Political Hotsheet
November 5, 2009 1:20 PM

Poll: Republicans Heart Huckabee

(AP / CBS)
The election may still be three years away, but it seems it’s never too early to speculate: A USA Today/Gallup poll sizing up the potential 2012 Republican presidential candidates was released today. Taking the top spot? Former Arkansas governor (and 2008 presidential hopeful) Mike Huckabee.

The poll found that the top four Republican contenders for the presidential nomination are Mike Huckabee, Mitt Romney, Sarah Palin and Newt Gingrich. Seventy-one percent of declared Republicans would "seriously consider" voting for Huckabee, 65 would consider voting for Romney and for Palin, and 60 percent would consider voting for Gingrich.

Among Americans overall, the order remains the same: Huckabee leads, with 40 percent saying they would seriously consider voting for him. Romney closely follows with 39 percent. He’s followed by Palin with 33 percent and Gingrich with 29 percent.

The results suggest that the identity of Obama's 2012 opponent will rest largely on who is selected by "the Republic faithful," even in states with open primaries. No more than 20 percent of Democrats and no more than 40 percent of independent voters say they would consider voting for any one candidate.

The poll also surveyed Americans on who they believe is qualified for the job of president. When it comes to Huckabee and Romney, the number of Americans who believe they are qualified for the job is larger than the number that would consider voting for them.

But here’s something interesting: The results suggest that a greater percentage of Republicans - and Americans overall - would consider voting for Sarah Palin than believe she is qualified to be president. Sixty-five percent of Republicans and 33 percent of American adults would seriously consider voting for Palin, yet only 58 percent and 31 percent of these respective groups believe she is qualified for the job.

USA Today points out that all four top candidates either are releasing or have just released books. Palin's much-anticipated memoir Going Rogue is coming soon, and Huckabee published a book of twelve Christmas stories on Tuesday. Gingrich co-authored a book about George Washington and the Revolutionary War that was released last month, and Romney's No Apology: The Case for American Greatness is set to drop next March. The paper speculates that these candidates may be taking cues from President Obama, whose books The Audacity of Hope and Dreams of My Father helped lend him visibility and credibility.

(AP)
Huckabee, despite his first-place finish, dismisses the results as meaningless.

"It's like speculating who's going to be the best actor next year when we don't even know what the movies are," he said to USA Today. (Indeed, it’s worth remembering that President Obama wasn’t on any presidential frontrunner lists back in 2005.)

Gallup, however, disagrees with Huckabee. "Early front-runner status in Republican nomination contests is important, because historically, that person usually has won the nomination," the polling group asserts.

This poll was conducted among 1.021 American adults between October 31 and November 1, 2009. The results contain a maximum margin of error of seven points.

Tags:
Mike Huckabee ,
Mitt Romney ,
Sarah Palin ,
Newt Gingrich ,
Republicans ,
2012 ,
polls ,
Gallup
Topics:
2012
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by mountainstates1 November 30, 2009 12:48 PM EST
Republicans are in such bad shape. People don't trust them. Most of their cnadidates sound like they never got past 8th grade, and now Huckabee has pardoned cop killers. Tme for this party to fold and just go away. You've started wars based on lies that have cost thousands of young lives, ruined people's retirement plans with greed, ruined our housing values, caused the worst recession since the Great Depression and ignore us in a time of crisis like Katrina. Go invade another country and leave America alone! Please!
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by AppleseedJoseyWales November 12, 2009 12:07 PM EST
..Ron Paul, Ron Paul, Ron Paul..Campaign for Liberty, Appleseed Project, The Oath Keepers, 9/12 Project, there are others too..
..Critical Thinking, Liberty, Responsibility, could you belive in that?.. Lets do this people, WAKE UP!!
..Did I mention Ron Paul, no neocons no reds..
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by JV1970 November 10, 2009 5:42 AM EST
We Christians need to take this country back! We need Huckabee and Palin! I believe they are the ones to do it! I have no confidence in Romney or Gingrich. Huckabee is an ordained Baptist minister and Sarah Palin is a Evangelical (Assembly of God) Christian conservative. They are exactly who we need! I hope in 2012 there's a Huckabee/Palin ticket or a Palin/Huckabee ticket. It doesn't matter to me which runs for the presidency and vice-presidency but we need both of them! Go Mike! Go Sarah!
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by PAFreedom November 9, 2009 9:06 PM EST
"End The Fed" is a great book by Ron Paul that reports the truth on an all important issue concerning all Americans and it was not written simply to promote themselves regarding a run for president.

Ron Paul should have been on the list. He still holds records for money raised, his Campaign For Liberty is very active, and his support continues to grow with energy and even young people.

There should be at least one person who faithfully follows the Constitution on any list worthwhile.
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by cvbaber November 8, 2009 10:55 PM EST
Huckabee did follow Clinton. The highways were in bad shape so taxation maybe have been necessary after that administration.
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by njpaul2-2009 November 8, 2009 12:42 AM EST
To Blah1862...you ask what exactly did Huckabee do to Romney? For decades Evangelical preachers have taught their flocks that Mormons, Jehovah's Witnesses, and a few other religions are not really Christians, that they are cults. Huckabee was one of those pastors. Their attacks have been directed at churches that send out missionaries, obviously to demonize them and avoid the possibility of losing members. If your church doesn't send out missionaries, then for the most part you get a pass and your doctrine is considered OK... you're still a Christian.

Huckabee tapped into that, reminding evangelical pastors and members of what they'd been taught in Sunday School for all those years. He had to be somewhat subtle, but he was clearly speaking code to evangelicals, pretending the whole time to not be doing it. But Mormons and Evangelicals and everyone else familiar with the situation knew exactly what he was doing.

What really annoyed me is his disregard for Article VI of the US Constitution, which reads in part, that "No religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the United States." At a time when secular progressives attack people of faith in so many ways, why would I want a president who selectively does the same?
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by mustang9026 November 7, 2009 5:54 PM EST
Quite a few of the anti-Huckabee comments on this and other websites are not posted by Democrats, but by Romney-ites who haven't realized that their man has no future in Presidential politics.

The truth is that the people are gradually realizing that Huckabee has the intellect, character, experience, judgment, and charisma to make an outstanding President. If he can overcome the ecocons in his own party who ruined the country, he will be able to defeat Barack Obama in 2012, because he is on the right side of history as far as Federal overspending is concerned.
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by njpaul2-2009 November 7, 2009 8:58 PM EST
Don't get me wrong. I think Huckabee is basically a good guy. I agree with him on most issues. I like his conservative values. But the evidence from Arkansas is that he didn't really do anything all that creative with the budget, and what he did accomplish depended on a whole bunch of taxation, kind of like what Obama is doing now. I don't know if Romney is the right guy either, but I do think Romney is in a whole different league when it comes to understanding the economy. We've got plenty of guys in Washington who got there because they know what to say. I'd like a few more people who actually know what to do, and have the resume and the references to back it up.

For me, Huckabee is a dilemna, because I do agree with him on a number of issues. But I don't respect the tactics he displayed a couple of years ago. He has a talent for pretending to be someone we can trust, but I have to wonder what was on those hard drives he didn't want people to see.
by njpaul2-2009 November 6, 2009 11:41 PM EST
I don't know who the best conservative is for 2012, but I sure hope we can do better than Huckabee, who I think has 2 problems:

1- He's a religious bigot. Clever as he tried to be, he wasn't clever enough. Everyone in the world knew what he did to Romney, and they know it's called religious bigotry. That might be something the South is proud of but I'd like a Commander in Chief who is better than that.

2- Huckabee will never appeal to moderates and independents. He really doesn't bring much to the table in the way of education or business expertise, and it showed when he was governor of Arkansas. What he does bring is a good wit, his dimples, and his guitar. Nice guy, weak resume.
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by blah1862 November 7, 2009 10:51 PM EST
Wait...I'm confused. What EXACTLY did he do to Romney? All he did was fight back when ROMNEY said that Mike Huckabee wasn't a true conservative. Unless of course you're referring to the West Virginia incident. Mike Huckabee did nothing there. Ron Paul and John McCain voters did.
by steve8313 November 6, 2009 2:23 AM EST
I love the line up there.... a bunch of sycophants and one absolute nut case (Gingrich)! Looks like in 2012 we'll have another Dem in the White House. YAY!
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by JV1970 November 10, 2009 5:25 AM EST
I think you're forgetting that Obama has not even said if he'll run again in 2012!
by quo_vadis-2009 November 6, 2009 12:28 AM EST
Huckabee is a real human being & first class statesman instead of the usual carefully packaged demagogue. And I sincerely hope that he runs again in 2012 - we need someone who can not only get us back on track, but also help bring our country back together instead of opportunisticly profiting off of fomenting the division & anger between us like so many others are doing these days...
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by steve8313 November 6, 2009 2:29 AM EST
Love the positive attitude there. Obama hasn't even been in one year and your judging the next three years in to the future? Harbouring a little hate or is this just a stunning example of the flawed logical thought pattern of the Republican "mind"?
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