IN making the case for Mike Huckabee's campaign for the presidency, circumstances require that I start with a declaration: I am not now, nor have I ever been, an Evangelical Christian.
It's important to get that disclaimer out of the way, because Huckabee has regrettably been pigeonholed as the "Evangelical candidate" - a swell guy, but off-limits to anyone without a fish decal on the back of the family truckster.
And that's a shame, because Huckabee's appeal could - and, indeed, should - transcend religious or cultural affiliations.
Unlike most other Republicans past and present, this folksy, up-by-the-bootstraps former governor of a heavily Democratic state has a message capable of reaching far beyond the GOP faithful. It's one with a natural resonance for the middle class, for Latinos, for African-Americans, for believers of all kinds - indeed for anyone.
If only that message could get a full hearing.
That it doesn't is in no small part Huckabee's own doing. He has directed much of his energy toward rallying his base, and that's fed all too easily into the media's narrow image of Huck as the smooth-talking itinerant preacher.
Which he is, but he is also so much more.
Given that Huckabee is the only viable candidate consistently committed to protecting unborn human life, it's natural that he would be the favorite of conservative Christians. But for Huckabee, this is more than pandering. It's part of a broader
Start with his strong actions in behalf of racial equality, which date back to the early 1980s, when Huckabee single-handedly took on the unpopular task of integrating an all-white Arkansas church. Later as governor, he worked to end racial disparities in drug-sentencing laws, and appointed numerous African-Americans to prominent positions in his administration while pushing an agenda of racial reconciliation.
Then there's Huckabee's decision to allow the children of illegal immigrants to get in-state tuition at Arkansas' public universities - a decision that irks plenty of GOP stalwarts. But Huck's Gospel doesn't punish children for the sins of their parents. His commitment is to the dignity of the human person - not to party politics.
So Huck bucks the GOP establishment in other ways, too.
Though favoring a strong approach to the War on Terror, he has fairly criticized Bush foreign policy for being, at times, "arrogant." Likewise - here comes that commitment to human dignity again - he rejects the use of torture on suspected terrorists.
On taxes, Huckabee supports reductions that favor middle-class families, not high-end earners or corporations. On trade, he calls for America's partners to stop manipulating currencies and import controls to gain an unfair advantage. On the environment, he's rightly concerned about the dangers of global warming. And on health care, he's serious about extending coverage to poor children, combating smoking and dealing with the obesity crisis.
For these deviations from party orthodoxy, members of the GOP establishment have maligned Huckabee as some sort of crypto left-winger. But these are unconservative positions only if one thinks that conservatism demands rejecting any concern raised by a liberal, no matter how valid, and an adamant belief that the market can do no wrong.
Huckabee, however, harkens back to a more traditional brand of conservatism, one that sees the family, the middle class, social stability and the environment as goods worth conserving.
Perhaps it's because, as a preacher, he spent many years ministering to average Americans personally, gaining a real sense of the issues that concern them - health insurance, economic uncertainty, family breakdown. Huckabee brings a practical approach to politics that's directed toward making people's lives better, not making people's lives conform to some ideological template.
Call his political philosophy whatever you want, but it has the potential to obliterate the tiresome blue-red binary of American politics. Huckabee also has a sense of humor and doesn't take himself too seriously - a refreshing change in modern politics.
Evangelicals are right to like Mike. They shouldn't be the only ones.
Chris Weinkopf, the Daily News' editorial-page editor, blogs at insidesocal.com/friendlyfire. Write to him by e-mail at chris.weinkopf@dailynews.com.
4 comments:
McCain's arrogant confidence that he'll win the Republican nomination may be exactly what's needed to energize grassroots conservatives and get the word out that McCain's not the man the media's portraying.
The insider fix is in there's no doubt about it: Fool the people, make McCain the Republican nominee, and Obama becomes president, guaranteed...
The TRUTH about each candidate should be reported by the media, not "news" created. Otherwise the American electorate cannot cast an informed vote. What the liberal-dominated media is doing is irresponsibly and unethically trying to manipulate the election for their favored darling.
For example, the media's not reporting things like the following:
Dr. Romney graduated among the TOP 5% of his class at the prestigious Harvard Business and Law Schools. Only 15 out of 550 cream-of-the-cream Harvard Law School students in the extremely rigorous MBA/JD program graduated! Romney was one of the 15.
Romney took only one dollar as salary for turning around the Olympics. He took zero dollars for his service as a State Governor. And as an unpaid lay minister he put in probably thousands of hours counseling and serving members of his church, for free.
Compare Governor Romney's brilliant intellect, his record of selfless service to others, and his incredible achievements in finance, business, and government with McCain's graduation at the BOTTOM 5% of his military class, his dismal "maverick" performance as a senator, his one time service as commander of one military base, his age and quick temper, and his lifelong reliance on the public purse for his livelihood.
How can McCain possibly successfully debate Obama who too is a Harvard grad?
McCain is way over his head. He'd get clobbered each time as badly as Romney clobbered him in the last debate. That's why McCain is endorsed by the New York Times and so many liberals - he can't possibly beat the Democrat challenger. It's a setup for the Democrats!
Decide for yourself who's best prepared to be leader of the free world. As for me I'll vote for Mitt Romney, not for the Obama/McCain ticket!
Get your facts straight! Mike Huckabee finally is showing his true colors. For a time, I was deceived like you - thinking he was truly a born-again Christian, Jesus loving, conservative with integrity. Wake up my dear! Did you not see what happened today? He has hitched his horse to John McCain. My, my how quickly his facade has faded. Please come to your senses and realize that Huckabee is a sham, a fake, and liar. We've all been deceived, unfortunate and painful as the realization may be. The question is, what are you going to do about it? At this point, I would rather vote for a democrat than vote for Mike Huckabee! Nothing is worse than being deceived by someone you trusted. At least Hillary and Obama are not afraid to stand up for what they believe!
Dr. James Dobson endorses Mike Huckabee 2-7-08
http://www.citizenlink.org/content/A000006474.cfm
Please post on your website if you want.
Also it is likely that Huckabee, McCain and Paul will all enter the Convention this fall, none of them having the majority of the delegates required to win the nomination. All of the delegates will then have to cast ballot after ballot after ballot until some one emerges as the nominee. It could be Huckabee! Want proof that Gov. Huckabee is viable?
• When Sean Hannity attempted last week to get Newt Gingrich to tell Gov. Huckabee to “drop out,” Newt rebuked Hannity (twice!) on the air, saying that Gov. Huckabee will be the “power broker” at the Convention this fall!
• In the early days of the GOP, there are many instances where multiple ballots were taken to decide who was the party’s nominee, when no candidate came into the convention with a majority of the delegates: At the 1860 convention, Lincoln won on the 4th ballot; In 1876, Rutherford B. Hayes won on the 7th ballot; In 1881, Garfield won on the 36th ballot (wow!); and at the 1888 convention, Benjamin Harrison was nominated on the 9th ballot. Each of these GOP nominees went on to win the Presidency that year.
As Governor Huckabee has said, “We are going nine full innings.” And, I am confident, if we all work hard in each of those innings, we will nominate Governor Huckabee as our next President of the United States!
NEVER GIVE UP! FIGHT UNTIL THE END!
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