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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Huckabee quits Fox News show to weigh White House bid

Huckabee
Cathleen Decker Los Angeles Times

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee pulled the plug on his Fox News Channel talk show on Saturday in order to “gauge support” for a second presidential run.

In an email to supporters headed “Tonight I say goodbye,” Huckabee alluded to the complications inherent in seeking support for a presidential campaign while holding on to a high-profile weekly post on a news channel. That same conflict caused Huckabee, in 2011, to bow out of a presidential run in 2012.

“There has been a great deal of speculation as to whether I would run for president,” he said in an email. “I won’t make a decision about running until late in the spring of 2015, but the continued chatter has put Fox News into a position that is not fair to them. The honorable thing to do at this point is to end my tenure here at Fox so I can openly talk with potential donors and supporters and gauge support.”

The intermediate step – signing off television while still considering a political campaign – was one Huckabee had dispensed with in 2011 when he said that he would “gladly” continue on television rather than run.

“All the factors say go, but my heart says no,” Huckabee told viewers then.

In his 2008 campaign, Huckabee, a Southern Baptist minister, parlayed his connections among the strongly religious voters in Iowa’s start-off caucuses. He won seven other contests, mostly in the South.

Huckabee’s announcement did little to clarify the potentially crowded Republican field for 2016. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush announced last month that he was considering a bid.

Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul has spent months in a barely disguised run-up to a campaign; Texas Gov. Rick Perry and his home-state senator, Ted Cruz, have criss-crossed the early presidential states, including Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina.

Others pondering whether to run include Florida Sen. Marco Rubio and a handful of governors, including New Jersey’s Chris Christie, Ohio’s John Kasich and Wisconsin’s Scott Walker.