Political Hotsheet
By

John Dickerson /

CBS News/ March 4, 2011, 11:29 AM

Why Mike Huckabee may regret his comments about Obama's roots

Mike Huckabee Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images


This post originally appeared on Slate.

Of all the candidates to dish theories about President Obama's roots, you'd think Mike Huckabee would be the most careful. As a former Baptist minister, he has had to endure all kinds of weird questions about how his religion controls him and his hidden motives. Just before the Iowa caucuses in 2008, for example, he was questioned about subliminal cross imagery in one of his advertisements, on the theory that he was trying to send secret signals to evangelical voters. (As it was an ad about Christmas, the Christian signals were hardly secret.)

In a recent session with reporters, Huckabee said such questions--which treated him like some kind of oddity in part to excite the passions of viewers--were one of the reasons he could skip early debates without harming his potential candidacy. The inquiries are a bother, and they're not important to voters.

Yet this week and in his new book, Huckabee has been offering his theories on how Obama's roots explain his foreign policy. He got the facts wrong at first, saying Obama was born in Kenya. In correcting himself, however, he did not modify two theories he does believe: That Obama's Kenyan father and grandfather influenced his views about the British, and that Obama is not your standard American because he spent four years in Indonesia as a child. "Most of us grew up going to Boy Scout meetings and, you know, our communities were filled with Rotary Clubs, not madrassas," Huckabee said.

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This is a dog whistle, by which I mean it gets all of us in the political press yapping. That term is more commonly used to explain a phrase or quote that has special meaning to a specific group--in this case, conservatives who are obsessed with Obama's otherness. Ugh, you're saying. Are we really going to have this debate every week until the election? Maybe. That was the plan of Hillary Clinton's chief strategist in 2008, and Republicans will look to feed off this energy, too. In a just world, using threads from Obama's biography to define him as un-American would itself be considered un-American. He can be criticized plenty on the merits of his presidency. The last two years have provided a flowing basket of opportunities, and the next two will provide even more.

But this isn't a just world, and the instinct to ignore this dog whistle risks the chance the idea will float out there, unaddressed. So: David Weigel is right; Huckabee is not a birther. He doesn't think Obama was born anywhere other than Hawaii. He also defended Obama when conservatives tried to define Obama by his association with the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, saying that he'd hate to be condemned by every word that was uttered in his presence. Still, what Huckabee believes based on his book and recent interviews is more sweeping than birtherism: Obama is actively anti-American, because he is "molded out of a very different experience."

Huckabee is reaching back 40 years into Obama's biography to draw conclusions. Imagine if voters used that same intellectual dot-connector to draw conclusions about the beliefs Huckabee holds today and affirms each day in prayer and each Sunday at church. If a voter is supposed to believe that Obama is captive to the imagined ideas of a father he knew for only a month of his life, then, presumably, the same voter should believe that Huckabee can be equally captive to some imagined tenets of Christianity.

Huckabee has taken several recent trips to Israel. Does he want people drawing direct lines between his foreign policy and every passage of the Book of Revelation? This applies to all GOP candidates who would seek to define Obama wholly by his foreign connections. Should Mitt Romney be judged by every rule and law of the Mormon Church? Is Newt Gingrich irrevocably driven by the same impulses that ended his two marriages?

We are all the product of our life experiences. But any presidential candidate who doesn't want to be defined by the most attenuated interpretation of the influences contained in his biography should probably keep his theories about his opponents a little more closely tied to the here-and-now.

More from Slate:

How Republicans are winning the debate over the federal budget
The chart that explains why state government budgets are a mess
Do you have to be likeable to be president?

John Dickerson is a CBS News political analyst. He is also Slate's chief political correspondent and author of On Her Trail. You can also follow him on Twitter here.

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
11 Comments Add a Comment
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moretruthnow says:
Huckabee is playing to the most ignorant and wacky republican base who believe all the conspiracy theories thrown out since President Obama ran for president. Huckabee knows well that he is baring false witness and is sounding very unchristian and dishonest. There are just way too many lunatics who are rabidly believing every lie that is blasted on Faux Noise. There are way too many people who will not fact check anything that comes from the republican party.
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kansas1946 says:
"Most of us grew up going to Boy Scout meetings and, you know, our communities were filled with Rotary Clubs, not madrassas," Huckabee said.
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Really?? What about all of the imigrants to our country after WWII and before. Did none of them love this country because they didn't grow up at baseball games. Does every American diplomat with children that spend lives, sometimes more that the four years Obama spent in Indonesia, in other countries, have children who "feel differently about England" and are not patriotic Americans?? This guy is as not quite as goofy as most Republicans, but pretty danged goofy. He is the one that would like to control people and this country based on his own personal religious beliefs, not Obama.
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Birdman04 says:
Politicians tend to speak before they think. It is programmed into their brain and there is no cure. They say what people want to hear at a particular time and then live to regret saying it. What else is new?
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olebasiclady says:
I'm a little disappointed in Huckabee. He said it was a slip, and mentioned he got it right in his book, but golly, he said it more than once.

Seems there are more than a few politicians out there who don't do their homework, starting with our president.
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northpark2 says:
Huckabee has alot of baggage. It'll be tough for him like it was last time.
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vpcharan says:
Because he belongs to the small club of Racists in America
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olebasiclady replies:
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It wasn't a racist statement or issue.
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documemts says:
"may regret comments"?
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cwarner23 says:
The only people that think that Obama is anti-American are anti-American white supremists. Alot of whites still think they are better than everyone and can't stand that a black man is President. All racists like Huckabee do is go around saying in "code" is that Obama is "different" and doesn't hold the same values. In other words, don't trust Obama because he's black. When you are white and hate blacks then you assume that blacks hate whites as well so that's why they come up with this he's trying to destroy the world crap. White people know they've denigrated the black race so they they are SCARED that Obama will destroy the world as payback for slavery, and segregation. It's actually kind of funny. Calm down whiteys, he's not going to destroy the world. Obama is just trying to make it right.
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PG1985 says:
bcc243, Al Qaeda loves you. This is exactly what they want and you're feeding them.
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fralene-2009 says:
bcc243, that's your opinion, and we all know how much opinions are worth. In my opinion you're dead wrong. Now see how much my opinion is worth to you? Be specific and be factual,(remember how easy it is to check facts), or go back to the other liars at Faux News.
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