A 30,000 Foot View of the Democratic Presidential Candidate Debate

The below is a fairly objective 30,000 foot view of the Democratic Candidate Presidential Debate. However, it does not capture the drama of John Edwards and Barack Obama accusing Hillary Clinton of not being truthful.




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Hillary Caught In A Trap Of Her Own Making

The below video clip of Hillary getting caught trying to work both sides of the immigration issue is a cut I discussed in my reaction to the Democratic presidential debate.




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Show Me State Republicans Love Mike Huckabee


CARTHAGE, Mo. — Mike Huckabee is the runaway favorite in the Republican presidential race, at least based on a vote by members of the Jasper County Republican Central Committee.

CLICK HERE to read the rest of the article in the Joplin Globe


Republicans Win The Democratic Presidential Candidates Debate

The winner was clear in the debate between Democratic presidential candidates held in Philadelphia on the campus of Drexel University. There can be no doubt in anyone's mind that the winner of the debate was the Republican Party.

The debate opened with Barack Obama portraying Hillary as a flip-flopper. He talked about her changing positions on the war, torture, and NAFTA.

John Edwards followed up by accusing Hillary of double-talk, saying one thing and doing another. Later in the debate, Edwards accused her of having a primary election mode and a general election mode. He suggested that she should try adopting a "tell the truth mode." Edwards did everything but call her an out and out liar.

Another question about Hillary's honesty came up in the discussion regarding "real change." Obama claimed that Hillary's unwillingness to have the National Archives release documents from her interactions with Bill Clinton during his presidency signaled a return to secrecy in government. He pointed this at the Bush White House, however there can be no doubt that he was hoping everyone would make the connection with Whitewater, Travelgate, Chinese spying, and renting out the Lincoln bedroom. Edwards indicated that believing a Hillary presidency would result in "real change" is like believing in Santa Clause and the Tooth Fairy.

Bill Richardson came to Hillary's defense when the attacks on her started to hit home. It certainly appears that he will be Hillary's VP candidate, -- not because he believes as does she, but because he does not. Hillary is trying to be a centrist, so she needs a strong anti-war candidate like Richardson to balance the ticket. When Richardson came to her defense this evening he may well have locked up the VP spot.

However, not even Richardson could defend Hillary from herself when she was asked about driver's licenses for illegal aliens. The whole panel of candidates laughed out loud when she waffled back and forth first affirming both sides of the position and then denying that either side represented her own views. In the course of just a few minutes she switched her position back and forth several times. One candidate quipped something like, "Does anyone have any idea what she believes." It was obvious that no one did.

The candidates weren't the only ones questioning Hillary's flip-flopping ways. Tim Russert asked Hillary why she had one public position and one private position on raising the cap on Social Security. She tried to explain how it made perfect sense to adopt such an approach, but I am thinking that those listening who have even an intuitive understanding of the law of contradiction found Hillary to be unpersuasive. Hillary doesn't stake out a position, she stakes out all the positions and then advocates depending upon the make-up of her audience. I don't know why the press lets her get away with this.

Hillary was not the only candidate to be accused of duplicity. Christopher Dodd accused John Edwards of embracing a situation ethics which held others to higher standards than he was prepared himself to live.

Hillary tried desperately to move the topic of discussion away from herself. She said that the Republicans are obsessed with her which proves that she's the man. By that argument, one would have to conclude that George Bush must be Superman because she took his name in vain with every breath.

I hope someone goes to the trouble of counting the number of times that Hillary mentioned "George Bush." I'm guessing somewhere in the neighborhood of 47 bjillion.

While Hillary mentioned George Bush more than all of the other candidates combined, the other candidates did invoke his name in this "George Bush is evil" marathon. Dennis Kucinich went so far as to claim that GB should be impeached. However, most of the others seemed to think a good tar-and-feathering was more in order.

During the course of one of his answers Kucinich stated, "we must have a president who understands..." The problem is that Kucinich gives no evidence that he knows the differences between "understanding" and "wishful thinking."

The Democratic presidential candidates also managed to get in a few swipes at the Republican candidates. Joe Biden's claim that Rudy Giuliani has only three things he mentions in a sentence, "a noun, a verb, and 9/11" was the one-liner getting the most audience response. However, that is not saying much as the crowd was horribly bored, and with good reason.

Biden also said of Giuliani that he is probably "the most under-qualified man since George Bush to seek the presidency."

Obama took a couple of swipes at Romney along the way, however, the blows did not seem to really land. When he was asked about Romney confusing Obama's name with that of Osama, Obama said of Romney, "I don't pay much attention to what Mitt Romney has to say,- at least this week, it may be different next week." He also said that for Halloween he might wear a Mitt Romney mask, a mask with two faces. Had it been a Republican audience he would have probably received a more positive response. Republican are very wary of Mitt's even-numbered year position changes. Whereas, Democrats are more accustomed to such flip-flopping.

Much time was dedicated in the debate to discussions of fiscal responsibility. Republicans should be ashamed for having given them the high ground on this subject by not showing restraint. However, the debate made one thing very clear, -- for democrats fiscal responsibility means higher taxes. Or, as Barack Obama said, the wealthy need to pay "more of their fair share." I wonder what does "more of a fair share" look like.

What did you think about the debate?


Barack Obama - No Blurring Of The Line Between Church and State

Barack Obama answers a question about his faith on MTV. According to Obama, faith would inform his decisions, but he would assure that the lines between church and state would not be blurred. View his complete answer below:



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The Real Rudy Giuliani

I disagree with most of what Frank Rich has to say, but at least he's got his facts straight in the excerpts below:

Rudy Giuliani. Banished from Gracie Mansion after dumping his second wife for Judith Nathan, New York’s lame-duck mayor had been bunking for two months with a gay couple. No brand-name American politician had ever publicly done such a thing, so I decided to pay a visit to Rudy’s home away from home.

His Honor was out that day, but Howard Koeppel, a garrulous Queens car dealer, and his partner, Mark Hsiao, a Juilliard-trained pianist, were gracious tour guides to their 32nd-floor apartment on East 57th Street. I asked Mr. Koeppel, a born comic, whether it was unexpected that Rudy would live with an openly gay couple. “I don’t know if it’s any more unusual than him wearing a dress,” he deadpanned. On a more sober note, Mr. Koeppel told me that the connubially challenged mayor was an admirer of his and Mr. Hsiao’s relatively “idyllic life” and had assured them that “if they ever legalized gay marriages, we would be the first one he would do.” ...

Hilariously enough, some other big names on the right, typified by Sean Hannity of Fox News, are capitulating to the Giuliani candidacy by pretending that he, like the incessantly flip-flopping Mitt Romney, is reversing his previously liberal record on social issues. The straw they cling to is Rudy’s promise to appoint “strict constructionist” judges to the Supreme Court.

Even leaving aside the Giuliani record in New York (where his judicial appointees were mostly Democrats), the more Democratic Senate likely to emerge after 2008 is a poor bet to confirm a Scalia or Alito even should a Republican president nominate one. No matter how you slice it, the Giuliani positions on abortion, gay rights and gun control remain indistinguishable from Hillary Clinton’s.


CLICK HERE to read the complete article.


A Five Way Race For The Republican Nomination

Hugh Hewitt, self-proclaimed genius, believes he can make this a "two-man race" for the Republican presidential nomination simply by declaring it so. The polls are saying something altogether different.

"The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Monday shows five candidates within eleven points in the race for the Republican Presidential Nomination. Among Likely Republican Primary Voters nationwide, Rudy Giuliani is preferred by 23% while Fred Thompson is six points behind at 17%. John McCain and Mike Huckabee are at 13% while Mitt Romney is a point behind at 12%. No other Republican attracts more than 3% support."


In fact, not only is this not a two-man race, but the two men Hewitt insists are the sure thing, are showing a degradation of support. Giuliani is in a death spin in California having lost ten points. Romney is polling in fifth place as can be seen in the Rasmussen Presidential Tracking Poll above.

Hewitt is wasting what little credibility he had left.

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A Possible Scenario - How Huckabee Might Win

Bill Kristol paints the following possible scenario in todays Daily Standard.

"Huckabee wins Iowa (or places a very strong second), beating Romney. He then defeats at least Thompson in New Hampshire. Energized social conservatives rally to the real thing for Huckabee's showdown with Giuliani, as Thompson and Romney fade. Huckabee gets enough money flowing in to compete adequately, and beats Giuliani one-on-one on Feb. 5 and after, winning more delegates than Giuliani by doing better in the delegate-overweighted (because they've voted Republican more often recently) Southern states."


Sounds good to me.

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Christians In The Gaza Strip Fear For Their Lives

The situation in the Gaza Strip continues to deteriorate and Christians there fear for their lives as extremist groups begin to target Christians.


Atheist says we must break the cycle of silence

I guess I was wrong when I stated that there is nothing too absurd for the ACLU to find a reason to get involved. Even the ACLU isn't interested in breaking the silence...


Oklahoma Lawmakers Reject Korans

Oklahoma legislators seem to be struggling with the propriety of accepting a gift copy of the Koran. I do not believe the issue is cut-and-dry and I do not find fault with either side as they struggle to do what they believe is ethical.



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Rudy Giuliani has dropped 10 point in the polls of likely Republican voters in California. I think Republicans are starting to recognize a Democrat when they see one.



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Federal government bans flag-folding recitations following one complaint

Is there no limit to what people will complain about? The AFA had this to say about it,

"Following one complaint, the Veterans Administration has made anti-Christian bigotry the law of the land. The U.S. government has bowed to pressure from one radical anti-Christian secularist. Allowed to stand, the action by the Veterans Administration, in essence, means that anti-Christian bigotry is now the accepted and approved law of the land."



Giuliani, Thompson, and Romney Offend Even More Potential Voters

Huckabee and McCain were the only two candidates to show up for the Iowa forum hosted by AARP. This follows on the heels of the other major Republican candidates boycotting the debate which focused on African-American issues. Are these clowns intentionally trying to offend everyone other than deep-pocket economic conservatives?


Democrats Should Read More

Read the below article to see why Democratic legislators and policy makers need to read Made To Stick and Words That Work.


Over-Zealous John Edwards Campaign Staff?

Like everyone else, I had not seen the video mentioned in the article below until after the events described. Sometimes campaigns shoot themselves in the foot by reacting to strongly to bad press.




And, here is the video of which the article speaks.



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Mike Huckabee Responds to Wall Street Journal Column

News Release: Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee Responds to Wall Street Journal Column

October 26, 2007

Little Rock, AR – Presidential Candidate and Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee wrote the following letter to the editor of the Wall Street Journal in response to Friday’s column by John Fund:

To the Editor:

John Fund’s view of my ten-and-a-half-year record as governor of Arkansas and my vision for America’s future (“Another Man from Hope, Who is Mike Huckabee?”) calls for me to set the record straight.

It’s important to note that every living Republican in Arkansas who has been elected to either a statewide or a federal office has endorsed my candidacy. I’m grateful for their support and proud that in 1998, I received the largest percentage of votes ever received by a Republican gubernatorial nominee in Arkansas, and that Arkansans re-elected me to another four-year term in November 2002.

I am even prouder that, throughout my tenure as governor and lieutenant governor of Arkansas, I campaigned tirelessly for countless Republican candidates for the state house and federal office – and even helped get some elected.

As governor, I pushed through the Arkansas Legislature the first major, broad-based tax cuts in state history — a $90 million tax relief package for Arkansas families; led efforts to establish a Property Taxpayers' Bill of Rights; and created a welfare reform program that reduced the welfare rolls in the state by almost 50 percent. We also doubled the standard deduction to $2,000 for single taxpayers and $4,000 for those who are married. In total, I led the fight to cut taxes and fees over 90 times during my ten-and-a-half years as governor, saving the people of Arkansas almost $380 million. When I left office, Arkansas had over $800 million in state surplus.

One of my proudest achievements as governor was signing legislation creating ARKids First – creating health insurance coverage for more than 70,000 Arkansas children who otherwise might have gone without. I am firmly committed to finding a way to provide health care and a better education for America’s children, who hold the key to our nation’s future. Unfortunately, there seems to be a serious misunderstanding about my SCHIP comment at a recent presidential debate.

I was not criticizing President Bush’s veto as a matter of policy, but as a matter of politics. I fully believe that Bush should have negotiated a compromise and not let it get to the point of a veto. Bush indicated he was willing to spend more than the $5 billion he originally proposed, but less than the $35 billion the Democrats pushed through, so there was clearly room to negotiate. In no way do I support spending an additional $35 billion, or moving two million children from private insurance to government insurance, or letting SCHIP be a step on the path to socialized medicine.

I believe that we must be good stewards of our environment and support many paths to reducing our emission of greenhouse gases, such as more nuclear power and alternative sources of clean energy. As part of our overall effort, I also support a cap and trade system, which has worked well for reduction of sulphur dioxide emissions. However, I do not agree with those who want all allowances to be auctioned off because I believe that will create too great a burden on businesses. The alternative to cap and trade is a carbon tax, which I don’t support.

It is difficult to fully understand the institutional challenges of a Republican running for office in Arkansas. In 1993, when I was elected lieutenant governor, I was the fourth Republican to be elected to statewide office since Reconstruction. Students of Arkansas politics should talk to former U.S. Senator Tim Hutchinson, U.S. Rep. John Boozman or former Rep. Jay Dickey, all of whom support my candidacy for president, but none of whom is cited in Fund’s column, about these challenges.

Nevertheless, running for election and re-election, and more importantly, governing in an overwhelmingly Democratic state, prepared me to climb that next mountain: running for president and leading America with an optimistic vision and solid plans to successfully confront the complex challenges we face today.

Thank you for your time and attention to this matter.

Sincerely,

Mike Huckabee

Presidential Candidate

Former Governor of Arkansas (1996-2007)

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I Heart Huckabee

Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee! Huckabee!


Mike Huckabee at the FRC Values Voters Summit 2007

Here is the speech that Mike Huckabee gave at the Values Voter Summit which resulted in him receiving more votes at the summit than all of the other eighteen candidates combined. It is definitely worth watching.






Mike "The Arkansan Stallion" Huckabee

"First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they attack, and then they come to your swearing in."


Imagine

Imagine ...

A leader who values human life ...

Of all Americans young and old ...

Who celebrates the sanctity of life ...

As foundationally essential...

Imagine.


It's About Time

Just a few of the reasons why Huckabee would make a great president.


The GOP's Best Bet? Hope and a common touch: reasons to like Mike Huckabee

Jonathan Alter has written an excellent article in Newsweek about the Republican's Best Hope. Here is an excerpt:

The GOP is in a deep hole and keeps digging. Even after Mike Huckabee won big among attendees at last week's "Values Voters Convention," many evangelicals have been telling the former Arkansas governor—and onetime Baptist minister—that they like him but won't back him because he can't beat Hillary Clinton. They have it exactly backward. He may be the only Republican candidate with a decent chance to beat the Democrats next November.

Huckabee? Yes, Huckabee....

....Huckabee comes across more hopeful than Giuliani, more believable than Romney, more intelligent than Thompson and fresher than McCain. He would hold the base and capture moderates drawn to his down-home style. His greatest asset is that he alone among the Republicans "speaks American." He connects to his audience with stories and metaphors and a geniality that can't be faked. "I'm conservative but I'm not angry about it," he likes to say, and it's true; his gentle mocking of the intraparty warfare that broke out during the Fox debate—likening it to a "demolition derby"—confirms the point. This was Reagan's secret, and it worked for Huckabee in Arkansas, where he won the votes of independents and Democrats....

.... The stridency of today's GOP has blinded the party to the context of this election, which is Bush fatigue. No wonder all the Democrats are using some variation of the line "The era of cowboy diplomacy is over." It is. And the least cowboyish and bombastic Republican will have the best chance a year from now to win the White House. That's Mike Huckabee.

CLICK HERE to read the entire article.


Friendly truce as 2008 candidates wives meet

Elizabeth Edwards, Jeri Thompson, Michelle Obama, Ann Romney, and Cindy McCain Friendly participated in a forum at a women's conference in which they shared fears, joys and stories about the 2008 campaign toll upon their families.


Mitt Romney - The Bionic Candidate

This video addresses Mitt Romney's credibility problem.


Rudy claims to be a liberal

He claimed to be a liberal in 1996. He still is.


Romney Argues For A Consensus Candidate

In the video below, Mitt Romney states that the Republican Party has been made up of defense conservatives, economic conservatives, and social conservatives. And, "We're not going to win the White House with two out of three."

His premise that it will require a consensus candidate is spot on. However, the tripartite breakdown he offers reflects the Republican identity crisis that is prevalent. Most people assume that Christians can be lumped into the larger heading of "social conservatives." Wrong. Christians are not going to vote for someone simply because he is a social conservative.

This comes into play most dramatically with Romney himself. Many, many Christians believe that a Romney presidency would promote a confusion of the gospel message. As long as Mormonism claims to be Christianity, and employes a bait-and-switch pseudo-Christian gospel, there will be numerous Christians who will not put political pragmatism ahead of Christian convictions.

If the Republican Party wants the Christian vote then it needs to stop promoting candidates with an anti-Christian agenda.





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Giuliani Courts Christian Right

While addressing those attending the Values Voter Summit, Rudy Giuliani shares "you know we have some areas of disagreement." Well duhhh. Giuliani is the reason for the summit. It was held to discuss alternatives should Giuliani receive the Republican nomination. 27% of conservative evangelicals have indicated that they will not vote for Giuliani under any circumstances. You can count me as part of that number.



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What They're Saying About The Values Voter Straw Poll

I recently wrote about Mike Huckabee's amazing victory at the Values Voter Straw Poll in which he received more votes from those attending than did all of the other candidates combined. Here is what others are saying . . .

"But for the people that actually voted onsite, it was no contest. Huckabee won 488 votes to Romney’s second place 99. That’s called a thumpin’.... The story today is Huckabee." (David Brody, at CBN News)

"So Mitt really did bomb. And I mean, *really* bombed. Huckabee got 51%. Romney got 10%. That's second, but there are miles between Huckabee and Romney." (J.P. Freir, at Politalk)

"The FRC Action Straw Poll confirms that Mike Huckabee is the big winner here today.... Huckbee got 488 votes for an absolute majority out of the 19 candidates (all the Dems and GOP'ers) on the straw poll ballot (51.25%). Romney received 99 votes. What makes that even bigger news is that several sources connected to the FRC Action Washington Briefing have said Romney brought in "around 100" people to participate and assist." (Erick Erickson, at RedState)

"Huckabee blew Romney out of the water--51 percent to 10 percent. Everybody who was at the conference saw how Huckabee wowed the room. It will be really hard for Christian leaders meeting this weekend to choose Romney as their candidate for pragmatic reasons when it's so obvious that Huckabee is the choice of their base." (Philip Klein, at The American Spectator)

"Among voters who showed up for the speeches, Huckabee won 51 percent--a 41 point landslide over Romney." (David Weigel, of Reason Magazine)

"...Huckabee beat Romney by a five-to-one margin." (Michael Kranish, in the Boston Globe)

"Mike Huckabee was a success in the room. He clearly won the straw poll, etc. He clearly won the speech. And he clearly won the day." (Soren Dayton, from Eyeon08)


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Want more Mike Huckabee news? Check out these sites...


Mike Huckabee with Tucker Carlson

Presidential candidate Mike Huckabee talks to MSNBC’s Tucker Carlson about the new Rasmussen Poll which has Huckabee at a virtual tie for second with Fred Thompson.


Mike Huckabee Wins The Values Voter Straw Poll

The results are in for the Family Research Councils Values Voter Summit straw poll. Mike Huckabee overwhelmingly won over the hearts of those attending. The following results are taken from the Family Research Council website:

Onsite Straw Poll Results

Mike Huckabee 488 51.26%
Mitt Romney 99 10.40%
Fred Thompson 77 8.09%
Tom Tancredo 65 6.83%%
Rudy Giuliani 60 6.30%
Duncan Hunter 54 5.67%
John McCain 30 3.15%
Sam Brownback 26 2.73%
Ron Paul 25 2.63%
Undecided 11 1.16%
Not Voting 7 0.74%
Barack Obama 5 0.53%
Christopher Dodd 2 0.21%
Dennis Kucinich 2 0.11%
Joe Biden 1 0.11%
Hillary Clinton 0 0.00%
John Edwards 0 0.00%
Mike Gravel 0 0.00%
Bill Richardson 0 0.00%
Total 952 100%


Mike Huckabee received more than half of the votes cast at the Values Voter Summit. Huckabee received five times as many votes as the the next closest candidate who had less than 100 votes. It will be interesting to see how this support will be reported in the media.



When the online polling is factored in, Mitt Romney actually appears to be ahead by a few votes. However, as has been reported in the Baltimore Sun, Romney's campaign worked hard to manipulate those results so the onsite voting is most representative.



UPDATE: I previously mentioned that Romney received less than 100 votes at the Values Voter Straw Poll. Redstate is reporting that, "What makes that even bigger news is that several sources connected to the FRC Action Washington Briefing have said Romney brought in "around 100" people to participate and assist."


Some of those attending are blogging about the experience. You can read what they are saying at the links below. Many of them are pretty committed to specific candidates so expect to see some "push back."



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Mike Huckabee at the Values Voter Summit

The following is an excerpt from Mark Silva's article in the Baltimore Sun about the Values Voter Summit.


“I do not spell G-O-D G-O-P,’’ Huckabee said to cheers. “Our party may be important, but our principles are even more important…. It is time for those of us who call ourselves values voters to pledge our lives, our families, our fortunes and our sacred honor to that which is right and which is eternal.’’

Following on the heels of the GOP’s front-running presidential candidate – the former mayor of New York who asked this audience to overlook their differences with him on abortion – Huckabee made a hard appeal for loyalty to the “culture of life’’ which voters hold dear here. This afternoon, it will be left to the 2,000 people at a Values Voter Summit here and more voting online to decide whether Huckabee’s appeal to principle or Rudy Giuliani’s appeal to pragmatism matters more to them in 2008.

“There are many who will seek out support,’’ Huckabee told the audience. “But it’s important that people sing from their hearts and don’t merely lip synch to our songs…

“There were times… when things amongst us were negotiable,’’ he said. “But some things are not negotiable, the sanctity of life, the definition of marriage… Let us never sacrifice our principles for anybody’s politics – not now, not ever.’’


Click here to read the rest of Silva's article.


Mike Huckabee On Glenn Beck








Governor Huckabee's Band Performs Freebird


Gene Edward Veith On The Republican Candidate Crisis

I have liked Gene Edward Veith ever since the days we were both on campus at Northeastern Oklahoma A & M College. He had this to say about the current Republican candidate crisis:

Christian activists are holding a big conclave in Washington today, trying to figure out what to do about the presidential election. I don't understand why they aren't rallying around Mike Huckabee, whom even the secular media is praising as a candidate, and who is not just trying to get the Christian conservative votes but is a Christian conservative himself. The argument that he can't win is ridiculous at the primary stage. Of course he can't win if people who like him won't vote for him because he can't win. Vote for the person you agree with and maybe he will. Some of the same people who think this way about Huckabee are contemplating a Third Party candidate--do they think he can win?


Click here to read the rest of Veith's article.


Sam Brownback - Out / Steven Colbert - In


Brownback To Pull Plug On Presidential Bid


Polls Show Huckabee Gaining Support


RASMUSSEN REPORTS POLL: HUCKABEE “VIRTUALLY TIED”
FOR SECOND IN IOWA, CLOSING ON ROMNEY
Former Arkansas Governor Leads National Frontrunner Giuliani, McCain


Little Rock, AR – Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee has continued his strong push toward the top of the polls in Iowa, moving into a statistical tie with former U.S. Sen. Fred Thompson and leading national frontrunner Rudy Giuliani by 6 percent, according to a poll released today by the Rasmussen Reports.

Rasmussen Reports, the nation's most accurate polling firm during the 2004 presidential election, indicated Romney attracts 25 percent of likely caucus participants, followed by Thompson at 19 percent and Huckabee at 18 percent, “virtually tied for second.”

“This poll is just the latest in a series that reflect what we have been seeing across Iowa,” Huckabee said. “We are gaining more support and momentum as each day goes by and it’s clear my conservative message is resonating with the people of America.”

Huckabee for President National Campaign Manager Chip Saltsman says these numbers are significant for many reasons, including the fact that Romney has spent far more money than other GOP candidates in Iowa.

“The surge that began with Gov. Huckabee’s stunning second-place finish in the Republican Party of Iowa Straw Poll on Aug. 11 continues as the first-in-the-nation Iowa caucuses approach,” Saltsman said.

The Rasmussen Reports Poll notes that the Iowa race remains “very fluid.”

“Iowans like Mike Huckabee and respect his stand for traditional values, ethical leadership and real reform,” Saltsman said. “They’re going to turn out for him in force on Jan. 3, 2008.”


According to the Rasmussen Report, Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani is the only other Republican in double digits at 13 percent. Arizona Senator John McCain, once considered by some to be the GOP frontrunner, gets just 6 percent of the vote. Kansas Senator Sam Brownback (3 percent), rounds out the field with Congressmen Tom Tancredo (2 percent), Ron Paul (2 percent), and Duncan Hunter (1 percent). Eleven percent (11 percent) are undecided.

A poll summary notes that Romney and Thompson are essentially even among men, but Thompson attracts only 10 percent of the vote from women. In fact, Romney, Huckabee, and Giuliani all outpoll Thompson for the female vote. Huckabee leads among evangelical Christians while Romney leads among those with other religious beliefs.


GOP Candidates Target Each Other


Brownback To Withdraw From Presidential Race

Libby Quaid reports that people close to Sam Brownback are saying he will withdraw from the presidential race tomorrow.


People close to Brownback said it was unlikely he would endorse another candidate on Friday.

It's uncertain how much weight a Brownback endorsement would carry. While the anti-abortion senator is a favorite of religious conservatives, he failed to become their consensus candidate and ranks low in national polls and state surveys.

Still, a nod from Brownback could bolster the conservative credentials of a candidate such as McCain or Huckabee, the rivals who appear most likely to receive his support.

Brownback and McCain are close Senate comrades and have refrained from criticizing one another, instead assailing Romney.

While McCain has a voting record similar to Brownback's on cultural issues, McCain prompts skepticism on the right flank of the party because he isn't a high-profile
crusader against abortion rights and gay marriage. Brownback's backing could signal to Christian conservatives that they can trust McCain.

Campaigning in Spartanburg, S.C., on Thursday, McCain said of Brownback, "I'll miss him in this debate. He's a voice for family. He's a voice for the pro-life movement and community in America."

Huckabee, a Southern Baptist preacher, is another favorite of religious conservatives. But like Brownback, he has struggled to rally that voting bloc around his candidacy. He, too, could benefit from Brownback's backing.

Huckabee, campaigning in Rindge, N.H., declined to comment on Brownback's withdrawal because he hadn't heard it officially.

It's harder to imagine any other Republican in the field getting a Brownback nod, although former Tennessee Sen. Fred Thompson is a possibility. The Kansas senator has bitterly criticized Romney, and Giuliani is disliked by many religious conservatives because of his abortion rights and gay rights positions.


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Political Lunch

Fred Thompson, Hillary Clinton, Barak Obama, Dick Cheney, and Steven Colbert in the news:


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design by Dwayne Hunter