Friday 1 February 2008

The Ladies Perfer Huckabee

http://dyn.politico.com/printstory.cfm?uuid=CEFE5639-3048-5C12-00C476A1E5ACB554


BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — The media called it a “victory lap” for John McCain, touting him as the winner of Wednesday night’s Republican debate.

But for 11 Republican-leaning women in a California conference room, the underdog — former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee — came out ahead.

Arizona Sen. McCain, they said, was snide, and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney was “phony.” Issues were secondary to personality. And hot-button topics like abortion, and even the war in Iraq, were decidedly less important to these women than bread-and-butter concerns like the economy and health care.

“Being a woman, [I think] Huckabee overall best understands what women Republicans or voters want, need and expect,” said Christine, a 32-year-old moderate Republican.

“He seemed more classy and more real,” agreed Pam, a 44-year-old undecided voter.

The women, all residents of Los Angeles County, came together in a nondescript Beverly Hills conference room to watch the debate, evaluate the candidates and talk some serious politics. They were participants in a focus group co-sponsored by Politico and Lifetime Networks, which are partnering to study how women view the presidential candidates.

Politico got to play policeman, watching from behind a thick pane of double-sided glass as the women observed the debate on CNN and discussed their reactions.

California, which has more than 15 million registered voters, is a make-or-break race for Republicans. The state awards 173 delegates, the largest number of any single state. The majority, 153 in total, are doled out by congressional district, turning the state into a hard-fought ground zero for every candidate hoping to pick up delegates.

The focus group here reflected California’s diversity, with participants ranging in age, income and ethnicity. At least three were immigrants, coming from Russia, Hungary and Thailand.

Despite their differences, most felt a Huckaboom at this debate.

Seven out of the 11 women declared Huckabee the winner, even though neither he nor Texas Rep. Ron Paul had anywhere near the airtime of McCain or Romney. After viewing the debate, four of the women — almost half the group — said they had changed their vote from McCain to Huckabee.

The former Arkansas governor won Iowa, but has yet to take another gold in the five subsequent races. The latest polling in California, taken before the debate, showed Huckabee with 11 percent — far behind Romney’s 28 percent and McCain’s 32 percent.

Still, Huckabee has consistently polled better with women than with men: 40 percent to 20 percent in Iowa, for example. His gender gap was smaller in other states but still notable: He won 33 percent of the female vote in South Carolina, compared with 28 percent of the male vote. And in Florida, he pulled 18 percent of women and just 11 percent of men.

McCain, considered the GOP front-runner after his big win in Florida, didn’t score any points with these undecided female voters — mostly because of his personal demeanor during the debate. They felt he was rude, undignified and as canned as a bad pickup line.

In general, the women respected his achievements but felt he was too snide on the debate stage at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in nearby Simi Valley.

Romney, while seen as professional, failed the personality test. “Arrogant,” “phony,” “Stepford wife-ish” and “a snake” were their choice words for the former Massachusetts governor. (Although they all agreed on his good looks.)

Part of his problem seemed to be his wealth. Romney, who made his fortune as chief executive of the private equity firm Bain Capital, is rumored to have contributed as much as $40 million to his own campaign.

“If he became president, I can almost agree that he won’t think of anyone else but himself and the wealthy,” said Eva, 39, a Hispanic who identified herself as a strong Republican.

Romney’s Mormon faith also made some of the women uncomfortable.

“It scares me how much he’s downplayed it,” said Katherine, 42, a small-business owner. “I know if he were to win, the second he’d get into office that would rear its head.”

Overall, issues took a back seat to personal qualities.

But when pressed, the women named immigration and health care as their top concerns.
Health care, they said, is a particularly resonant issue for women, because they have and take care of children.

“We’re going to have kids, some of us do have kids, and we want to make sure they’re taken care of,” said Rita, a 25-year-old moderate Republican. “It’s the general maternal instinct.”

And, as with voters throughout the country, the women’s concerns about a struggling economy far outranked their feelings about the war in Iraq.

One traditionally female issue that didn’t make the list was abortion. The women all said that, while they had their own personal views on the issue, it wasn’t a litmus test. They believed the issue was unlikely to change dramatically either way — no matter who wins the election.

One point of contention was the candidates’ descriptions of retired Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor. When asked if Ronald Reagan was right to appoint O’Connor to the Supreme Court, the candidates generally dodged the question.

“This is a history-making woman, and they all said such terrible things,” said Katherine. “That made me feel like none of them were thinking, 'Well, that’s going to offend some women out there.'”

And although they said they wouldn’t vote for Democratic Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, they respected her historical position.

“I don’t think I’ll vote for her, because I don’t agree with her policies,” said Joy. “But it is a monumental step that a woman as strong as she is has come as far as she has.”

The focus group was chosen and facilitated by Republican pollster Kellyanne Conway of The Polling Company. Democratic pollster Celinda Lake of Lake Research Partners has put together a similar group of undecided women voters to hear the Democratic candidates’ debate in Los Angeles on Thursday night.

Wednesday 16 January 2008

Romney - Sneaky Politics

JANUARY 16, 2008 - 03:20 PM
WHAT DOES $585,000 BUY YOU?
by Team Huckabee
SEND TO A FRIEND
Question: What does $585,000 buy you?

Answer: It bought Mitt Romney backers a smear job against Mike Huckabee orchestrated by Beltway Insiders.


The Club for Growth has an affiliated 527 group, Club for Growth.net, running anti-Mike Huckabee ads in early primary states.

- At least $585,000 in contributions from Mitt Romney financial backers.

- Club for Growth has spent $750,000 against Governor Huckabee in Iowa, South Carolina and Michigan.
Here are donors that have donated both to Club for Growth.net* and Mitt Romney:

Name: John Childs**

Contribution to Beltway Group
$100,000 on 11/16/07

$100,000 on 12/31/07

Contribution to Mitt Romney
$2,100 on 1/8/07


Name: Bob Perry

Contribution to Beltway Group

$200,000 on 12/12/07

Contribution to Mitt Romney
$2,300 on 3/13/07


Name: Kristen Hertel

Contribution to Beltway Group

$25,000 on 12/21/07

$25,000 on 1/02/08

Contribution to Mitt Romney
$1,000 on 2/6/07



Name: Muneer Satter

Contribution to Beltway Group

$25,000 on 12/21/07
$25,000 on 1/02/08

Contribution to Mitt Romney

$2,300 on 2/6/07




Name: Michael Valentine

Contribution to Beltway Group

$40,000 on 1/3/08

Contribution to Mitt Romney

$2,300 on 4/4/07


Name: Travis Anderson

Contribution to Beltway Group

$25,000 on 12/19/07

Contribution to Mitt Romney

$2,100 on 2/8/07


Name: Richard Gaby

Contribution to Beltway Group

$20,000 on 12/19/07

Contribution to Mitt Romney

$1,000 on 2/12/07

* Only represents donors that contributed more than $20,000 to Club for Growth.net in 2007/2008.

** "Boston investor John Childs, who donated $2,100 to Romney in 2007, recently gave 100,000 to the Club for Growth." [Morain, Dan. "Huckabee foes open their wallets for attack ads," The Los Angeles Times. 1 January 2008.]

*** All contributor information obtained from Federal Election Commission's electronic database at www.fec.gov.



Paid for by Huckabee for President, Inc.
www.mikehuckabee.com

Permalink: http://www.mikehuckabee.com/index.cfm?FuseAction=Blogs.View&Blog_id=1198

Romney to Buy Talk Shows

Mitt Romney's VC Firm to Buy Clear Channel
http://www.chrisbrunner.com ^ | December 13th, 2007 | Chris Brunner
Posted on 01/15/2008 3:29:39 PM PST by Blue Collar Republican
http://www.chrisbrunner.com/2007/12/13/mitt-romney-to-buy-clear-channel-communications/

Mitt Romney's VC Firm to Buy Clear Channel 

What would it cost to buy the support of just about every nationally-syndicated neocon talk show host in America? About $19.5 Billion, which is what Mitt Romney's private equity firm, Bain Capital, and Thomas H. Lee Partners have agreed to pay in a leveraged buyout agreement with Clear Channel Communications, the largest radio station owner in the country. This is part of a negotiation that has been pending for over a year.

Clear Channel owns over 1,100 full-power AM, FM, and shortwave radio stations, twelve radio channels on XM Satellite Radio, and more than 30 television stations in the United States. Premiere Radio Networks, which is the largest syndication company in the United States, is a wholly owned subsidiary of Clear Channel and is home to Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, and many others. Sean Hannity recently signed a large multi-market contract with Clear Channel, as well.

The Huckabee Plan

Joe Miller


http://www.evangelicaloutpost.com/archives/004182.html


Issues and Positions

Tax Reform

-Make all tuition for higher education tax-deductible

-Make health insurance tax deductible for individuals and families as it now is for businesses. (Low income families would get tax credits instead of deductions.)

-Preserve and expand President Bush’s tax cuts

-Eliminate the marriage penalty

-Cut taxes on savings

-Eliminate the Death Tax

-Reduce counterproductively high personal and corporate marginal tax rates.

-Encourage "baby boomers" who plan to work into their late 60’s or even beyond by giving them tax breaks, like additional exemptions or a “working senior” deduction.

-Long-term goal: implementation of the FairTax so that American workers keep their entire paycheck, American businesses can compete on a level-playing field with their foreign competitors, and so that we can brings jobs and investment that are currently parked off-shore back to the United States.

Economy

-Subprime mortgage crisis: begin a second round of negotiations with subprime lenders with an eye toward expansion of the “Hope Now” program.

-Cut burdensome red tape that drives up the cost of products and keeps employers from hiring more workers or raising wages.

-Reduce frivolous lawsuits which drive up costs of products and medical care.

-Institute free trade that is fair to America. We will expect our trading partners to live up to their obligations—everyone must play by fair rules.

-Open new markets for American products.

-Ensure the Federal Reserve adapts a pro-growth, low-inflation policy.

-Veto earmarks and unnecessary discretionary spending

Energy Independence

-Implement a national energy security policy which will end our dependence on Middle Eastern oil within ten years by conserving, exploring, and inventing our way to independence in energy.

-pursue all avenues of alternative energy: nuclear, wind, solar, hydrogen, clean coal, biodiesel, and biomass.

-Remove red tape that slows innovation, allow the free market to sort out what makes the most sense economically.

-Set aside a federal research and development budget that will be matched by the private sector to seek the best new products in alternative fuels.

Social Issues

-Support passage of a constitutional amendment to protect the right to life.

-Support passage of a constitutional amendment that defines marriage as a union between one man and one woman.

-Oppose all embryo-destructive research.

-Veto any pro-abortion legislation, including federal funding for Planned Parenthood.

Education

-Make all tuition for higher education tax-deductible

-Support the rights of parents to home school their children

-Support states that want to create more charter schools or implement public school choice.

-Allow states to develop their own benchmarks.

-Work towards a clear distinction between the federal role in assisting and empowering states and in usurping the right of states to carry out the education programs for their students

Healthcare

-Advocate policies that will encourage the private sector to seek innovative ways to bring down costs and improve the free market for health care services.

-Reform medical liability

-Support the adoption of electronic record keeping

-Make health insurance more portable from one job to another

-Expand health savings accounts to include all Americans.

-Making health insurance tax deductible for individuals and families as it now is for businesses. (Low income families would get tax credits instead of deductions.)

-Encourage the states' role as laboratories for new market-based approaches.

Immigration

-Ensure that an interlocking surveillance camera system is installed along the border by July 1, 2010.

-Ensure that the border fence construction is completed by July 1, 2010.

-Increase the number of border patrol agents.

-Fully support all law enforcement personnel tasked with enforcing immigration law.

-Policies that promote or tolerate amnesty will be rejected.

-Propose to provide all illegal immigrants a 120-day window to register with the Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services and leave the country. Those who register and return to their home country will face no penalty if they later apply to immigrate or visit; those who do not return home will be, when caught, barred from future reentry for a period of 10 years.

-This is not a "touchback" provision. Those who leave this country and apply to return from their home country would go to the back of the line.

-Employment is the chief draw for most illegal immigrants and denying them jobs is the centerpiece of an attrition strategy.

-Impose steep fines and penalties on employers that violate the law.

-Institute a universal, mandatory citizenship verification system as part of the normal hiring process.

-Prevent the IRS and the Social Security Administration from accepting fraudulent Social Security numbers or numbers that don't match the employees' names.

-Promote better cooperation on enforcement by supporting legislative measures such as the CLEAR Act, which aims to systematize the relationship between local law and federal immigration officials.

-Encourage immigration-law training for police. Local authorities must be provided the tools, training, and funding they need so local police can turn illegal immigrants over to the federal authorities.

-End exemptions for Mexicans and Canadians to the US-VISIT program, which tracks the arrival and departure of foreign visitors. Since these countries account for the vast majority of foreigners coming here (85 percent), such a policy clearly violates Congress' intent in mandating this check-in/check-out system.

-Reject Mexico's "matricula consular" card, which functions as an illegal-immigrant identification card.

-Inform foreign governments when their former citizens become naturalized U.S. citizens.

-Impose civil and/or criminal penalties on American citizens who illegitimately use their dual status (e.g., using a foreign passport, voting in elections in both a foreign country and the U.S.).

-Eliminate the visa lottery system and the admission category for adult brothers and sisters of U.S. citizens.

-Increase visas for highly-skilled and highly-educated applicants.

-Expedite processing for those who serve honorably in the U.S. Armed Forces.

-Improve our immigration process so that those patiently and responsibly seeking to come here legally will not have to wait decades to share in the American dream.

Judges

-Huckabee's judicial philosophy: "I believes that the Constitution must be interpreted according to its original meaning, and flatly reject the notion of a "living Constitution." The meaning of the Constitution cannot be changed by judicial fiat. The powers delegated to the federal government by the Constitution come from "We the People," and judges have no right to prohibit the people from passing democratically-enacted laws unless we have explicitly authorized them to do so. Nor can vaguely-worded language in the Constitution be used by judges to give them power over subjects the framers never intended our founding document to address. As such, any interpretation of the Constitution that is based on "evolving standards of decency," penumbras, or any other judicial fiction, is antithetical to the rule of law, and must be forcefully challenged."

-Appoint justices and judges who not only share his judicial philosophy (e.g., Chief Justice John Roberts, Justice Antonin Scalia, Justice Clarence Thomas, and Justice Samuel Alito), but who also have established themselves within the conservative legal community as faithful adherents of originalism and textualism.

Social Security

-Allow younger workers the option of personal accounts.

-Allow letting people take the money in their account at retirement and buy an annuity.

-Encourage "baby boomers" who plan to work into their late 60’s or even beyond by giving them tax breaks, like additional exemptions or a “working senior” deduction.

-Since some retirees don’t need their Social Security to retire comfortably, offer them the option of a tax-free lump sum for their children or grandchildren to get when they die, which would delay some payments for decades.

National Sovereignty

-Oppose the Law of the Sea Treaty.

-Oppose the U. N. Convention on the Rights of the Child.

-Oppose the North American Union,.

-Oppose the Kyoto Treaty.

Veteran's Affairs
Veterans will be provided the following "Bill of Rights":

-The right to a mandatory rather than a discretionary mechanism for funding veterans' health care, to eliminate year-to-year uncertainty that the funds they need will be there for them

-The right to obtain full and clear explanation of all benefits and comprehensive assistance in obtaining those benefits.

-The right to have a claim processed within six months.

-The right to the fullest possible accounting of the fate of POW/MIAs and the right to be designated as POW/MIA.

-The right to access state-of-the-art treatment facilities for traumatic brain injuries.

-The right of National Guard and Reserve personnel called to active service to receive the same benefits as active duty veterans.

-The right of disabled veterans to receive both their military retirement and VA compensation.

-The right of wounded Reserve troops to be treated like their active duty counterparts until their claims have been processed.

-The right of wounded veterans and those who have served in combat theaters to a comprehensive GI bill that provides full tuition, books, fees, and living expenses at any institution to which the veteran is accepted.

National Security

-Increase defense spending to six percent of GDP.

-Build new planes, new armed vehicles, new robotic land and air vehicles, new ships all right here in America.

-Recruit and train thousands of new troops and bring our National Guard and Reserves back home. We must increase the size of the U.S. Army and the Marine Corps by about 92,000 troops within two to three years without lowering enlistment standards.

-Improve the nation's aging infrastructure (roads, bridges, water systems, sewer systems, etc.).

-Active-duty forces should not be used for nation building. We must return to our policy of using other government agencies to build schools, hospitals, roads, sewage treatment plants, water filtration systems, electrical facilities, and legal and banking systems.

-If we are required to undertake a large invasion we must use overwhelming force.

-[The GWOT] -- The Commander-in-Chief has an obligation to clearly communicate to the American people the nature of the war we are fighting, especially the goal of the jihadists: to kill every last one of us, destroy civilization as we know it, and to establish a theocratic caliphate without national borders.

-[The GWOT] -- The United States' biggest challenge in the Arab and Muslim worlds is the lack of a viable moderate alternative to radicalism. Although we cannot export democracy we should nurture moderate forces that present an alternative to the jihadists.

-[The GWOT] -- The goal in the Arab and Muslim worlds will be to calibrate a course between maintaining stability and promoting democracy. We must not act too hastily but we must act. Specifically, we can help by aiding or promoting basic sanitation, health care, education, jobs, a free press, and fair court systems within these areas.

-[The GWOT] -- We must reduce our dependence on foreign oil if we are going to defeat jihadism.

-[The GWOT] -- We must strengthen both our human intelligence resources and our military assets in order to eliminate the current threat.

-[Iraq] -- We should not withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq any faster than General David Petraeus, the top U.S. commander there, recommends. Troops must be brought home based on the conditions on the ground, not on artificial timetables.

-[The Kurds] -- We must encourage Turkey to continue to improve life for its Kurds, and we must encourage the Turkish Kurds to address their grievances through the political process, including through the 20 deputies currently representing them in parliament.

-[The Kurds] -- We should be willing to provide the Turks with actionable intelligence to go after the PKK (Kurdistan Workers' Party) with limited air strikes and commando raids. A even better method would be to train and equip Iraqi Kurds to fight the PKK and rid themselves of this menace.

-[Iran] -- The military option for dealing with Iran should not be taken off the table.

-[Iran] -- Iran is a nation that has to be contained, just as the Soviet Union was during the Cold War. In order to contain Iran, it is essential to win in Iraq. We cannot allow Iran to push its theocracy into Iraq and then expand it further west.

-[Iran] -- We must be as aggressive diplomatically as we have been militarily since 9/11. We must intensify our diplomatic efforts with China, India, Russia, South Korea, and European states and persuade them to put more economic pressure on Iran.

-[Iran] -- Despite the protestations of Congressional Democrats, we should support and continue President Bush's new sanctions against Iran, his decision to designate Iran's Revolutionary Guards as a proliferator of weapons of mass destruction, and the classifications of al Quds force as a supporter of terrorism. We must also encourage our state and private pension funds to divest themselves of Iran-related assets.

-[Iran] -- Despite the protestations of Russia, we should move forward with the current plan to set up ten missile interceptors in Poland and a radar system in the Czech Republic to protect Europe from Iranian missiles.

-[Iran] -- We should reestablish diplomatic relations with Iran but only after the Iranians have made concessions that serve to create a less hostile relationship.

-[Iran] -- Iran must not be allowed to acquire nuclear weapons. However, a range of incentives (e.g., trade and economic assistance, full diplomatic relations, and security guarantees) should be offered before moving forward with military action. Before we put our troops at risk in Iran, we should exhaust all diplomatic and economic options.

-[Pakistan] -- On September 12, 2001, Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf agreed to sever his relationship with the Taliban and let us fight al Qaeda inside Pakistan. But distracted by Iraq, we have since allowed him to go back on his word. We should pressure him to remain firm in his commitment to us.

-[Pakistan] -- Because the next attack on the U.S. will have been planned in Pakistan, we must go after al Qaeda's safe havens in that country. The threat of an attack on us is far graver than the risk that a quick and limited strike against al Qaeda would bring extremists to power in Pakistan.

-[Pakistan] -- Musharraf has spent far more energy and enthusiasm sidelining the moderate Pakistani forces (like former Prime Ministers Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif) than he has in going after religious extremists and terrorists. We must have a "Pakistan policy" rather than just a "Musharraf policy."

-[Pakistan] -- We must use our friendly ties with India to encourage and help it improve its relationship with Pakistan and to push for increased trade and cooperation between the two countries, all to bring greater stability to the South Asian region.

Monday 14 January 2008

Dobson's "NO" on Thompson

WASHINGTON, Oct. 19 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- After a week of fighting over who is the true conservative candidate in the race, the Republican presidential frontrunners are in Washington this weekend trying to win over evangelical leaders at the Family Research Council's Values Voter Summit. Despite what conservative Christian John Stemberger called "pandering" by the candidates, the GOP field, with its spotty records, flip flops and unimpressive campaign performances isn't catching on with this critical Republican base. [Washington Post, 10/19/07] According to a CBS poll released yesterday, white evangelicals "feel that Democrats, not Republicans, are paying more attention to their top issues," and a recent Pew poll showed that support from young evangelicals is up for Democrats. (CBS News, 10/18/07, Washington Times, 10/2/07)

No one has questioned the conservative bona fides of these Republicans more than Focus on the Family's James Dobson, who will be honored during the summit at a gala dinner Saturday night. Dobson said he would rather not vote at all than vote for Giuliani, hopes he won't "get stuck" with McCain, has resisted supporting Romney, and said Thompson was "Not for me!" Disappointed with his options, Dobson told Sean Hannity earlier this month that "there's still a possibility that one of those other candidates, a dark horse, could come from nowhere." (Fox News Hannity and Colmes, 10/8/2007) He even wrote in a New York Times op-ed earlier this month that conservative leaders may abandon the Republican presidential nominee in favor of a third-party candidate in 2008 - a clear sign of GOP problems ahead. (New York Times, 10/4/07)

"If the GOP candidates can't gain the support and trust of key Republican constituencies they need to get elected, how can they possibly expect voters to trust them to lead our country?" said DNC Press Secretary Stacie Paxton. "As they hemorrhage support, the GOP frontrunners seem willing to do or say anything to get elected, but even Party leaders like James Dobson are questioning the trustworthiness of candidates who waffle and feign to score political points."

Conservative Leaders Iffy on Republican Frontrunners

Dobson Will Not Vote for Giuliani. In an op-ed posted on the conservative website WorldNetDaily.com Dobson wrote, "My conclusion from this closer look at the current GOP front-runner comes down to this: Speaking as a private citizen and not on behalf of any organization or party, I cannot, and will not, vote for Rudy Giuliani in 2008. It is an irrevocable decision. If given a Hobson's -- Dobson's? -- choice between him and Sens. Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama, I will either cast my ballot for an also-ran -- or if worse comes to worst -- not vote in a presidential election for the first time in my adult life. My conscience and my moral convictions will allow me to do nothing else." (WorldNetDaily.com, 5/17/07)

Tony Perkins Doesn't See Giuliani As the GOP Answer. Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, said to CNN of Rudy Giuliani, "I cannot, under any circumstance, see the conservative base of the Republican Party being excited and working for a presidential candidate that is pro-abortion." (New York Times, 10/19/07)


Dobson Prays Republicans "Won't Get Stuck" With McCain. "James Dobson, founder of the Colorado Springs-based Focus on the Family as well as the Focus Action cultural action organization set up specifically to provide a platform for informing and rallying constituents, came out strongly against a McCain candidacy during a radio interview. Dobson said in response to a statement McCain made on gay marriage, "Speaking as a private individual, I would not vote for John McCain under any circumstances....Dobson added that there are a lot of other things, pointing out that McCain is not in favor of traditional marriage, and concluded saying, I pray that we won't get stuck with him." (Associated Press, 1/17/06)

Tony Perkins Calls McCain "Questionable on the Issues". To MSNBC earlier this month, Perkins raises doubts about McCain's position on abortion, saying "McCain is questionable on the issue." (New York Times, 10/19/07)

Tony Perkins: Romney Log Cabin Letter "Quite Disturbing." "In the 1994 letter addressed to the Log Cabin Republicans, a gay Republican group, Romney strongly argued for gay rights. 'We must make equality for gays and lesbians a mainstream concern,' Romney wrote, adding that he would be more aggressive than Senator Kennedy in pushing for gay rights...'This is quite disturbing,' said Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, who had praised Mr. Romney as a champion of traditional values at the group's conference in late September. 'This type of information is going to create a lot of problems for Governor Romney. He is going to have a hard time overcoming this.'" (New York Times, 12/9/07)



Hemming and Hawing, Dobson Avoids Supporting Romney. In response to conservative commentator Sean Hannity's assertion that "at the end of the day, you are now saying that the only top-tier candidate you would support would be Mitt Romney?" Dobson replied "Sean, I don't agree with that statement, either. We have reports that were given in Salt Lake that indicated that it is highly unlikely that anyone is going to capture the nomination the first week of February. They're just not going to be able to get that number of votes. And who knows what will happen?" (Fox News Hannity and Colmes, 10/8/2007)



Dobson Says Thompson is "Not For Me!" According to the AP, in a private email Dobson wrote, "'Isn't Thompson the candidate who is opposed to a Constitutional amendment to protect marriage, believes there should be 50 different definitions of marriage in the U.S., favors McCain-Feingold, won't talk at all about what he believes, and can't speak his way out of a paper bag on the campaign trail?' Dobson wrote. 'He has no passion, no zeal, and no apparent 'want to.' And yet he is apparently the Great Hope that burns in the breasts of many conservative Christians? Well, not for me, my brothers. Not for me!'" (Associated Press, 9/20/07)

Dobson's "NO" on McCain

A prominent Christian leader whose radio and magazine outreaches are solidly in support of biblically-based marriages – and keeps in touch with millions of constituents daily – says he cannot consider Arizona Sen. John McCain a viable candidate for president.

"Speaking as a private individual, I would not vote for John McCain under any circumstances," said James Dobson, founder of the Colorado Springs-based Focus on the Family as well as the Focus Action cultural action organization set up specifically to provide a platform for informing and rallying constituents.

Dobson, who always is careful to note that he's not speaking for the non-profit ministry, which cannot advocate for or against candidates legally, also doesn't hesitate to state his personal opinions on social or political issues and agendas.

Several times he's talked to Republicans, the traditionally conservative political party, about the need to maintain the values of that large part of the U.S. population, or lose the support of those people.

His most recent comments came during an interview on the Jerry Johnson Live program on KCBI 90.9 FM.

The show host noted that pro-family conservatives already are thinking about the next cycle of leadership in the United States, which will be determined in the 2008 presidential and congressional elections. He also noted that McCain and New York mayor Rudy Giuliani appear to be the leaders.

Then he asked Dobson to listen to a statement from McCain and respond.

"I think, uh … I think that gay marriage should be allowed if there's a ceremony kind of thing, if you wanna call it that … I don't have any problem with that," McCain says.

"Dr. Dobson, would you be comfortable with someone like John McCain as the … conservative or Republican candidate for president?" Johnson asked.

"Well, let me say that I am not in the office. I'm in the little condo so I can speak for myself and not for Focus on the Family," Dobson said in rejecting McCain's leadership.

He noted that legislation he'd just been discussing on the program, regarding an attempt by Democrat leaders in Congress to create obstacles for ministries such as Focus to reach constituents with action messages about pending legislation, is being supported by McCain, too.

"That came from McCain, and the McCain Feingold Bill kept us from telling the truth right before elections … and there are a lot of other things. He's not in favor of traditional marriage, and I pray that we won't get stuck with him," Dobson said.

The provisions of the new congressional proposal, hidden deep inside a plan to reform lobbying rules to eliminate the many recent scandals involving members of Congress, would require pro-family groups to provide documentation of their actions to the government any time they try to spark any "grass-roots" action.

Phone calls, personal visits, e-mails, magazines, broadcasts, phone banks, appearances, travel, fundraising and other items all would be subject to government tabulation, verification and audits, Dobson said during a recent program. "On and on it goes."

"Clearly, the objective here is to hide what goes on from the public and punish and silence those of us who would talk about what our representatives are doing," Dobson said of the plan by Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev. American Family Association Chairman Donald Wildmon, Family Research Council President Tony Perkins and American Values President Gary Bauer joined Dobson in urging listeners to flood Capitol Hill with phone calls demanding those speech limits be removed.

Bauer said the telephone number to call is: 202-224-3121.

Focus also has begun an online petition, at Focuspetitions.com.

Wildmon characterized the Washington proposal as a message to the American public: "We don't want to hear from you, and this is the way we're going to handle it."

Dobson also earlier scolded Republicans for blaming the 2006 election victories by Democrats in many races across the country on conservatives.

"Dick Armey emerged from four years in the wilderness to blame conservative Christians for Tuesday's defeat. They were, he said, 'too involved' with the party. He can't be serious! Someone should tell him that without the support of that specific constituency, John Kerry would be president and the Republicans would have fallen into a black hole in '04," Dobson said in a story WND reported earlier.

"Values Voters are not going to carry the water for the Republican Party if it ignores their deeply held convictions and beliefs," he said.

"Republican leaders in Congress during this term apparently never understood, or they forgot, why Ronald Reagan was so loved and why he is considered one of our greatest presidents. If they hope to return to power in '08, they must rediscover the conservative principles that resonated with the majority of Americans in the 1980s – and still resonate with them today. Failure to do so will be catastrophic," Dobson said.

Dobson noted he'd been interviewed by U.S. News and World Report after the 2004 elections and warned if Republicans squandered their opportunity, they would pay a price at the polls in either 2008 or 2006.

Dobson's predictions about values and the Republican Party go back even further than that, too.

In 1998 he told a reporter that the GOP was in danger of losing its ability to "claim to speak for those of us with deep moral convictions."

He said at that time the party has "ignored the moral issues year after year, term after term" and said at that time it was "time to fish or cut bait."

At that time he also warned the GOP Christians and conservatives "will abandon them if they continue to ignore the most important issues."

Dobson's "NO" on Giuliani

ELECTION 08: Dobson says he wouldn't vote for Giuliani
By Michael Foust
May 18, 2007

EDITORS' NOTE: This story is part of a regular series of stories focusing on the most recent news about the presidential candidates' views on faith and morality.


NASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP)--Focus on the Family's James Dobson May 17 became at least the second major Christian conservative leader in recent weeks to say he would not vote for Republican presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani in a general election.

Writing in a WorldNetDaily column, Dobson said Giuliani's liberal positions on abortion and "gay rights," as well as his personal life, should trouble conservatives. Richard Land, head of the Southern Baptist Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, also has said he would not vote for Giuliani in a general election.

"Speaking as a private citizen and not on behalf of any organization or party, I cannot, and will not, vote for Rudy Giuliani in 2008," Dobson wrote. "It is an irrevocable decision. If given a Hobson's -– Dobson's? -– choice between him and Sens. Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama, I will either cast my ballot for an also-ran –- or if worse comes to worst -– not vote in a presidential election for the first time in my adult life. My conscience and my moral convictions will allow me to do nothing else."

Giuliani, who leads the GOP field in most national polls but trails in the latest polls in Iowa and New Hampshire, is seeking to become the first pro-choice Republican nominee for president since 1976.

"How could Giuliani say with a straight face that he 'hates' abortion, while also seeking public funding for it?" Dobson asked. "How can he hate abortion and contribute to Planned Parenthood in 1993, 1994, 1998 and 1999? And how was he able for many years to defend the horrible procedure by which the brains are sucked from the heads of viable, late-term, un-anesthetized babies? Those beliefs are philosophically and morally incompatible. What kind of man would even try to reconcile them?"

Giuliani, Dobson said, "opposed the Marriage Protection Amendment" in Congress and supports domestic partnerships for homosexual couples. The former New York mayor also has been married three times, Dobson noted, "and his second wife was forced to go to court to keep his mistress out of the mayoral mansion while the Giuliani family still lived there."

"Unlike some other Republican presidential candidates, Giuliani appears not to have remorse for cheating on his wife," Dobson wrote.

Land said on MSNBC's "Hardball with Chris Matthews" May 10 that he would not support Giuliani in a general election.

"I don't think I could sell [Giuliani] to most [Southern Baptists and evangelicals], and I wouldn't try," Land said. "I would say, 'Vote your values, vote your beliefs and vote your convictions,' and have to leave it to them to connect the dots. I don't endorse candidates, but I'm negatively endorsing [Giuliani]."

GIULIANI AND ADOPTION -- Giuliani said during the second GOP presidential debate May 15 that under his administration as New York mayor, adoptions in the city increased 133 percent and abortions declined 16 percent. Although those stats generally are true, The New York Times reported May 17, they "mirrored national trends," and adoptions were increasing before he took office.

Additionally, The Times said, the adoptions statistic refers only to "city agencies involving children in the foster care system" and does not refer to private adoptions. Giuliani is credited with helping reform a broken New York foster care system by creating the Administration for Children's Services, which helped "improve caseworker responses to reports of neglect" and helped find foster care children permanent homes. But "little if anything in the public record suggests that he was promoting adoption as an alternative to abortion," The Times story said.

As mayor, the newspaper reported, Giuliani "continued a strong tradition of supporting abortion rights, including using public money to provide poor women with abortions, as well as contraceptive services."

Maria Comella, a spokesman for Giuliani's campaign, said Giuliani's creation of the Administration for Children's Services, his implementation of welfare reform and other initiatives helped contribute to an increase in adoptions.

"When you're creating an environment that encourages adoption as a choice that will naturally lend itself to decreasing the number of abortions," Comella told The Times.

HUCKABEE SAYS ABORTION ISSUE 'CRITICAL' -- Would Republican candidate and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee consider a vice presidential slot alongside a pro-choice presidential nominee? He's not sure, saying he'd have to think "long and hard" before making a decision to such an invitation.

"This is an issue to me that is very critical," he said, according to the Associated Press. "It's one of the reasons that I got into politics because I believe the manner in which we treat innocent life and the matter in which we respect human life, at whatever stage ... is an incredibly powerful statement about who we are as a people."

Abortion, he said, "is not just some peripheral political position."

CLINTON VIDEO CRITICIZED -- Some pro-life Catholics are criticizing Hillary Clinton's campaign for releasing a five-minute video showing her in a photo side-by-side with Mother Theresa. The late Catholic nun was a staunch pro-lifer, and in 1994 -- with the Clintons in attendance -- delivered a memorable speech to the National Prayer Breakfast where she called abortion the "greatest destroyer of peace today." Conservatives applauded. The Clintons did not.

"And if we accept that a mother can kill even her own child, how can we tell other people not to kill one another?" she said, according to a transcript. "... Please don't kill the child. I want the child. Please give me the child. I am willing to accept any child who would be aborted and to give that child to a married couple who will love the child and be loved by the child."

Joseph Cella, president of Fidelis, a pro-life Catholic organization, said it is "wholly inappropriate, disrespectful and disturbing" for the Clinton campaign to be using the picture.

"Mother Teresa tirelessly fought to protect unborn children, while Hillary Clinton staunchly supports abortion on demand in all nine months of pregnancy, including partial birth abortion and taxpayer funding of abortion," he said in a statement.
--30--

Saturday 12 January 2008

WHY HUCKBEE?



Some of Gov. Mike Huckabee's Political Experience...

  • Governor of Arkansas from 1996-2007.
  • Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas from 1993-1996.
  • Re-elected in Arkansas four times.
  • Chairman of the National Governors Association from 2005-2006.
  • Chairman of the Education Committee of the States from 2004-2006.
  • More leadership experience and accomplishments than any other candidate running, Republican or Democrat.

  • Some of Gov. Mike Huckabee's Awards...
  • Named one of the five best governors in America by Time Magazine, 2005.
  • Named a "Distinguished Public Health Legislator of the Year" in 2005.
  • Named a top "Doer, Dreamer & Driver" by Government Technology magazine, after leading AR to a top 10 finish in the 2004 Digital States Survey.
  • American Association of Retired Person's Impact Award, 2005.
  • Music for Life Award by the National Association of Music Merchant, 2007.
  • Southern Region Runner of the Year, Road Runners Club of America, 2005.
  • Arkansas Outdoor Hall of Fame, 2000.
  • Athlete of the Week, United States of America Track and Field.
  • American Sportfishing Association's Man of the Year, 1997.
    Gov. Mike Huckabee on the Issues...

    Sanctity of Life:
  • Supports the passage of a constitutional amendment to protect the right to life.
  • Roe v. Wade should be over-turned.
  • Helped pass Arkansas' Unborn Child Amendment, which requires the state to do whatever it legally can to protect life.
  • As Governor of Arkansas, Mike banned partial birth abortion, required parental notification, required that a woman give informed consent before having an abortion, allowed a woman to have her baby and leave the child safely at a hospital, and made it a crime for an unborn child to be injured or murdered during an attack on his mother.
  • Attended the Arkansas March for Life every year while he was governor.
  • Opposes research on embryonic stem cells. Supports adult stem cell research.
  • Every child deserves a quality education, first-rate health care, decent housing in a safe neighborhood, and clean air and drinking water.

    Taxes/Economy:
  • Mike cut taxes and fees almost 100 times in Arkansas, saving the taxpayers almost $380 million. He left a surplus of nearly $850 million, which he urged should go back to the people in the form of either a tax rebate or tax cut.
  • Mike grew the Arkansas economy at a rate higher than the national average.
  • Roads in Arkansas were ranked as some of the nation's worst before Mike took office. Roads in Arkansas are now ranked as some of the nation's most improved.
  • Our massive deficit is not due to Americans' being under-taxed, but to the government's over-spending.
  • Achieving and maintaining a balanced federal budget is an important and worthy goal necessary to our long-term economic well-being.
  • To control spending, Mike believes that the President should have the line-item veto.
  • We need to completely eliminate ALL federal income and payroll taxes.
  • Supports the Fair Tax. Expert analyses have shown that the FairTax lowers the lifetime tax burden of all of us: single or married; working or retired; rich, poor or middle class. The FairTax will instantly make American products 12 to 25% more competitive because the cost of those goods will no longer be inflated by corporate taxes, costs of tax compliance, and Social Security matching payments.

    Education and the Arts:
  • Music and the arts are not extraneous, extra-curricular, or expendable - they are essential. It is crucial that children flex both the left and right sides of the brain.
  • Art and music are as important as math and science because our future economy depends on a creative generation.
  • Music has always been an important part of Mike's life. He still plays bass guitar in his band, Capitol Offense.
  • The study of music improves math scores, spatial reasoning and abstract thinking.
  • As Chairman of the Education and Arts Commission of the States, Mike created a two-year initiative called "The Arts - A Lifetime of Learning," which promotes the benefits of arts education to all fifty states.
  • As Governor of Arkansas, Mike passed landmark legislation to provide music and art instruction by certified teachers for all Arkansas children in grades one through six.
  • We need to judge the success of our schools by the results we obtain, not by the revenue we spend.
  • Test scores rose dramatically in Arkansas thanks to Mike's education reforms.
  • Before Mike was Governor, Arkansas' education quality was ranked 48th in the nation. Arkansas' overall education quality is now ranked 8th best in the nation thanks to Mike's education reforms. The number of students taking advanced placement classes grew by leaps and bounds.
  • To attract top talent, Mike raised teachers' salaries from among the lowest in the nation to among the most competitive.
  • Strong supporter of the rights of parents to home school their children, of creating more charter schools, and of public school choice.
  • Mike is proud that his three children attended public schools from K through twelve, as did he and his wife.
  • We should provide bonuses and forgive student loans for high-performing teachers to work in low-performing schools.
  • In addition to his gubernatorial experience, Mike has significant national experience in education policy. He was Chairman of the National Governors Association from 2005-2006 and also Chairman of the Education Committee of the States from 2004-2006, working with governors, legislators, and education chiefs from all fifty states to advance education policy and conduct research on effective trends in education.
  • Regarding "No Child Left Behind," Mike believes that states must be allowed to develop their own benchmarks.
    Energy Independence:
  • The first thing Mike will do as President is send Congress his comprehensive plan for energy independence. We will achieve energy independence by the end of Mike's second term. The Huckabee Administration will be remembered as the time when we finally, finally achieved energy independence.
  • Achieving energy independence is vital to achieving success both in the war on terror and in globalization. Energy independence will help guarantee both our safety and our prosperity.
  • We have to explore, we have to conserve, and we have to pursue all avenues of alternative energy: nuclear, wind, solar, hydrogen, clean coal, biodiesel, and biomass.
  • We are so pathetically behind the curve right now that federal spending for energy research and development is only 40% of what it was in 1979. Our efforts are haphazard and often pointless: today we have six million flex-fuel vehicles built to run on biodiesel or on E85, which is 85% ethanol, but only 1,413 pumps for those fuels in a country with 170,000 gas stations.
  • Oil addiction is killing us. None of us would write a check to Osama bin Laden, slip it in a Hallmark card and send it off to him. But that's what we're doing every time we pull into a gas station. We're paying for both sides in the war on terror - our side with our tax dollars, the terrorists' side with our gas dollars.
  • Our dependence on foreign oil has forced us to support repressive regimes, to conduct our foreign policy with one hand tied behind our back. It's time, it's past time, to untie that hand and reach out to moderate Muslims with both hands. Oil has not just shaped our foreign policy, it has deformed it. When Mike makes foreign policy, he wants to treat Saudi Arabia the same way he'll treat Sweden, and that requires us to be energy independent.
  • If we are energy independent, we will be able not just to take care of our own needs and protect our economy, we will also create jobs and grow our economy by developing technologies that we can sell to the rest of the world to meet their needs.
  • Achieving energy independence will make us safer and more prosperous, and is yet another way that Mike intends to lift America up.

    Health Care:
  • Helped 70,000 uninsured children in Arkansas receive health care coverage.
  • The health care system in this country is irrevocably broken, in part because it is only a "health care" system, not a "health" system.
  • We don't need universal health care mandated by federal edict.
  • We do need to get serious about preventive health care.
  • Advocates policies that will encourage the private sector to seek innovative ways to bring down costs.
  • When Mike's President, Americans will have more control of their health care options, not less.
    Crisis Management:
  • During the massive emergency of Hurricane Katrina, when local, state, and federal governments were in melt-down, Mike stepped forward and directed the rescue and relief of 75,000 victims.
  • Mike will remove FEMA from the Department of Homeland Security and restore it to Cabinet status, so that the Director reports directly to him. Mike's FEMA Director will have sterling credentials, including extensive, hands-on experience in disaster response.
  • As Governor, Mike has dealt with severe ice storms and tornadoes and other emergencies.
  • Mike's crisis management ability is one of the reasons Time magazine named him one of America's five best governors.

    Some of Gov. Mike Huckabee's Endorsements...
  • Chuck Norris (movie star, conservative writer, and martial arts expert)
  • Jerry Ross (Pro-Life Catholic Congress)
  • Scott Brannan (Christian Homseschool Network)
  • Millie Rice (Washington Republican National Hispanic Assembly)
  • Florida State Speaker of the House Marco Rubio
  • Florida State Representative David Rivera
  • Florida State Majority Leader Daniel Webster
  • Florida Senator Alex Diaz de la Protilla
  • Former South Carolina Governor David Beasley
  • Arkansas Minority Leader Michael Lamoureux
  • Arkansas Republican Party Chairman Dennis Milligan
  • Arkansas Republican National Committewoman Reta Hamilton
  • Virginia House Speaker William J. Howell
  • Former Wyoming Governor Jim Geringer
  • Hall of Fame baseball player Mr. Bob Feller
  • Ric Flair (professional wrestler)
  • New Hampshire National Education Association
  • Home School Legal Defense Association PAC
  • Georgia Right to Life PAC
  • Michigan Chooses Life PAC
  • Montana Right to Life PAC
  • Dallas Morning News
  • Machinists and Aerospace Workers Union
  • Republican Sportshooters Association

    Click here for full list of endorsements.

    For more information on Mike Huckabee, visit:
    Mike Huckabee for President

    Facebook Group:
    Mike Huckabee for President 2008!

    If you want to support Mike...

    Forward this message to everyone you know! Copy and paste the following into a new note/blog/bulletin:

  • Tuesday 8 January 2008

    THIS IS HUCKABEE - WATCH

    Janet Huckabee - Woman of Steel

    http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-janet8jan08,1,2929953.story?coll=la-headlines-nation&ctrack=4&cset=true


    Los Angeles Times

    She's Huckabee's staunchest supporter

    The candidate's wife, Janet, doesn't like to get in front of the cameras, but she's not shy -- she's one of the only spouses in this race to have her own experience running for office.


    January 8, 2008

    MANCHESTER, N.H. — As the Mike Huckabee campaign prepared to air a television advertisement attacking Mitt Romney in the last days before the Iowa caucuses, one crucial player argued strenuously against the spot. Her name was Janet Huckabee.

    Mike Huckabee would eventually announce at a news conference that he was overruling most of his advisors and would not air the ad. He described this as an act of conscience, but he was also bowing to the wishes of his wife of 33 years.

    "I told him, 'I don't feel comfortable with you doing this,' " she said in an interview. "I kind of always knew he'd come to his senses."

    In the Republican presidential contest, Janet Huckabee is at once the least-known of the candidates' wives, and perhaps the most politically experienced. She and President Clinton, the husband of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, share the distinction of being the only spouses on either side of the race who have run for office themselves.

    Janet Huckabee lost a bid to be Arkansas secretary of state in 2002, even as her husband, on the same ticket, won reelection. She and her opponent engaged in negative attacks, and the campaign left scars, by her own account. She says she learned from the experience, and now appears to be applying those lessons behind the scenes.

    Aides say she is one of the most effective and determined fundraisers in a campaign that is short of money. Her husband has described her, along with national chairman Ed Rollins and campaign manager Chip Saltsman, as his closest advisors in a campaign that has fewer executive staff than its rival camps.

    Her role on the campaign trail, while small, has been growing. Janet Huckabee, who is on leave from an emergency-management job at the American Red Cross, has begun introducing her husband at campaign events, and at one Des Moines rally, even danced with Saltsman while her husband played with a band. When Mike Huckabee jetted to California to appear on "The Tonight Show" hours before the Iowa caucuses, Janet Huckabee filled in for him at campaign events.

    About 2 inches taller than her husband and more athletic, Janet Huckabee cuts a nontraditional figure. When Mike Huckabee works crowds, she sometimes helps clear a path. She speaks with a stronger Arkansas twang than her husband, and more colloquially. At one rally, she described the prospect of becoming first lady as "too cool."

    For the most part, she prefers to be out of camera range. When Huckabee gave his victory speech Thursday night in Iowa, the woman behind him in the TV images was not his wife but Gena Norris, the model-actress wife of celebrity Huckabee endorser Chuck Norris.

    "I'm not the belle of the ball," Janet Huckabee said.

    The Huckabees met in junior high school in their hometown of Hope, Ark. Mike Huckabee likes to talk about how he was raised by poor parents in a small rented house, but Janet Huckabee had it worse. Her father abandoned the family; her mother raised Janet and four siblings.

    Mike Huckabee has written that he was attracted to her integrity and her physicality. Janet Huckabee, at a sliver under 5 foot 10, was an all-district basketball player and track star who competed fiercely. "My coach used to say I'd argue with a fence post," she recalled.

    They married at 18 and went off to college, but within a year she was diagnosed with cancer of the spine. Doctors told her she might not walk again. After surgery and radiation therapy, she recovered.

    In Arkansas, she became well-known for her physical courage. During her time as first lady, she tracked bears, hunted rattlesnakes, jumped out of a plane, Jet-Skied the Arkansas River and, on a lark, did some bungee jumping.

    In 2002, Republican Party officials, without a candidate for secretary of state, asked her to run. "I wanted people to have a choice," she said. She started behind in the polls and stayed there. "She was very negative and criticized me personally because she didn't have a public record," recalls her opponent, Charlie Daniels, who attacked her as well. Janet Huckabee says the race was very difficult, in part because she and her husband were on the same ballot.

    The Huckabees are a tightknit clan, and the presidential campaign is a family affair. Two of the couple's three children, in addition to their daughter-in-law, have been paid employees of the campaign, according to Federal Election Commission filings. Janet Huckabee has given touches of home to the campaign bus, even bringing the family's three dogs on board.

    Mike Huckabee likes to tell audiences that he enjoys hearing his wife talk about him on the stump, because she is never so kind at home. The former Arkansas governor says his rivals are wasting their money on negative ads because "my wife will tell you for free that I'm a bum."

    This is not entirely a joke, friends of the couple say. His talking, for instance, sometimes seems to try her patience.

    "I think sometimes literally we talk things to death. I say: 'Let's quit talking about it. Let's go do it,' " she said.

    Shortly after Mike Huckabee announced he was pulling the Romney ad, she retreated to what she thought was the quiet of the campaign's Des Moines headquarters.

    Instead, she was nearly run over by a half-dozen cameramen who were interviewing her husband. She made an athletic leap to get out of the way, and shook her head.

    "I thought this area was supposed to be private," she said.

    joe.mathews@latimes.com

    Monday 7 January 2008

    Illegal Aliens Scared of Huckabee??????

    Mexicans fear Huckabee

    By Jeremy Schwartz | Monday, January 7, 2008, 10:58 AM

    A week ago, most Mexicans had never heard of Mike Huckabee. After the former Baptist minister’s victory in Iowa, many here now view Huckabee as a danger. Huckabee is generally seen as the most conservative of the Republican candidates and as such, the toughest on immigration (Mitt Romney might have something to say about that characterization).

    Here’s how this morning’s Reforma newspaper analyzed Huckabee’s victory:

    “The triumph of Mike Huckabee in the Iowa caucus is not good news for Mexico. It happens that the ex-governor of Arkansas … is winning supporters in great part through his plan to seal the border with Mexico with a wall and more Border Patrol. He also has the support of such “wonderful” people as James Gilchrist, founder of the anti-immigrant Minuteman movement and the actor Chuck Norris, who played the role of a violent Texas Ranger.”

    In the Milenio newspaper, columnist Diego Petersen Farah writes, “Huckabee’s position on immigration is absolutely radical…Without a doubt, for Mexico and Latin America in general, Barack Obama would be a much more empathetic president, although not free of problems.”

    Antics that Provide RESULTS!

    Huckabee has history of winning support, or at least attention, with 'bumper sticker' style

    The Associated Press
    Monday, January 7, 2008
    LITTLE ROCK, Arkansas: Mike Huckabee's offbeat antics — what some would call stunts — helped propel him to the front of the Republican presidential pack after a decade honing that "bumper sticker" style as governor of Arkansas.

    This is a man who moved with his wife into a triple-wide trailer while the governor's mansion was being renovated. Who wedded her again, before a crowd at a sports arena, to show support for a marriage law he had just signed. Who, five weeks into Arkansas' top job, worked a day in the state motor vehicle office sporting a "Cashier Trainee" tag before launching and winning a fight to streamline the agency.

    During his decade as governor of Arkansas, Huckabee's style drew criticism from opponents who bristled at his lighthearted approach to serious public policy debates. But it also got the attention and often the support of voters Huckabee needed most.

    Transferred to the opening round of the 2008 presidential nominating contest, Huckabee's wit charmed even his Republican opponents — before they saw him as a threat. Among those listening to the affable Arkansas governor were evangelical Christians, who on Thursday night helped propel Huckabee past millionaire Mitt Romney to win the race's first test of strength, the Iowa caucuses.

    Touching down a day later in New Hampshire, Huckabee tried to reassure skeptics in a famously independent northeastern state that holds its primary on Tuesday.

    "Being president is a serious job. Running this country is serious business. The issues we face are serious," he told about 175 people in Henniker, New Hampshire, on Friday. "The reason I have fun is because I love America."

    By that reasoning, he adored Arkansas.

    Huckabee's antics earned criticism from lawmakers and groans from reporters, but helped the Republican win re-election twice in a Democratic-leaning state.

    "Here in Arkansas, obviously, he knew coming in with one of the most heavily Democratic legislatures in the country he would have to have a strategy of going around the Legislature, around some of the traditional media, around some of the traditional power makers in politics," former Huckabee aide Rex Nelson said. "He had a superb ability at doing that."

    Jay Barth, a political scientist at Hendrix College in Conway, Arkansas, said Huckabee's gimmicks in national politics echo those in Arkansas because they were met with criticism but helped Huckabee win over the voters he needed. In Iowa that meant evangelical Christians; in Arkansas, rural white voters.

    Barth cited Huckabee's opening campaign ad for president, a tongue-in-cheek spot that featured an endorsement by action star and Internet cult hero Chuck Norris.

    "Most of these gimmicks all said the same thing: 'I am one of you. I get the entertainment value of Chuck Norris. I want to celebrate Christmas. I'm sick of negative ads and I know you are too,'" said Barth, a member of the state Democratic committee.

    Huckabee's penchant for gimmicks to get his message out began with his first year in office, 1996, when he traveled the Arkansas River by bass boat to drum up support for a one-eighth of 1 percent sales tax for conservation efforts.

    Months after his one-day stint at a state motor vehicle office, Huckabee successfully fought to drop annual vehicle inspections and streamline renewals for driver's licenses and car tags.

    In 2001, Huckabee created a "tax me more" fund to chide legislators who suggested targeted tax increases to offset $142 million in budget cuts.

    "It's put up or shut up time," Huckabee said then. "Either put up the money, write the check and let us see if you're serious, or quit telling me that Arkansans want their taxes raised."

    By 2003, the fund held between $2,000 and $3,000.

    Legislators lamented the governor's "bumper sticker" approach to serious state budget problems. Senate Majority Leader John Riggs, a Democrat from Little Rock, then called Huckabee's fund a "grandstand act and what you would expect of somebody who takes on clownish behavior."

    Nelson, Huckabee's aide, said the criticism was not a major concern and came from people who were not going to support the governor anyway.

    Huckabee even used his home and his marriage to gain publicity. In 2001, Huckabee signed into law an option for couples to enter into covenant marriages, which can be ended only after counseling and only on certain grounds — adultery, criminal activity, physical or sexual abuse or a two-year separation.

    To mark the occasion, Huckabee and wife Janet converted their 30-year union to a covenant marriage in front of a crowd of 6,400 people at Alltel Arena in 2005.

    "We hope to say to others, 'Marriage is tough, but it's best to work through those difficulties,'" he said.

    That was five years after the Huckabees moved into a triple-wide manufactured home so the governor's mansion could be renovated. Huckabee went along with plenty of jokes — including an appearance on NBC's "Tonight Show with Jay Leno" — when the first family moved into the once-wheeled dwelling. Mrs. Huckabee jokingly referred to herself as the queen of the triple-wide — and received more than $6,000 in honoraria from mobile home industry trade groups grateful for the publicity.

    "We're blowing the stereotypes by letting people see that this is not some pull-behind-the-truck trailer," the governor said at the time. "This is a beautiful, very nice home. We're thrilled to death to have it."

    Barth said the mobile home may have looked like a public relations disaster, but actually was a political gain for Huckabee.

    "It was ridiculed mercilessly, but if you look at the counties where he needed to win, those white, rural, swing counties, those were the places where there are a lot of mobile homes," Barth said.