Illustration by Jack Brummet
“All the factors say go, but my heart says no and that’s the decision I have made,” he said. Huckabee stressed the decision was not financial (many pundits have noted the vast amount of money he has made in the last couple of years on books and Fox--and he is building a very expensive home in Florida), or political. He said his family urged him to run. The polls showed he was a serious contender and that he could draw voters from outside the south and wingnut arm of the GOP. He is known to really dislike fundraising, but was convinced recently that he could raise the cash for a serious run. I'll admit, I don't agree with much--if anything--he says, but he has always seemed by far the most likable of that entire crowd.
In the meantime, of the serious candidates, Pawlenty is in, Mitt is in, and Newt Gingrich is in. Interestingly, Jon Ward, on the Huffington Post wrote today that "Perhaps no one will benefit more than Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) if she decides to run. She has the capability -- probably more than any other potential GOP candidate -- to unite social conservatives in Iowa in the manner Huckabee did last election." God forbid!
It's always fun to watch the Republicans when they are out in the cold. They start acting like Democrats. I suspect everyone's gunsights (to use Sarah Palin's metaphor) will be focused squarely on Mitt Romney, who sometimes at least, seems to be the only possibly electable one of the entire pathetic bunch.
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