Huckabee, the other man from Hope, opens 2016 bid


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HOPE, Ark. (AP) — Mike Huckabee declared his presidential candidacy Tuesday, counting on his brand of conservative populism to make his second White House bid more successful than his first. In 2008, he captivated evangelical Republicans but couldn't build wide enough support to win the Republican nomination.

The former Arkansas governor announced his 2016 bid in the hometown he shares with former President Bill Clinton, becoming the sixth notable Republican to enter the campaign, with more to come.

"Power, money and political influence have left a lot of Americans behind," Huckabee told supporters in a speech railing against "big-government bailouts" and pledging elimination of the IRS, "the biggest bully in America."

A populist but no Democrat, he did not endorse a minimum wage increase, instead calling for policies encouraging a "maximum wage" for workers. But he did align himself with labor interests in criticizing "unbalanced trade deals" and describing President Barack Obama's immigration policy as a way to "import low-wage labor, undercut American workers and drive wages lower than the Dead Sea."

The ordained minister — he was Arkansas Baptist Convention president before getting into politics — speaks the language of faith, and he played up the cultural conservatism learned in this small town where many of his relatives — and a few Clinton relatives — still live. He stood by his opposition to abortion rights and same-sex marriage, declaring that "the Supreme Court is not the supreme being, and they cannot overturn the laws of nature or of nature's God."

His foreign policy hawkishness comes with religious undertones, too. He said Obama wants Christians to "make nice" with "radical jihadists." He pledged loyalty to Israel and a hard line on Iran's military ambitions.

"The ayatollahs will know that hell will freeze over before they get a nuclear weapon," he roared.

Huckabee acknowledges he needs to reach beyond the Christian evangelicals who helped him win the Iowa caucuses and seven other states in the 2008 GOP nomination contest. The political commentator and author took swipes at rivals in both parties, without naming them, as he sought to position himself as the best Republican to take on Hillary Rodham Clinton, the dominant Democrat in the 2016 contest.

Huckabee boasted that in Arkansas politics, he found success in "challenging the deeply entrenched political machine that ran this state. It was tough sledding, but I learned how to govern and how to lead." An introductory video about the governor who fought "the Clinton machine" made clear he meant Bill and Hillary. Bill Clinton was governor before Huckabee.

"I don't have a global foundation or a taxpayer-funded paycheck to live off of," Huckabee said. "I don't come from a family dynasty, but a working family."

That was a knock at the Clintons again, as well as Republican prospect Jeb Bush, the son and father of presidents, and all rivals who work in the Senate or as governors.

"If you live off the government payroll and want to run for an office other than the one you're elected to, then have the integrity and decency to resign the one you don't want and pursue the one you decided you'd rather have," said Huckabee, who does not have a government job to resign from.

Among his declared rivals, Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas, Rand Paul of Kentucky and Marco Rubio of Florida are running for president while keeping their jobs in Congress. Rubio isn't seeking re-election to the Senate next year, while Paul is keeping that option open. Cruz isn't up for re-election until 2018.

Opinion is divided on whether the "Clinton machine" in Arkansas was as intimidating as Huckabee makes it out to be.

Nate Coulter, a former Bill Clinton aide who lost to Huckabee for lieutenant governor in 1993, said the Clintons didn't stump for him in that campaign. "They had things that were frankly more important to them and the republic," said Coulter. Huckabee was elected lieutenant governor, his first public office, months after the Clintons left for Washington.

Jay Barth, an Arkansas political scientist, said that since that race, Huckabee has proven his ability as a populist. "Huckabee is a master at running against elites," Barth said.

One question for Huckabee now is whether his approach can fuel another insurgent campaign, this time with a deeper field of candidates, some of whom are also competitive with religious conservatives.

"I never have been and I'm not going to be the favored candidate of those in the Washington to Wall Street corridor of power," he told his supporters. But he cracked: "Rest assured, if you want to give me a million dollars, please do it."

He's soon off to Iowa.

___

Follow the reporters on Twitter at https://www.twitter.com/BillBarrowAP and https://www.twitter.com/ademillo.

Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


I governed in a state that was the most lopsided and partisan in the country. No Republican governor had more Democrats and fewer Republicans. I challenged the deeply entrenched political machine that ran this state. It was tough sledding, but I learned how to govern and how to lead.

–Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee


Besides the anti-Clinton emphasis, Huckabee sees himself as an economic populist and foreign affairs hawk who still holds deeply conservative views on social issues such as abortion and gay marriage.

Huckabee advocates a national consumption tax, which is similar to a sales tax, to replace the existing federal taxes on personal income and payrolls. He rejects calls for a minimum wage increase, saying his proposals will yield a "maximum wage" for workers.

A governor from 1996 to 2007, Huckabee compiled a mixed record ideologically. He both cut and raised taxes, drawing the ire of some national groups like the Club for Growth. He pleased conservatives with a late-term abortion ban but raised eyebrows by issuing more criminal pardons and sentence commutations than his three predecessors combined.

Huckabee, an author and former Fox News host, hopes to appeal to everyday Americans who "don't feel like anybody understands or knows who they are, much less cares what's happening to them."

As he put it Tuesday: "Power, money and political influence have left a lot of Americans behind."

Huckabee's potential strength among the growing number of Republican candidates rests with cultural conservatives who wield strong influence in the party's nominating process.

Evangelical Christian voters helped Huckabee win the Iowa caucuses in 2008 and finish a strong second in South Carolina, the largest of the early-voting states. Huckabee would need to replicate that early success to create an opening to build a wider coalition and compete deep into the primary schedule.

Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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BILL BARROW and ANDREW DeMILLO

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