By Quin Hillyer on 10.24.07 @ 12:08AM
Are socio-cons rallying to the wrong banner -- and falling for a Huckster?
With Sen. Sam Brownback now out of the presidential race, only
two candidates in the Republican presidential field -- California's
longtime U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter and former Arkansas Gov. Mike
Huckabee -- can lay claim both to a high degree of purity on the
hot-button issues for social conservatives and to a personal life
that seems in keeping with those traditional values.
But only one, Huckabee, seems to be gaining major traction...
even though the record in Arkansas suggests that he might be the
wrong one to rally around.
Ask lots of folks in Arkansas, including Republicans, and a fair
number will probably
tell you that Huck is for Huck is for Huck. National media
folks like David Brooks, dealing in surface appearances only, rave
about what a nice guy Huckabee is, and a moral exemplar to boot. If
they only did a little homework, they would discover a guy with a
thin skin, a nasty vindictive streak, and a long history of
imbroglios about questionable ethics.
Once, Gov. Huckabee even had the gall to file suit against the
state ethics commission. He lost.
Fourteen times, the ethics commission -- a respected body, not a
partisan witch-hunt group -- investigated claims against Huckabee.
Five of those times, it officially reprimanded him. And, as only
MSNBC among the big national media has reported
at any real length, there were lots of other mini-scandals and embarrassments
along the way.
He used public money for family restaurant meals, boat
expenses, and other personal uses. He tried to claim as his own
some $70,000 of furniture donated to the governor's mansion. He
repeatedly, and obstinately, against the pleadings even from
conservative columnists and editorials, refused to divulge the names of donors to a
"charitable" organization he set up while lieutenant governor -- an
outfit whose main charitable purpose seemed to be to pay Huckabee
to make speeches. Then, as a kicker, he misreported the income
itself from the suspicious "charity."
Huckabee has been criticized, reasonably so, for misusing the state airplane for personal
reasons. And he and his wife, Janet, actually set up a "wedding gift registry" (they had already been
married for years) to which people could donate as the Huckabees
left the governorship, in order to furnish their new $525,000
home.
According to the Arkansas News Bureau (Feb. 1, 2003),
"Huckabee's personal lawyer, Kevin Crass of Little Rock, has said
Huckabee believes there should be no limit on gifts short of a
bribe." After all, said Janet Huckabee, public officials like her
husband should be automatically trusted: "Until you absolutely
positively know that the man has outright lied to you, it should be
enough that the man's word is that everything was done
appropriately, legally, to the best of his knowledge to the letter
of the law."
Of course, her reasoning refutes itself: If one is precluded
from even questioning "the man's word," how can one possibly find
out in the first place whether the official "has outright lied to
you"?
It must be said that a fair-minded journalist ought to tread
lightly in scrutinizing a candidate's spouse; but in Janet
Huckabee's case, she is a politician in her own right, having run
unsuccessfully for Arkansas Secretary of State. Voters
overwhelmingly rejected her, perhaps because they remembered her
propensity for other outrageous statements -- such as the time when
she defended secrecy about the donors to her husband's "charity" by
saying that a donor's name "wouldn't be enough. [Then] you'd want
to know who he was married to, and then his wife would be German
descent, and you'd have Mike, you'd have him responsible for
600,000 killings of Jews."
Huh?
Of course, nobody accused Huckabee of genocide. But his skin is
so thin that when various underlings in his administration, even
for bureaus as small as the state film office, crossed ethical
lines (some of them, admittedly, rather minor), the governor
consistently and angrily attacked the media for reporting the
transgressions rather than demanding that the transgressors make
things right.
Finally, Gov. Huckabee had a propensity to be almost as prodigal
with pardons as was his famous predecessor by the name of Clinton.
Indeed, Hillary Clinton's campaign team is probably licking their
chops at the prospect of Huck as the nominee, because one of his
pardons, in particular, was so outlandish as to make Willie
Horton's case in Massachusetts seem almost child's play by
comparison. After Huckabee helped secure the release of
already-well-known rapist Wayne Dumond, the released convict
sexually assaulted and murdered a woman in Missouri.
All of which leads one to ask two questions: First, how can
voters whose primary concerns are moral look beyond so many of a
candidate's problems with ethics? And, second, if Republicans in
general have concluded, as most of them have, that repeated
scandals among Washington GOPers played a huge role in Republican
defeats in 2006, how could they possibly nominate somebody who
seems to have such big ethical blind spots?
Give this to Huckabee: The man gives a good speech. But so does
Duncan Hunter, with the biggest difference being that Hunter's
speeches appeal more to the intellect than the heartstrings -- and
that Hunter can boast 25 years of leadership for conservative
causes, including on taxing and spending issues where Huckabee is
notoriously un-conservative.
For that matter, if the question is public ethics, all the other
major Republican candidates have rather solid records. With so
little scandalous material to look into, why hasn't the usually
scandal-ravenous national media delved into the record of the one
GOP candidate whose ethics have been repeatedly questioned in his
home state?
Has even the cynical big media been fooled by a Huckster?
topics:
Hillary Clinton, Law