Huckabee ran for White House on wing and a prayer

Wed Mar 5, 2008 6:02am EST
 
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By Ed Stoddard

DALLAS (Reuters) - Mike Huckabee shook up the Republican Party establishment with an improbable run for its presidential nomination that energized the party's evangelical Christian base but failed to attract moderates beyond it.

Huckabee, a former governor of Arkansas, stayed alive as better known rivals dropped by the wayside but finally had to fold up his campaign on Tuesday as Arizona Sen. John McCain marched through the state-by-state voting to become the party's candidate in the November election.

From pheasant shoots in Iowa fields to sermons in packed churches, the affable former Baptist preacher often seemed to be running his cash-strapped campaign on a wing and a prayer.

But he proved a formidable campaigner with a folksy Southern style. An eloquent speaker with a sharp sense of humor, he wooed crowds by cracking jokes, playing electric bass guitar and bantering on stage with martial arts guru Chuck Norris.

His staunch opposition to abortion rights and gay marriage mixed with a big dose of economic populism enabled him to reach centrist evangelical leaders concerned about the poor while simultaneously connecting with the culture warriors of the old "Religious Right."

And his blue collar roots and fondness for hunting and fishing went down well in the rural U.S. heartland.

Huckabee's high point was in Iowa on January 3 when he won the first of the state-by-state presidential nominating contests, beating a well-oiled and heavily funded machine run by the wealthy former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney.

Conservative Christian voters handed him that crucial victory and Huckabee cast himself in Biblical terms as a humble David taking on a political Goliath, frequently telling his Iowa supporters that Romney was outspending him 20 to one.  Continued...

 

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