Posted by
Killer Konservative™ on Tuesday, February 05, 2008 9:12:43 PM
I suppose you could say I’ve been mildly critical of Governor Mike Huckabee on this blog. Naturally, I’ve always believed my reasons for doing so were legitimate. Ever since he began his presidential bid, Huckabee has shamelessly portrayed himself as the “moral choice” in this election. (“I’m running to take this nation back for Christ!”) For those of you who don’t believe me, just look at Congressman Ron Paul, another strong Christian who has striven to keep his faith largely out of the limelight. Although he’s rightly recognized that religion should play a pivotal role in government, he’s purposely avoided the temptation to pander to his fellow Christians and instead focused on substantive governmental issues, a decision for which I admire him.
Huckabee however, has brought his Baptist faith to the forefront, claiming to “drink a different kind of Jesus Juice,” which is as much as to say he’s out of step with the majority of social conservatives. What’s more, I’m not particularly inclined to believe that he’s even a considerate or “Christian” individual. No one can deny that his unprovoked name-calling of fellow candidates and of the current president hardly reflects an attitude of Christian charity. Nevertheless, the mainstream media has spent the last two months fawning over him and their other pet Republican, Senator John McCain, who also seems to loathe Mitt Romney with a fiery passion. If I didn’t know better, I’d say these two had some sort of agreement worked out. In the last week, Huckabee has viciously attacked his secondary rival, Governor Mitt Romney, while turning a blind eye…or rather an affectionate eye…to the real target and frontrunner:
“McCain’s not a liberal. Mitt Romney calls him that, and that’s absurd.” –Mike Huckabee
“Dishonest? I’ve never seen John McCain say something untrue.” –Mike Huckabee
This isn’t normal political behavior. As third in line according to the polls, Huckabee should be joining Romney in attacking the frontrunner. But as the race goes on, he continues to act as though Romney is his primary concern, with little if any talk about actually winning the nomination. And there’s a good reason, too.
This man isn’t running for president anymore. He’s running safety for John McCain.
“Huckabee knows that by keeping his candidacy alive, he’s potentially helping McCain win another split plurality vote. McCain knows it, too. Gratitude will follow — but whether that includes the vice presidency is anybody’s guess.”
This according the University of Virginia political science professor, Larry Sabato.
But regardless of whether the Huckster has some sort of ulterior motive for acting this way, any reasonable person must at least conclude he has a bit of a personal vendetta against Romney: Just look at some of the nasty things he’s said about the former Massachusetts governor in recent days, most of which have nothing whatsoever to do with actual policy issues:
“Here’s a man who didn’t hit political puberty in the conservative ranks until he was almost sixty years old.”
“He spends millions of bucks [against] John McCain, or me then we push back then he just jumps up and down and screams and hollars and says ‘oh its a personal attack, its a personal attack.’ This is running for the presidency, this ain’t bean bag. So if he’s gonna throw a few at our head, he needs to know that when he comes to the plate he’s gonna see some 98mph fastballs coming back. That’s the way it works. If he thinks this is tough he ain’t seen nothing yet.”
“Some people running for president were gone over 200 days their last year in office.”
“Ask him [Romney] when was the last time he used a firearm and would he know how to clean it if somebody handed it to him.”
True to form, Huckabee even reverted to his signature class-warfare rhetoric, taking a jab at Romney’s largely self-funded campaign:
“I can’t write a personal check for tens of millions of dollars to impress you with what a great guy I am.”
Then there’s his infamous mouth-off about President Bush for which Mitt Romney actually demanded an apology:
“As the world's last superpower, America is less vulnerable to military attack but more vulnerable to the animosity of other countries. Much like the 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. Thus, American foreign policy needs to change its tone and attitude, open up, and reach out and move away from the Bush administration's arrogant bunker mentality."
Probably the funniest part about McCain’s new little smart-aleck sidekick is how he goes for Romney’s jugular on the all-too-familiar “flip-flopping” issue, and yet himself exhibits hypocrisy and political expediency on a spectacular scale.
“You can’t change your position on key issues like that.” he said of Romney, and yet continues to alter his own positions based on the daily polls, a practice first pioneered as I recall by another Arkansas governor turned presidential candidate.
Consider for example, Huckabee’s own incredible about-face on illegal immigration:
"I tend to think that the rational approach [to illegal immigration] is to find a way to give people a pathway to citizenship." –Huckabee
Ready? Here we go…Presto-chango!
“[We need to] send illegals home so everyone in the US can hold their heads high.”
--Huckabee
Perhaps just as interesting was his solemn promise late last year to keep this campaign friendly and positive. Just days later however, he aired his first attack ads against Romney in Iowa.
And now it seems Huckabee will stop at nothing to carry through with his “if I can’t have it, Romney can’t” attitude. For the last week, there have been calls from all over the Republican party for the cash-starved Huckabee to get out of the race and allow the conservative base to unite around Romney. Stubbornly refusing, Huckabee reverted to his default temperament and pointlessly demanded that Romney instead, drop out.
Just hours ago, the story broke that Mike had won the delegates from the state of West Virginia, a plurality of which had formerly supported Mitt Romney. In what appeared to be a shrewd deal orchestrated by higher officials in the McCain camp, all of the caucus delegates supporting the Senator were instructed to switch to Huckabee’s side with the expressed purpose of “stopping Romney.”
Romney campaign spokesman, Kevin Madden, commented:
“Unfortunately, this is what Senator McCain’s inside Washington ways look like: he cut a backroom deal with the tax-and-spend candidate he thought could best stop Governor Romney’s campaign of conservative change.”
According to Huckabee, “If you’re catching flak, you must be close to the target.” Seems to me Romney’s plane is the only one on fire.