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Scott Conroy /

CBS News/ May 29, 2012, 11:21 AM

Backers see Mike Huckabee filling VP niche

Mike Huckabee, CPAC

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee addresses the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Washington, Friday, Feb. 10, 2012.

/ AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

This article originally appeared on RealClearPolitics.

(CBS News) If Mitt Romney's most pressing consideration in selecting a running mate is to find someone who can expand his appeal among independents or a critical demographic that remains up for grabs, several candidates would likely fit the bill better than Mike Huckabee.

But if the former Massachusetts governor instead concludes that his right flank is not as secure as it needs to be, Huckabee may be among his best options.

The winner of the 2008 Iowa caucuses remains one of the most popular and well-recognized conservatives nationwide, and his decision not to launch a second presidential run removed what might have been Romney's toughest competitor on the road to the Republican nomination.

Thus far, most GOP strategists assume that the urgency to defeat President Obama will negate any conservatives' thoughts about staying home in November. Romney's primary concern over the next five months, this dominant line of thinking goes, is to make headway with the narrow slice of the electorate who can be won by either candidate.

With that in mind, Huckabee backers are quick to draw attention to the former Arkansas governor's affable demeanor, lack of pretention, and his up-from-the-bootstraps personal story, all of which might soften Romney's image and make the GOP ticket more relatable to blue-collar independents.

But chief among the pro-Huckabee arguments made by many former aides and close confidants is that he could be an instant cure for the presumptive nominee's lingering problems within his party's base -- a concern that his Boston-based campaign may be underestimating.

"Romney is still weak among evangelicals and the faith-based community, and there's probably no one else in the country who could better take that off the table than Huckabee," said Mike Campbell, who helmed Huckabee's 2008 campaign in South Carolina. "When you go beyond that, he's extremely popular with the Tea Party and with the fair-tax community. These are people that Romney is going to desperately have to have that level of comfort with, and I just don't think there's anyone else out there who can balance off the ticket as well as [Huckabee] does."

Through his best-selling books, paid speaking engagements, and contract with FOX News, where he hosts the most popular weekend news program on cable television, Huckabee has secured a significant influence as well as a comfortable lifestyle that was widely believed to be the reason he declined to launch a second presidential run last year.

But Campbell professed not to have any doubt that the former two-term governor would jump at an opportunity to serve at the national level, if asked to do so.

"If they receive the phone call, no one turns down the vice presidency," Campbell said, noting the relative brevity of a vice-presidential run vs. the years-long commitment that seeking the presidency can be. "He would step up and do it, not just for Romney and the party, but for the country."

When asked on FOX News about the possibility of becoming Romney's running mate last month, Huckabee gave a boilerplate non-denial of interest and reverentially suggested that Marco Rubio would be a better choice for Romney.

"I haven't gotten a call and I doubt I will, so I just merrily go about doing my business," he said.

Former members of Huckabee's inner political circle, however, are far less coy in making the case for him.

Hogan Gidley, who was Huckabee's communications director before joining Rick Santorum's presidential campaign staff, said that he planned to make calls this week to friends in the Romney campaign to vouch for the man he said would be "an outstanding pick."

"The way the news cycle is now, the vice presidency is more high-profile than it used to be, and you need to have someone who's vetted and doesn't have any major surprises," Gidley said. "I think one of the reasons to pick Mike Huckabee is that he's done it before. He's been vetted, he's good on the stump, he's great on a debate stage, he's inspiring, he was a governor, he energizes the base."

Gidley noted that in addition to bringing an extensive grass-roots network that would be "a force to be reckoned with" if activated, Huckabee would boost Romney's outsider appeal as a former governor who built an impressive record working with an overwhelmingly Democratic state legislature.

"I know he loves the radio and he loves FOX News, but that kind of stuff doesn't drive Governor Huckabee," Gidley said. "He's a Christian, and he's had to answer the call several times to run for office, and it wasn't always the convenient time. Quite frankly, it was never convenient."

Though Romney appeared as a guest on Huckabee's new radio show last month and there have been other signs of a thaw in their previously frosty relationship, the two men's divergent backgrounds and personalities might be difficult to reconcile in a campaign setting.

During their 2008 primary battle, Huckabee appeared time and again to harbor a visceral disdain for Romney that he revealed most overtly during a series of acrimonious exchanges on debate stages.

And while Romney has mended fences with other former Republican rivals, in selecting Huckabee as his running mate he would have to look past a particularly unpleasant moment in December of 2007 when Huckabee asked a New York Times reporter, "Don't Mormons believe that Jesus and the devil are brothers?"

That line of "innocent" questioning earned a stern rebuke from Romney and a subsequent apology from Huckabee, but the highly charged issues of faith continued to play a significant role in the Romney/Huckabee duel leading into the Iowa caucuses that year.

Despite having already been vetted, Huckabee's extensive use of pardons and commutations as governor, his ethics controversies and a fiscal record that garnered criticism from economic conservatives would again be brought to the forefront by a national media that had only begun to dig into his record in late 2007 and early 2008.

Huckabee's potential to jump-start the Republican ticket is clear, but the risks are just as apparent. As someone who cultivated a niche in the Republican field as the most authentic social conservative in the 2008 race, his appeal to suburban swing voters remains questionable.

Huckabee remains an intriguing wildcard in the VP race, but his selection, should it come, would be a surprise to most observers.

More from RealClearPolitics:

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Recent News Could Cause Panic for Obama Campaign


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    Scott Conroy is a National Political Reporter for RealClearPolitics and a contributor for CBS News.

9 Comments Add a Comment
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Nocults says:
Romney and Huckabee have the destruction of public records, to hide their misdeeds, in common.

Huckabee destroyed state files and equipment as he left the Governor's Office - He ordered the payment of $25,000 from a state emergency fund to physically destroy the hard drives of his office at the end of his term. That data belongs to the Office of the Governor, not the man, and a public official should have NO expectation of privacy when carrying out the duties of office on government equipment. To turn one of the government's favorite phrases around "if you don't have anything to hide..." So much for rule of law over personal privilege. We could expect little return to Constitutional guarantees of privacy and transparent government under Huckabee. Allocating the funds from a state emergency fund earmarked for floods, tornadoes, and natural disasters is fiscally irresponsible, spendthrift, and perhaps illegal. We should not be surprised if this scandal takes on wings of its own, given all the possible angles.
(Arkansas Democrat Gazette)
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MurdochSucks says:
A Mormon Pres with Evangelical Christian Pastor Vice Pres? Wow, that would be some kind of ticket. Could shore up the evangelical vote, but could drive some centrists away. Sounds like it would help Obama.
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Nocults replies:
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Governor Huckabee was sanctioned 5 times for ethics violations, and had 9 other complaints, none dismissed as frivolous. He's taken practically every gift or favor ever given to him as Arkansas governor, and actively asked for gifts: "some former Huckabee staff and appointees acknowledged ... that Huckabee's chief of staff and a cabinet official solicited contributions from staff and appointees for Christmas gifts for the governor." Shouldn't it go the other way around? The boss buys a small gift for the staff. What about that old Christian nugget: it's better to give than receive. There is also a very direct correlation between his receipt of gifts and his political appointments.
He even went so far as to set up a wedding registry for him and his wife to receive gifts to decorate their house after they left office. How completely tacky. Clearly this guy thinks of public service as serving him, not the other way around.
(MSNBC) (Guardian UK)
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twmat311 says:
Who would have thought in 1980 that George HW Bush would have run as VP with Ronald Reagan? "Politics makes strange bedfellows" renews itself every election. The real problem is pandering to the special-interest-group checklist; it creates a crazy quilt that nobody in their right mind wants to accept.
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DebbieCorona says:
As a Christian and a citizen I have a major problem with a man that gives up his calling to serve Christ to be a politician. Hucks a no go as he turned his back on Christ.
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Nocults replies:
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- Huckabee is a pro-war "Christian" - Here's a chance to actually put some of Christ's sermons (Blessed are the warmongers?) into action. Instead, he supports continuing the war in Iraq to "save national honor" rather than admitting it was a mistake (no WMD's, no al Qaeda) and withdrawing. How many more have to die before we "leave with honor"? Is that the 11th Commandment? Maybe it'll be as honorable as Korea, Vietnam, Panama, Bosnia, Somalia, Sudan or Serbia... He has absolutely no idea how foreign policy and militarism connects with the dollar crisis, terrorism, and the coming recession. This makes him identical to all but Ron Paul out of any of the candidates, but is noteworthy given how bloodthirsty he is for a minister.
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dng888 says:
Huckabee would be an interesting choice helping out Romney with the Evangelical vote and the southern vote as well. He is older than Rubio has more experience and has honed his craft even more being on Fox news. The women's and hispanic vote would not be as appealing though. Obama has divided the country pitting rich against poor, men v women, hispanic v white and any other division he can think of. Saul Alinksy and Karl Marx would be proud of Barack.
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MurdochSucks replies:
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When Obama took office, those divisions were already played out. It was the Republican platform to pit rich v. poor when they carried out the single-largest shift of wealth in the history of man upward to the wealthiest Americans. Men v women? What are you talking about, how has Obama pitted men vs. women, or Hispanic vs. White, which are apples and oranges, one an ethnicity one a race. Most Hispanics are White (Caucasian), with roots from Europe, some are African American, with roots from Africa. Ignorance in one field portends ignorance in many others.
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pbaird2 says:
Huckabee has been campaining in Texas against the "Washington crowd", but anyone who goes to Washington, D.C. becomes the "Washington crowd". If one dislikes the federal government so much why do they continue to spend millions to become one of them? These people should stay in state government and argue their issues there.
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