► Show Top 10 Hot Links

Posts Tagged ‘Mike Huckabee’

Huckabee will not run for President

by Phantom Ace ( 8 Comments › )
Filed under Breaking News, Elections 2012, Headlines, Progressives, Republican Party at May 14th, 2011 - 9:33 pm

Mike Huckabee has announced that he will not run for President in 2012. This is good news because he’s yesterday’s news.

Good call there Huck.

WSJ/NBC Poll has Trump surging into 2nd place

by Phantom Ace ( 28 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2012, Headlines, Republican Party at April 6th, 2011 - 9:16 pm

Donald Trump appears to be connecting with Republican primary voters. A new WSJ/NBC poll of Republican voters have the Queens, NY native at 17% nationally tied with Mike Huckabee and behind Mitt Romney at 21%.

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney appears to be the early front-runner in the largely unformed race for the Republican nomination for president, but real estate magnate Donald Trump may be a surprise contender, according to a new Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll.

Among Republican primary voters, Mr. Romney captured the support of 21% in a broad, nine-candidate field. Mr. Trump was tied for second with former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, with 17%. House Speaker Newt Gingrich got 11%, just ahead of former Republican Vice Presidential nominee Sarah Palin’s 10%. Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, considered a strong contender by political handicappers, remains largely unknown, with just 6% support. Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota had 5%, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum 3%, and Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour with just 1%.

This shows dissatisfaction with the current field. Trump is discussing issues that many mainstream Republicans are ignoring. If he runs, he is not to be dismissed easily. Clearly Trump is connecting with rank and file Republicans. The other potential candidates Mitt Romney, Mike Huckabee, Mitch Daniels, Tim Pawlenty and Newt Gingrich who speak in 20 year old talking points.

Donald Trump discusses issues that people are concerned about. China’s manipulation, The stranglehold of OPEC, the leaching of our Military by so called allies and interventions not based on National interests. Trump is speaking to the concerns of the people. Like him or not, his message is resonating.

Update: Here is a great article by American Thinker on why Trump in 2012 is exactly what the GOP needs.

Untill, our world, the real world, is far from perfect.  Given current political realities, Trump may be just what Republican voters need at the moment.

As Trump himself has noted, if not for pervasive voter disenchantment with President George W. Bush, we wouldn’t now have President Barack. H. Obama.  In 2008, voters in both major parties and everywhere in between had grown weary of Bush’s “compassionate conservatism.”  Of course, being but a euphemism for ever larger government — that is, exactly that thing against which Republican campaign rhetoric rails — it was neither compassionate nor conservative, as conservatives understand these concepts.  The Republican Party claimed to have learned this lesson, but beyond vague references to “spending,” no GOP 2012 hopeful has so much as explicitly repudiated Bush “conservatism,” much less specified the respects in which their governance will differ from that of the last Republican president.

Trump, in glaring contrast, has already indicated the willingness, the eagerness even, to make it abundantly clear to both the party and the nation how and why he will be no Bush Republican.   This the party faithful and — more importantly, to hear the Republicans tell it — the independents and “moderates” regarding whom the politicians from both parties spare no occasion to woo both need and deserve to know.

Trump represents a clean break with the the last 20 years of the Rockefeller Compassionate Conservatism. The GOP will once again be the party it was in the era of Reagan, it will mean business on both economics and national interests.


The GOP’s 2012 Trouble

by Phantom Ace ( 127 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Democratic Party, Elections 2012, Progressives, Republican Party at February 13th, 2011 - 2:25 pm

Things are looking murky in 2012 for the Republicans after a triumphant 2010 when they won the House, picked up Senate seats and decimated the Democrats at the local level. Obama’s approval ratings are back up and the media is pushing the Obama  Boom theme, that this is the best the economy can get. The Republicans have wasted in month in finally getting around to doing budget cuts. They still haven’t proposed any tax and regulatory reform to make American economically competitive again. The irony is Obama is set to win re-election in 2012 because of their surrender  in the lame duck session. It’s even at the point that Obama is calling himself the gipper, a reference to Ronald Reagan. No Republican has come out and called Obama out on this! Things are not looking for the Republicans in 2012.

Another handicap the Republicans face is their pathetic 2012 Presidential field. None of the 4 main candidates Romney, Palin, Huckabee or Gingrich are offering new ideas or proposals. Instead they speak in catchy phrases, the same stale talking points and all are politically damaged. Polls show Obama would handily defeat any of these four if the election was help today. This is due to the decimation the Republicans had in 2006 and 2008. Obama right now is sitting pretty for 2012, anemic economy and all.

WASHINGTON — Marry the movie star, or the librarian?

This year is a little different, though. Reagan is in the air, everywhere. Republicans can’t help remembering the time they nominated their boldest, sexiest choice — and he turned out to be

That was the question conservatives were puzzling over at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference this weekend in DC. In the past, Republicans have flirted with sexy but extreme candidates like Pat Buchanan, Ron Paul and Mike Huckabee, but, being conservatives, tend to commit to safer, consensus candidates — even when those pols were so safe and mainstream (like Bob Dole and John McCain) that no one in the party (or, alas outside of it) succeeded in getting excited about them.

Everywhere you looked, there were Reagan posters, Reagan speaking from TV monitors, Reagan birthday parties. There was so much Reagan it was almost like it was the 1980s — “1984” in fact, with Big Gipper watching us everywhere we turned, threatening to disapprove. It got kind of creepy after a while.

And the party has lots of national leaders of tomorrow — baby-faced Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, the lovably cantankerous New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, the quietly appealing Rep. Kristi Noem of South Dakota, Louisiana’s boy wonder Gov. Bobby Jindal.

The source of the party’s unease is that it knows it doesn’t have a now leader. The unspoken hope of GOPalooza 2011 was that someone would emerge as our Obama.

No one did.

Read the rest:  The Right’s stuff

The Republican Party’s best hope is the Senate in 2012. With 23 out of 33 Senate seats in play, Republicans should easily win that chamber. In 2016, we will have probably the best presidential candidate field ever. However it maybe too late as by 2016, America will have gone through nearly 16 of a sub-par economy of low job growth and stagnant pay. Americans may well get used to diminished lifestyle and lose hope for a better tomorrow. Obama’s reckless 3rd World Liberation based foreign policy will put America in its weakest global position. 2012 is critical, but the 4 major GOP candidates are not up to the task of presenting a winning alternative to Obama’s politics of diminished returns.

Note: The Blogmocracy radio Show will now be Sundays 8:30 – 10:00 PM EST.

Huckabee would support Jeb Bush

by Phantom Ace ( 217 Comments › )
Filed under Democratic Party, Elections 2012, George W. Bush, Progressives, Republican Party at December 14th, 2010 - 8:30 am

As I have stated, like the Bourbons, the Republicans have learned nothing and forgotten nothing. In the run up to the 2010 elections, the GOP acted like Conservatives, but since the election is over they are back to their old ways.

Former Arkansas governor and Progressive Republican, Mike Huckabee, said in an interview that should Jeb Bush run for office in 2012, he will sit out. Huckabee should sit out anyway since he’s a two face fake, but promoting Jeb Bush isn’t the solution. Jeb is a Liberal Republican and is a member of the Liberal Bush clan. His dad and brother governed as big government Rockefeller Republicans. They were pushed around by the Democrats and didn’t fight back. Jeb is cut from the same cloth and would be a disaster for the Republican Party and Conservative movement.

But he said he would stay out of the race if former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush were to run.

“I love Jeb, I think he’s brilliant,” Huckabee said. “He could certainly raise the money, and I think he’d clear the deck.” He also said there are a lot of capable, qualified possible candidates who “aren’t the obvious ones.”

Read it all: Obama ‘Amateurish,’ Jeb Bush ‘Brilliant’

The Bush family has a history of using the Conservative movement for their own means. They use social issues to cover up their Progressive Republican instincts. Jeb Bush would guarantee a second Obama term. The Bush family’s con games with Conservatives are over and Jeb Bush would go nowhere in a Primary.