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A Mole in Huckabee's Campaign?
Is there a mole in Huckabee HQ?
How else to explain two bizarre last-minute decisions of Mike Huckabee's campaign. First, the former Arkansas governor held a near-meltdown of a press conference on Monday, during which he decried negative campaigning but then played for the assembled camera crews the anti-Romney ad he had commissioned and had decided not to use. Then on Wednesday, Huckabee was scheduled to leave frosty Iowa--the day before the caucuses--for sunny L.A. to appear on the Jay Leno show. So he was trading a day of campaigning in the Hawkeye State for several minutes of chuckles on a national television show that probably is not watched by many of his potential voters, older social conservatives (unless these Iowans have a secret lust for Paris Hilton jokes). Huckabee certainly could reach more caucus-goers by working the Iowa media. And Iowan voters, as you know, expect to be treated like royalty by the candidates. Spurning them for laughs with Leno is not a show of respect. It looked as if Huckabee was more concerned with me-time than kneeling before Iowans--a true sin in presidential politics.
It practically seems that someone calling the shots in the Huckabee command is trying to sabotage his almost-a-miracle campaign. Whom might that be? Well, longtime readers of mine know that I am usually quite skeptical of conspiracy theorizing. But in this case, let me suggest a culprit: Ed Rollins. The veteran Republican strategist and operative recently signed on as Huckabee's campaign chairman. Rollins, who ran Ronald Reagan's wildly successful reelection campaign in 1984, has had a bumpy relationship with the GOP establishment. He worked for Ross Perot (as opposed to President George H.W. Bush) in 1992. But he has usually been a loyal GOPer. In the 1990 election, he ran the National Republican Congressional Committee. In 1993, he was campaign manager for Republican Christine Todd Whitman's successful gubernatorial effort in New Jersey. The following year, he helped Republican George Nethercutt, a Republican, unseat Democratic House Speaker Tom Foley. And he has assisted several Republicans since then.
It's been pretty clear--even if you don't read the National Review and watch Fox News--that the GOP elite is not keen on Huckabee ending up as the Republican nominee. So could Rollins be a double-agent? A plant of the GOP high-and-mighty, which would be delighted to see Huckabee crash and burn? Rollins does have a rep as an underhanded operative. After the Whitman race, he disclosed that he had had secretly paid black ministers and Democratic campaign workers in New Jersey to suppress the black vote. (He then partially retracted the remark, saying the comment was "an exaggeration that turned out to be inaccurate.") And in a 1996 book, Rollins claimed that he had learned (after the fact) about an illegal $10 million contribution to Reagan's 1984 campaign from Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos, but Rollin has refused to disclose details about this supposed crime.
So is it possible that Rollins is the GOP's Man in Huckabee Land? That may be fanciful speculation on my part. (Few high-profile strategists would want to be seen losing a campaign.) But the only other explanation is that after years of skillful politicking, Rollins has lost his game and gone stupid. Can you believe that?
Comments
What an absolutely lame (and unbelievable) conspiracy theory. The Moles are coming! The Moles are coming! It is so lame that I thought that the author would at some point invoke the wrath of god or try to tie in the death of the late mayor Daley.
Does the author know the meaning of the word 'parsimony'? The simplest and most probable reason for the listed events is that the Huckster campaign is poorly managed. This surely shouldn’t surprise anyone. Well, maybe not the Huckster himself!
I love this tidbit from CNN:
"A senior aide to Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee admitted Friday that the former Arkansas governor had "no foreign policy credentials" after his comments reacting to the assassination of former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto raised questions."
Posted by: Jonathan Stein on 01/02/08 at 10:00 AM Respond
Can you believe that?
I followed the KT McFarland campaign, so yeah, I can.
Posted by: julia on 01/02/08 at 12:01 PM Respond
LewisJ: I think Corn makes a good case for the idea that the GOP is attempting to shoot down the Huckster.
You refer to "parsimony," where I would cite Occam's Razor. Logic tells us that Huck's campaign manager must be either incompetent, lazy, or culpable. History tells us that he isn't incompetent or lazy. Ergo Sum.
Note that Rush, that other indicator of inside-GOP sentiment, is also adamantly anti-Huck.
I think the GOP is out-hucking the Huckster himself. They think the only possible Hillary-killer is the pretty one, and so they told Huck that God (who also now works for the GOP) wanted them to "help" him with a proven campaigner.
He'll wise up, but not soon enough.
Posted by: Dan Mortenson on 01/02/08 at 3:00 PM Respond
www.Taxhikemike.org
Posted by: Xisithrus on 01/02/08 at 4:29 PM Respond
I do not believe it
FX
Posted by: FX on 01/02/08 at 5:50 PM Respond
You overstate the case about Iowans expecting to be "treated like royalty." My 50-something wife and I will attend caucuses - Republican and Democratic, respectively. We've not attended any candidate's visits. We screen our calls. We've done our homework on the web.
And we wouldn't even have noticed - let alone cared - if Huckabee had gone to LA (unless we watched Leno that night).
Posted by: Monte Asbury on 01/02/08 at 6:20 PM Respond
With Romney now conceding to Hucknshuck, perhaps they felt Iowa was already taken care of? (I ain't pokin' ya in the eye; Knowing then what we know now, it still looks fishy.)
Posted by: tom rogers on 01/03/08 at 7:41 PM Respond
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Posted by: FX on 06/22/08 at 6:14 PM Respond
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Posted by: LewisJ on 01/02/08 at 8:43 AM Respond