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Far-right Extremism

Huckabee: No Hard Feelings

Mike Huckabee’s decision to sign on with an entertainment talent agency(link is external) might suggest he intends to take his act to late-night television, but in the meantime, he’s shoring up his political base.

First, Huckabee’s breathlessly promoted announcement(link is external) was simply the formation of a PAC(link is external)—pretty standard stuff for a politician. Likewise, it’s hardly a shock(link is external) to hear he’s going to be campaigning for John McCain(link is external).

But it was a big surprise(link is external) to see Huckabee grant a very friendly interview(link is external) to the Club for Growth, an anti-tax attack group that started off early and aggressively(link is external) running TV ads against Huckabee in Iowa(link is external). The candidate bit back over the last year, scandalizing(link is external) conservative fusionists by calling the group “the Club for Greed.” Now, here he is(link is external) chatting about vice-presidential picks for a Club for Growth web video.

And he’s scheduled(link is external) to do a fundraiser(link is external) for the Family Policy Institute of Washington, a state affiliate of James Dobson’s Focus on the Family. He’ll be appearing alongside Family Research Council President Tony Perkins. Dobson and Perkins were among the Religious Right “political bosses(link is external)” who Huckabee felt snubbed him in favor of candidates like Mitt Romney and Fred Thompson—in fact, just a few weeks ago, Huckabee was blaming them(link is external) for sinking his campaign:

Mike Huckabee can't definitively explain why he couldn't win the Republican presidential nomination, but he thinks the desire of Christian leaders to be "kingmakers," media coverage and Mother Nature all had something to do with it.

"Rank-and-file evangelicals supported me strongly, but a lot of the leadership did not," the former Arkansas governor says. "Let's face it, if you're not going to be king, the next best thing is to be the kingmaker. And if the person gets there without you, you become less relevant."

Huckabee may be looking at another presidential run in 2012(link is external), or he may try to parlay his mailing list into a career as a Religious Right “political boss” himself(link is external), but in either case, it appears he’s taking a page from McCain’s post-2000 playbook: find your enemies and suck up to them.