WASHINGTON, Aug. 12, 2007

Huckabee: I'm In The Top Tier After Iowa

Arkansan Says Placing Second In Iowa Straw Poll Makes Him A Serious Candidate

  • Play CBS Video Video Huckabee's Big Win?

    Former Arkansas governor and Republican presidential hopeful Mike Huckabee took second place in the Iowa straw poll. He tells Jim Axelrod that means he's a top tier candidate.

  • Video Political Roundtable 1

    David Yepsen of The Des Moines Register, Karen Tumulty of Time and Jim VandeHei of politico.com analyze what the results of the Iowa Straw Poll mean for Republican presidential contenders.

  • Video Political Roundtable 2

    David Yepsen of The Des Moines Register, Karen Tumulty of Time and Jim VandeHei of politico.com talk to Jim Axelrod about what Iowa polls mean for the Democrats running for president.

  • Former Arkansas governor and Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee performs with an Elvis impersonator at the Iowa Straw Poll on Saturday, Aug. 11, 2007.

    Former Arkansas governor and Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee performs with an Elvis impersonator at the Iowa Straw Poll on Saturday, Aug. 11, 2007.  (CBS/Vaughn Ververs)

(CBS)  His second place finish in the Iowa Straw Poll vaults Mike Huckabee into the top tier of Republican presidential candidates, the former Arkansas Governor said Sunday on Face The Nation.

"We're in fact in the first tier, I think, by everybody's estimation, and here's why," Huckabee told Jim Axelrod. "It wasn't just that we surprised people with a second showing, it's that we did it with so few resources. I mean, this really was feeding the 5,000 with two fish and five loaves, an amazing kind of day for us."

The Huckabee campaign spent about $150,000 in the weeks before voters descended on Ames, and Huckabee said it had no bus caravans or campaign ads to attract more support.

"So when you look at what we were able to achieve, it was because people came to Ames to vote for us," he said. "And we had remarkable stories of people who came literally from all over America to work for us."

Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, who won the Iowa vote as expected, spent millions of dollars and put months of effort into getting a first-place showing.

Huckabee received 18.1 percent of the vote to Romney's 31.5 percent. Sen. Sam Brownback, R-Kan., finished third.

Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani and Sen. John McCain of Arizona did not participate in the Iowa Straw Poll, but Huckabee, echoing similar comments made by the Romney camp, said the results still matter.

"What they did was forfeit the game, and if you forfeit, it's a loss," Huckabee said. "I don't think it diminishes what the rest of us did. I think it only enhances it and shows that we play in middle America and they know they didn't."

Romney said earlier the poll did just what it was designed to do: Let candidates show they have support that could help them win this winter's Iowa caucuses.

Turnout was much lower this year in Ames than for past campaigns, but Huckabee said that had more to do with the heat and the state fair than politics.

"What we're still dealing with, though, is the universe of people who are willing to drive anywhere from an hour to four and a half hours away to come to Ames and spend all day in hot sunshine," Huckabee said, "unless they're in one of the air-conditioned tents of the other candidates."

The candidate was not alone in his assessment of the events in Ames.

"I think Governor Huckabee was arguably the biggest winner yesterday, because he did beat Sam Brownback, and the two of them were in a real contest for the hearts and minds of the social conservatives," David Yepsen of the Des Moines Register told Axelrod. "So I think Mike Huckabee clearly made some gains out of this."

But other political reporters on Face The Nation said that no one candidate carried the day in Iowa.

"The Republican Party is in a funk," Jim VandeHei, executive editor of politico.com, said. "What they want, what they need is political salvation. And they see it coming in someone who's conservative and electable. And I don't think anyone has closed the deal yet on that."

Without a surefire winner for the state's caucuses, Time magazine's national political correspondent Karen Tumulty said Rudy Giuliani has recalculated his strategy in Iowa. Originally his campaign was all but ignoring the state. Now he is spending more time and money there.

"He's clearly recalculated; he calls it a renewed emphasis on Iowa," she said. But she said sometimes the former New York mayor seems a little out of place in the heartland.

"It's sort of funny to see what happens when you take the city boy out of the city," Tumulty said. "And everything he sort of related to something in New York. At one point, he goes into a country and western wear store in Fort Dodge to buy some cowboy shirts, and he says, 'You know, they have bull riding in Madison Square Garden.'"

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Add a Comment See all 76 Comments
by kansas1946 August 14, 2007 8:03 PM EDT
LOL. Could the Democrats be so lucky as to have this guy to run against.
Reply to this comment
by bigblue1998 August 14, 2007 1:33 PM EDT
Huckabee's point is valid and is because if candidates are not going to show for a Poll then how in the world can you say that they would have won? I mean, if Ohio State had not showed against Florida in the BCS Championship game would anyone question the Gators being champs? No, they would say that the Buckeyes were scared of losing and that is the same case here in Iowa. McCain and Giuanni know that they could not win and if they were so hot anyhow the voters would have showed it-whether they were there or not. No, Huckabee has scored a big win but contrary to what the whiners are saying about Romney, he is the big winner in Iowa. What Thompson, Giuanni, and McCaiun showed is that they are scared of head to head competition with Romney.
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by bigblue1998 August 14, 2007 1:29 PM EDT
Huckabee's point is valid and is because if candidates are not going to show for a Poll then how in the world can you say that they would have won? I mean, if Ohio State had not showed against Florida in the BCS Championship game would anyone question the Gators being champs? No, they would say that the Buckeyes were scared of losing and that is the same case here in Iowa. McCain and Giuanni know that they could not win and if they were so hot anyhow the voters would have showed it-whether they were there or not. No, Huckabee has scored a big win but contrary to what the whiners are saying about Romney, he is the big winner in Iowa. What Thompson, Giuanni, and McCaiun showed is that they are scared of head to head competition with Romney.
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by jasonmcj August 14, 2007 10:27 AM EDT
How delusional are Republicans this year?

Very!

Reply to this comment
by gsdpt August 13, 2007 11:46 PM EDT
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by diverinnl August 13, 2007 5:38 PM EDT
n
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by janeen812 August 13, 2007 4:17 PM EDT
If you watched his speech at the straw poll, Mike Huckabee is an "Israel first" canadate. Our country can't afford to have a president easily persuadable by a foreign government.
Reply to this comment
by janeen812 August 13, 2007 3:42 PM EDT
If you watched his speech at the straw poll, Mike Huckabee is an "Israel first" canadate. Our country can't afford to have a president easily persuadable by a foreign government.
Reply to this comment
by janeen812 August 13, 2007 3:42 PM EDT
If you watched his speech at the straw poll, Mike Huckabee is an "Israel first" canadate. Our country can't afford to have a president easily persuadable by a foreign government.
Reply to this comment
by janeen812 August 13, 2007 3:33 PM EDT
If you watched his speech at the straw poll, Mike Huckabee is an "Israel first" canadate. Our country can't afford to have a president easily persuadable by a foreign government.
Reply to this comment
by janeen812 August 13, 2007 3:20 PM EDT
If you watched his speech at the straw poll, Mike Huckabee is an "Israel first" canadate. Our country can't afford to have a president easily persuadable by a foreign government.
Reply to this comment
by fredgrad2000 August 13, 2007 2:48 PM EDT
"We're in fact in the first tier, I think, by everybody's estimation, and here's why," Huckabee told Jim Axelrod. "It wasn't just that we surprised people with a second showing, it's that we did it with so few resources. I mean, this really was feeding the 5,000 with two fish and five loaves, an amazing kind of day for us."

No you're not Mike - the "top tier" just didn't show up for the BBQ; and sorry, this country isn't electing you - we don't want to be preached to with Bible references even in political speeches; it may win you Arkansas or Kansas or Alabama, but won't win the "purple states". The top tier doesn't include anyone who did compete at the Straw Poll other than Romney, and he bought that poll, he didn't WIN it, and we can only hope he falls from the top tier soon; as he's a liability in the general election. Giuliani is the best answer to the far left in 2008.
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by jankebenz August 13, 2007 2:37 PM EDT
what happened to all the posts?
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by janeen812 August 13, 2007 2:09 PM EDT
If you watched his speech at the straw poll, Mike Huckabee is an "Israel first" canadate. Our country can't afford to have a president easily persuadable by a foreign government.
Reply to this comment
by janeen812 August 13, 2007 2:04 PM EDT
If you watched his speech at the straw poll, Mike Huckabee is an "Israel first" canadate. Our country can't afford to have a president easily persuadable by a foreign government.
Reply to this comment
by janeen812 August 13, 2007 1:52 PM EDT
If you watched his speech at the straw poll, Mike Huckabee is an "Israel first" canadate. Our country can't afford to have a president easily persuadable by a foreign government.
Reply to this comment
by janeen812 August 13, 2007 1:51 PM EDT
If you watched his speech at the straw poll, Mike Huckabee is an "Israel first" canadate. Our country can't afford to have a president easily persuadable by a foreign government.
Reply to this comment
by janeen812 August 13, 2007 1:49 PM EDT
If you watched his speech at the straw poll, Mike Huckabee is an "Israel first" canadate. Our country can't afford to have a president easily persuadable by a foreign government.
Reply to this comment
by janeen812 August 13, 2007 1:41 PM EDT
If you watched his speech at the straw poll, Mike Huckabee is an "Israel first" canadate. Our country can't afford to have a president easily persuadable by a foreign government.
Reply to this comment
by janeen812 August 13, 2007 1:26 PM EDT
If you watched his speech at the straw poll, Mike Huckabee is an "Israel first" canadate. Our country can't afford to have a president easily persuadable by a foreign government.
Reply to this comment
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