Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Huckabee’s exit highlights battle facing GOP field

Social conservatives courted by range of candidates

Bradley Klapper Associated Press

WASHINGTON – Mike Huckabee’s decision to forgo a shot at the presidency further muddies the field for a worthy Republican challenger to President Barack Obama, and leaves America’s social conservatives without a clear candidate to throw their support behind.

Huckabee, the former Arkansas governor, joins Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, South Dakota Sen. John Thune and Indiana Rep. Mike Pence on the sidelines. His decision underscores that for all of Obama’s vulnerabilities on the economy, taking on his re-election machine and potential $1 billion treasure chest remains a daunting task.

The 55-year-old Baptist minister insists that he could have captured the GOP nomination, citing polls that showed he could score strong even in the Northeast and among the less conservative rank-and-file party members.

“All the factors say go, but my heart says no,” Huckabee, the winner of the 2008 Iowa caucuses, said Saturday night on his Fox News Channel show. He described the decision as a spiritual one.

“Only when I was alone, in quiet and reflective moments, did I have not only clarity but an inexplicable inner peace,” he said. “Being president is a job that takes one to the limit of his or her human capacity. For me, to do it apart from the inner confidence that I was undertaking it without God’s full blessing is simply unthinkable.”

The announcement makes an already wide-open Republican field even more unpredictable.

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich has been making a concerted effort to reach out to the right. Although he’s been noting his recent conversion to Catholicism, he’s hampered by two divorces and an adulterous history. Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney must explain his change of heart over the years on positions on guns, gay rights and abortion; health care also is a problem for him. Minnesota’s ex-governor, Tim Pawlenty, has had to apologize for backing climate change legislation. Donald Trump? Highly unlikely.

With so many social conservatives looking for a home, the void created by Huckabee’s decision could prompt 2008 vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin or Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann to get in the race. Palin has yet to say if she will run, while Bachmann is inching toward a bid. Several other possible candidates, including Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels, are in waiting mode.

The lack of a clear GOP front-runner reflects Obama’s perceived strength as a candidate less than a year-and-a-half before the election. Despite uneven economic growth and continued sluggishness in the employment market, Obama will have the advantage of being an incumbent president with a seemingly unmatchable capacity to generate cash for his campaign. And while events could change dramatically between now and the presidential vote, polls show Obama in a stronger position now than he was before the mission that killed al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden.

Republican candidates were quick to praise Huckabee after his announcement, making obvious plays for his backers.

“His voters are very independent and they’re going to go where they believe that America needs to go both in conservative and spiritual values,” Gingrich said Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “Gov. Huckabee’s going to remain a very important figure in the conservative movement and I suspect that he’s going to have a role to play for years to come.”

Pawlenty said he’d work hard to gain the support of millions of Americans who have backed Huckabee, while former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum praised the TV host for praying before deciding not to run. Santorum added that he wanted to talk with Huckabee about fighting for traditional values even as some Republicans “seek to form a ‘truce’ on social issues.”

That was a slap at Daniels, who is considering a run and has suggested that Republicans downplay their focus on cultural issues like abortion while the nation’s economy is so fragile.

Huckabee praised several potential GOP nominees who, he said, hold points of view similar to his own. A notable omission from the list: Romney.

“There has been a lot of talk about Mitt Romney and me. And we don’t socialize together. We’re not close, you know, in personal ways,” Huckabee said on “Fox News Sunday.” “But I want to make it very clear today, if Mitt Romney is the nominee for our party, I will support him because I believe that Mitt Romney would be a better president of the United States than Barack Obama on any day.”

Had he chosen to run, Huckabee would have been forced to give up the lucrative media career he’s enjoyed since his unsuccessful presidential bid four years ago. In addition to his TV show, he hosts a nationally syndicated radio program, gives paid speeches around the country and has even launched a series of animated videos for children on American history.