for all the right reasons.

Ronald Reagan engendered anger from nations because he called the Soviet Union an “evil empire;” deployed Cruise and Pershing Missiles in Europe; moved ahead with the Strategic Defense Initiative; and supported the contras in Nicaragua. Millions took to the streets in Europe to oppose his defense build-up. Does Governor Huckabee believe Reagan’s actions were wrong simply because in many countries they were unpopular? Of course we would prefer to have universal support for our actions rather than encounter opposition. But does Huckabee understand that sometimes right and wise actions elicit opposition, and sometimes even intense and widespread opposition?

The popularity of the United States decreased in many Muslim nations in the aftermath of taking down the Taliban regime for its role in harboring and supporting al-Qaeda, which in turn was responsible for the worst attack on the American homeland in our history. Was that anger against America justified? Would Huckabee base his foreign-policy decisions on how our actions poll in Waziristan or Gaza under Hamas, or in madrasas throughout the Middle East? Based on his Foreign Affairs essay, it’s reasonable to believe he might.

As for his claim that the Bush administration’s “arrogant bunker mentality” has been counterproductive at home and abroad, the same point applies. Many Middle East dictatorships recoiled at the president’s decision in 2002 to sideline Yasser Arafat (who in many ways is the father of modern terrorism), and his insistence that Palestinian authorities renounce terrorism as an instrument of state policy if they ever hope to have a homeland. Was it “arrogant” to do so? Does Huckabee wish the president had done more to stand with dictators in the Middle East? Does he wish the president still abided by the ABM Treaty with Russia?

Governor Huckabee also seems ignorant about the extent of cooperation that, on a daily basis, is garnered for the war against militant Islam. Contrary to the portrait he paints, we are seeing unprecedented cooperation in tracking, arresting, and blocking funding for terrorist organizations. Is Governor Huckabee familiar with the Proliferation Security Initiative, which more than 70 nations have joined in an effort to deny terrorists, rogue states, and their supplier networks access to weapons-of-mass-destruction-related material? Is he aware that America and its allies shut down a sophisticated nuclear black market network headed by A. Q. Khan?

Does he know that NATO has taken over command of international forces in Afghanistan ­ the first mission in NATO’s history outside the Euro-Atlantic region? Does he know (or care) that the United States won the unanimous approval of the U.N. Security Council for Resolution 1441, which said Saddam Hussein had to comply with previous resolutions or face “serious consequences” (which all parties took to mean war)? And if the president’s policies have been so counterproductive abroad, how does he explain the rise to power of Sarkozy in France and Merkel in Germany ­ two nations where anti-American animus is said to run deepest?

In his Foreign Affairs essay, Huckabee writes, “After President Bush included Iran in the ‘axis of evil,’ everything went downhill fast.” Everything? Is the former governor of Arkansas at all familiar with the history of Iran since the 1979 revolution? Is he aware of Iran’s actions when it comes to its nuclear ambitions, support for terrorism, and the oppression of its own people ­ actions which earned it a place on the “axis of evil” list? Does Huckabee dispute that the Iranian regime is evil ­ or is he only upset that President Bush spoke truthful words about it? And what does he make of the fact that according to the latest National Intelligence Estimate Iran in 2003 ceased production of its nuclear weapons program ­ a year after the “axis of evil speech” and in the immediate aftermath of Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom?

Huckabee writes, “The Bush administration has properly said that it will not take the military option for dealing with Iran off the table. Neither will I. But if we do not put other options on the table, eventually a military strike will become the only viable one.”

Is Huckabee unaware of all the other options on the table, which Iran has so far rejected? And in arguing that we should re-establish diplomatic ties with Iran, Huckabee writes, “When one stops talking to a parent or a friend, differences cannot be resolved and relationships cannot move forward.” This echoes his opening reference to the United States being like a high-school student.

If Pastor Mike thinks that dealing with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Sayyid Ali Khamenei is akin to tension arising between high-school juniors Sally and Sue, he has a few things to learn ­ and the presidency is not the place for such basic on-the-job training.

The role of commander-in-chief is the most important one we look to in a president, particularly when America is at war. Governor Huckabee’s article in Foreign Affairs, while fine (if largely conventional) in some respects, is fundamentally unserious; on national security matters, he is likewise. And when the final votes are tallied in the GOP race, Mike Huckabee’s words, on these issues and others, will cost him.

­ Peter Wehner, former deputy assistant to the president, is a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center.


64 posted on 12/06/2010 8:56:20 AM PST by Matchett-PI ( Sarah Palin / Marco Rubio - a "can't lose" ticket for 2012..)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies]

To: Ramonne

Here’s more:

You Feelin’ Hucky?

BY MARK STEYN
January 7, 2008
URL: http://www.nysun.com/article/69011

Confronted by Preacher Huckabee standing astride the Iowa caucus smirking, “Are you feelin’ Hucky, punk?” many of my conservative pals are inclined to respond, “Shoot me now.”

But, if that seems a little dramatic, let’s try and rustle up an alternative. In response to the evangelical tide from the west, New Hampshire primary voters have figured, “Any old crusty, cranky, craggy coot in a storm,” and re-embraced John McCain. After all, Granite State conservatism is not known for its religious fervor: it prefers small government, low taxes, minimal regulation, the freedom to be left alone by the state. So they’re voting for a guy who opposed the Bush tax cuts, and imposed on the nation the most explicit restriction in political speech in years. Better yet, after a freezing first week of January and the snowiest December in a century, New Hampshire conservatives are googoo for a fellow who believes in the scariest of global-warming scenarios and all the big-government solutions necessary to avert them.

Well, okay, maybe we can rustle up an alternative to the alternative. Rudy Giuliani’s team are betting than after a Huck/McCain seesaw through the early states, by January 29th Florida voters will be ready to unite their party behind a less divisive figure, if by “less divisive figure” you mean a pro-abortion gun-grabbing cross-dresser. I can’t see things playing out quite like that. The principal rationale for Rudy’s candidacy is that he’s the national-security toughie who can beat Hillary. But it’s hard to conclude after Iowa that this is shaping up as a Code Orange election. And, as for Senator Clinton, her Thursday night third-place was the nearest Bill and Hill have come to a Ceausescu balcony moment. In a world where even John Edwards can beat Hillary, who needs Rudy?

Way back a gazillion years ago, when Mrs. Clinton was first exploring the exploration of exploring the possibility of an exploratory committee, some wily GOPers were suggesting the Republicans trump her history-making first-woman-President card by drafting Condi Rice. It turns out we dead white males on the right-wing were worrying unnecessarily: The Democrats trumped themselves. Liberal voters want desperately to cast a history-making vote and, if that’s your priority, Barack Obama is a much more appealing way to cast it than Hillary. Don’t worry about this “Change You Can Believe In” shtick. He doesn’t believe in it, and neither should you. He’s a fresh face on the same-old-same-old ­ which is the only change Democrats are looking for.

As for Huckabee, the thinking on the right is that the mainstream media are boosting him up because he’s the Republican who’ll be easiest to beat. It’s undoubtedly true that they see him as the designated pushover, but in that they’re wrong. If Iowa’s choice becomes the nation’s and it’s Huckabee vs Obama this November, I’d bet on Huck. As governor, as preacher and even as discjockey, he’s spent his entire life in professions that depend on connecting with an audience and he’s very good at it. His gag on “The Tonight Show” ­ “People are looking for a presidential candidate who reminds them more of the guy they work with rather than the guy that laid them off” ­ had a kind of brilliance: True, it is, at one level, cornball (imagine John Edwards doing it with all his smarmy sanctimoniousness) but it also devastatingly cuts to the nub of the difference between him and Romney. It’s a disc-jockey line: the morning man on the radio is a guy doing a tricky job ­ he’s a celebrity trying to pass himself off as a regular joe ­ which is pretty much what the presidential candidate has to do, too. Huckabee’s good at that.

I don’t know whether the Jay Leno shtick was written for him by a professional, but, if so, by the time it came out of his mouth it sounded like him. When Huck’s campaign honcho, Ed Rollins, revealed the other day that he wanted to punch Romney in the teeth, Mitt had a good comeback: “I have just one thing to say to Mr. Rollins,” he began. “Please, don’t touch the hair.” Funny line ­ but it sounds like a line, like something written by a professional and then put in his mouth.

This is the Huckabee advantage. On stage, he’s quick-witted and thinks on his feet. He’s not paralyzed by consultants and trimmers and triangulators. Put him in a Presidential debate and he’ll have sharper ripostes and funnier throwaways and more plausible self-deprecating quips than anyone on the other side. He’ll be a great campaigner. The problems begin when he stops campaigning and starts governing.

In The Wall Street Journal, Peggy Noonan observed of Huck that, “his great power, the thing really pushing his supporters, is that they believe that what ails America and threatens its continued existence is not economic collapse or jihad, it is our culture.”

She’s right. It’s not the economy, stupid. The economy’s fine. It’s gangbusters. Indeed, despite John Edwards’ dinner-theatre Dickens routine about coatless girls shivering through the night because daddy’s been laid off at the mill, the sub-text of both Democrat and Republican messages is essentially that this country is so rich it can afford to be stupid ­ it can afford to pork up the federal budget; it can afford to put middle-class families on government health care; it can afford to surrender its borders.

There is a potentially huge segment of the population that thinks homo economicus is missing the point. They’re tired of the artificial and, indeed, creepily coercive secular multiculti pseudo-religion imposed on American grade schools. I’m sympathetic to this pitch myself. Unlike Miss Noonan, I think it’s actually connected to the jihad, in the sense that radical Islamism is an opportunist enemy which has arisen in the wake of the western world’s one-way multiculturalism. In the long run, the relativist mush peddled in our grade schools is a national security threat. But, even in the short term, it’s a form of child abuse that cuts off America’s next generation from the glories of their inheritance.

Where I part company with Huck’s supporters is in believing he’s any kind of solution. He’s friendlier to the teachers’ unions than any other so-called “cultural conservative” ­ which is why in New Hampshire he’s the first Republican to be endorsed by the NEA. His healthcare pitch is Attack Of The Fifty Foot Nanny, beginning with his nationwide smoking ban. This is, as Jonah Goldberg put it, compassionate conservatism on steroids ­ big paternalistic government that can only enervate even further “our culture.” So Iowa chose to reward, on the Democrat side, a proponent of the conventional secular left, and, on the Republican side, a proponent of a new Christian left. If that’s the choice, this is going to be a long election year.

bttt


65 posted on 12/06/2010 8:58:09 AM PST by Matchett-PI ( Sarah Palin / Marco Rubio - a "can't lose" ticket for 2012..)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies]

To: Matchett-PI

Many of my liberal friends love Huckabee for some reason?


66 posted on 12/06/2010 9:01:26 AM PST by thedudesatx
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 64 | View Replies]

To: ichabod1

You’re giving LSM like Couric too much credit. Barbara Walters is more of a force than Couric.

Couric only appeals to liberals.

Independents, contrary to many of extreme right and extreme left’s belief, don’t trust news. Some don’t even read news from both liberal media and Fox News.

McCain/Palin ticket lost due to the curse of the Incumbent (the Republican President in 2008)ollowing:

(1) Call for Change. This is important to independents. Election is always about making “change” for good. The ticket is tied to a very unpopular incumbent and his party.

(2) Bad Economy. The buck stopped at the office of the President, a Republican at that time.

Question: When did the poll numbers of McCain plummet? September 2008 at the height of Financial Crisis.

The ticket’s poll numbers were still good even after the Couric interview.

By the way, what’s the damaging essence of the interview? That Palin didn’t read tabloids and lying papers like NYT? L don’t think that will matter in 2012 if she becomes a nominee.


67 posted on 12/06/2010 9:01:32 AM PST by convertedtoreason ( Nature tells us to take a LIBERTARIAN CONSERVATIVE stance)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 28 | View Replies]

To: Ranjit
Folks, If Sarah Palin is serious to get elected beyond the conservative base, she needs to go and articulate some policies. If she is serious about running, Sarah Palin should go and destroy people like Katie Couric. Yes she can spend her time with conservative media people but now and then she also needs to get to 2 or 3 mainstream media people and reach out to the broader independents. .

Where have you been? Sarah Palin has been the only one of any potential 2012 candidate that has talked about the Federal Reserve action on QE2 in a major speech and WSJ article and an interview. Palin has done writings about the need for a strong dollar which hardly any other projected candidate has suggested, she gave details, yes detail in two speeches and a writing on what the Obama Adminstration was doing wrong and what was needed to be done during the Gulf oil crisis.......name any Presidential candidate that has written to the WSJ or use extensive time to explain the dangers of CAP and Trade? Where are the Energy Policies offered up by the cattle of 2012 candidates that Sarah Palin did months ago? Palin also called for a strong military which is constitutional from calls of the Tea Party and others to gut the Defense....in a major speech in VA.....there is many more examples where Sarah has lead and the others did very little but I rest my case for now!
68 posted on 12/06/2010 9:07:46 AM PST by Bigtigermike
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 55 | View Replies]

To: Ramonne

More:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/01/11/AR2008011103123.html?hpid=opinionsbox1

By Jonah Goldberg
Sunday, January 13, 2008; B1

“... And both of these derive from the kind of thinking that led George W. Bush to insist in 2000 that he was a “different kind of Republican” because he was a “compassionate conservative” — a political program that apparently measures compassion by how much money the government spends on education, marriage counseling and the like.

The most revealing development of the campaign so far has to be Huckabee’s success at displacing Thompson as the candidate of the socially conservative South. Thompson’s failure to translate the immense excitement about his pre-candidacy into anything better than also-ran status is largely attributable to a lackluster campaign effort. But there’s at least something symbolic about the fact that Huckabee has become, in the words of Commentary’s John Podhoretz, “the socially conservative Southern pro-life candidate with a silver tongue and a pleasingly low-key affect.”

...Taken at his word, Thompson is a card-carrying Reaganite, favoring low taxes, a strong defense and a shrunken role for the federal government.

Huckabee, meanwhile, is nearly the philosophical opposite. He would even use his power as president to push for a national ban on public smoking. “I’m one of the few Republicans,” Huckabee insists, “who talk very clearly about the environment, health care, infrastructure, energy independence. I don’t cede any of those to the Democrats.”

When Huckabee says that, he means it in the same way that Bush promised not to surrender health care and education (another Huckabee issue) to his opponents when he ran as a “compassionate conservative.” As a result, we got the biggest federal government expansion into education in history and the largest spike in entitlement spending since the Great Society.

Huckabee says he’s a “paradoxical conservative,” and his success so far suggests that this is the wave of the future on the right. McCain, who may be emerging as the “establishment” candidate, proves the point. ...

There are important differences — on national security, the role of government, religion — among the different brands of conservatism bubbling up. But none of them necessarily reflects the views of the pro-government and social conservative rank and file. The center of the right does not hold, and so we see an army with many flags and many generals and nobody knows who goes with which.

In other words, there’s a huge crowd of self-described conservatives standing around the Republican elephant shouting “Do something!” But what they want the poor beast to do is very unclear. And it doesn’t take an expert in pachyderm psychology to know that if a big enough mob shouts at an elephant long enough, the most likely result will be a mindless stampede — in this case, either to general election defeat or to disastrously unconservative policies, or both. ...”


69 posted on 12/06/2010 9:07:57 AM PST by Matchett-PI ( Sarah Palin / Marco Rubio - a "can't lose" ticket for 2012..)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies]

To: shibumi
Mike Huckabee is really DannyH?

And here all this time I was thinking Danny H was Mitt Romney.

70 posted on 12/06/2010 9:09:57 AM PST by Allegra (Pablo is very wily.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 48 | View Replies]

To: Hawk720
Respect? Never.

Why? Two words: Maurice Clemmons.

He can go pound sand.

71 posted on 12/06/2010 9:13:34 AM PST by hoagy62 (.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Hodar
I think Glen Beck said it best. Do you damn job, and do it well. If you do, people will ASK you to run for President. Huck wants to be President to salve his bruised ego, he wants it because it will make him feel good. Meanwhile, we have some outstanding candidates who have done their jobs VERY well - Chris Christie and Sarah Palin come to mind.

Mike Huckabee is not my choice as a Presidential candidate.

Be that as it may, Mike Huckabee "did his job" as Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas from November 20, 1993 through July 15, 1996. He then "did his job" as Governor of Arkansas from July 15, 1996 through January 8, 2007.

That is a total of a little over 13 years of "doing his job" in serious political office in a State that has a population that is four times greater than the State of Alaska.

Sarah Palin "did her job" as Governor of Alaska (a State with half the population of San Diego, California) from December 4, 2006 through July 26, 2009.

Then she QUIT right in the middle of her first term in serious political office.

That is a total of a few weeks beyond 2 1/2 years before she quit on her job to make millions on reality TV shows.

A political leader, can't possibly "Do her damn job and do it well" if she quits in the middle of her first term in serious political office in order to make millions doing reality TV shows.

Reality TV is the kind of job job that Kate Gosselin does.

It's official: Sarah Palin and Kate Gosselin are joining forces : The latest news out of TCA proves that worlds will be colliding this fall: TLC president Eileen O’Neill confirmed that Kate Gosselin and her brood will make a guest appearance on Sarah Palin’s reality series Sarah Palin’s Alaska

Even in her reality TV job, Sarah Palin's rating dropped 40% from Week 1 to Week 2.

'Sarah Palin's Alaska' Ratings Plummet In Week 2

Sarah Palin cannot even keep 40% of her reality TV show audience from Week 1 to week 2 and, yet, the Sarah Palin Fan Club is under the illusion that the majority of American voters will vote her into the Oval Office.

An Associated Press-GfK surveyindicated that 54 percent thought Obama should be voted out of office in 2012. Be that as it may, the reality is that Sarah Palin is the one Republican candidate that even Barack Hussein Obama can beat like a red-headed stepchild in the general Presidential election:

An Associated Press-GfK survey released 11 days ago indicated that 54 percent thought Obama should be voted out of office in 2012 ..... Obama has a 48 to 40 advantage over Palin in a hypothetical general election matchup.

Sarah Palin has not proved she can do any job well except to preach to the choir in her own Fan Club. As a result, the majority of American voters will even vote for Obama before voting for Palin and even 40% of her reality TV show viewers did not bother to come back for Week 2.

72 posted on 12/06/2010 9:13:42 AM PST by Polybius
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: Matchett-PI
Great list of articles. I honestly hope we don't have to resurrect all of these articles and pictures of the true Huckster from the '08 campaign. It was such a depressing primary for the GOP.




73 posted on 12/06/2010 9:14:15 AM PST by Servant of the Cross (I'm with Jim DeMint ... on the fringe!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 69 | View Replies]

To: Ramonne

More:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1966320/posts?page=19#19


74 posted on 12/06/2010 9:14:51 AM PST by Matchett-PI ( Sarah Palin / Marco Rubio - a "can't lose" ticket for 2012..)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies]

To: convertedtoreason

McCain was flailing around well before that. His “fight with me, fight with me” speech at the convention was an embarrassment. He would NOT get in that mans face. At least Serra talked about “palling around with terrorists.” I think McCain saw what a mess was coming down the pike and took a dive, I really do. But when he shut down his campaign to return to Washington and then got there and basically said “whatever they decide is fine”, well that turned a lot of people off. It was like sKerry’s famous boat ride to the convention floor. It was supposed to be very dramatic and flopped.


75 posted on 12/06/2010 9:16:58 AM PST by ichabod1 (Hail Mary Full of Grace, The Lord Is With Thee...)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 67 | View Replies]

To: IMissPresidentReagan; Eric Blair 2084; flashbunny; NeoCaveman; SoConPubbie; Esther Ruth; pissant; ..
Folks, it looks like I'm going to have to ressurrect the Huckster ping list a lot sooner than anticipated, still being 2 years from the next Presidential election. The recent increase in number of Huckster articles touting his credentials has warranted it.

If you want on/off this ping list, please let me know.


76 posted on 12/06/2010 9:23:55 AM PST by OB1kNOb (Those offended by all things Christmas are simply afraid that GOD exists & will judge their actions.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: ichabod1

I have this suspicion now that you didn’t vote for McCain in 2008?

Am I right?

Typical conservative faithful would dismiss the ackwardness of McCain’s line “Fight with Me”. But somehow, you could still remember that. No. The convention did well for the ticket based on the polls.

The Financial Crisis was the turning point. Nobody could save the party... even Palin. It was the culmination of “Bush’s Fault”. The ticket was bound to lose, even if McCain did not shot down his campaign.

Obama would still win even if the nominee was Romney or Huck.


77 posted on 12/06/2010 9:32:49 AM PST by convertedtoreason ( Nature tells us to take a LIBERTARIAN CONSERVATIVE stance)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 75 | View Replies]

To: Polybius

“A political leader, can’t possibly “Do her damn job and do it well” if she quits in the middle of her first term in serious political office in order to make millions doing reality TV shows.” ~ Polybius

This one’s for you:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/gop/2636153/posts?page=19#19


78 posted on 12/06/2010 9:47:09 AM PST by Matchett-PI ( Sarah Palin / Marco Rubio - a "can't lose" ticket for 2012..)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 72 | View Replies]

To: Polybius

DO YOU REALLY UNDERSTAND TV RATINGS AND TV CHANNELS?

3-5 million viewers AT “TLC” is a flop? at TLC?

Wow.


79 posted on 12/06/2010 9:57:06 AM PST by convertedtoreason ( Nature tells us to take a LIBERTARIAN CONSERVATIVE stance)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 72 | View Replies]

To: Polybius

Be that as it may, Mike Huckabee “did his job” as Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas from November 20, 1993 through July 15, 1996. He then “did his job” as Governor of Arkansas from July 15, 1996 through January 8, 2007.

OKEY. 8 YEARS.

ANY SUBSTANTIAL ACCOMPLISHMENTS IN 8 YEARS?

OR WAS IT SAME ‘OL SAME ‘OL!... WASTING THE TIME OF HIS CONSTITUENTS IN 8 YEARS?

8 Years ... wow. too long. I would expect the REAL CONSERVATIVE HUCKABEE to lower the taxes of his people at least by half after 8 years. Did he?


80 posted on 12/06/2010 10:04:20 AM PST by convertedtoreason ( Nature tells us to take a LIBERTARIAN CONSERVATIVE stance)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 72 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-8081-99 next last

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.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson