The ‘campaign meltdown’ moment for Huckabee?

I wasn’t planning to do yet another post about Mike Huckabee, but this one’s too good to pass up.

There’d been quite a bit of buzz today about Huckabee dropping a proverbial campaign bomb today, the final hardest-hitting-ad-to-date smackdown against Mitt Romney, which ostensibly would curtail Romney’s momentum in the closing days before the Iowa caucuses.

But a funny thing happened on the way to the shoot-out. Marc Cooper reports from Des Moines:

In what is likely to be remembered as one of the more bizarre moments of this campaign season, embattled GOP presidential candidate Mike Huckabee renounced negative campaigning today by unveiling an attack ad to a ballroom full of reporters and dozens of TV cameras.

Standing before a banner reading “Enough is Enough” and flanked by five large charts attacking the record of rival Mitt Romney, a haggard-looking Huckabee said that the fight to win Thursday’s Republican caucus had gotten “out of hand” and “out of control” and that he would refrain from any more negative campaigning.

Huckabee told the assembled crowd of reporters, which I’ve been told was pretty big, that he and his campaign had already finished the attack ad, sent it local TV stations, and announced the press conference to unveil it … and then Huckabee had an epiphany this morning. “From now we will run only ads that say why I should be president not why Mitt Romney shouldn’t be president,” he said.

At which point, Huckabee showed the reporters the attack ad anyway, prompting what Cooper said was “loud gasps and laughter from the more than 150 reporters on hand.”

Marc Ambinder noted that Huckabee is presumably “hoping that gullible news executives will run the ad that Huckabee is too much of a saint for not airing — for free.” Of course, given the reported laughter in the room, that seems unlikely.

It gets worse.

Huckabee spoke surrounded by five placards on easels leveling the same attacks in print on Romney.

Asked to explain the pledge to stay positive with his decision to still show the ad and display the oppo, Huckabee said his staff hadn’t known of his decision until minutes before the event and that he only showed the negative spot to prove that he had actually cut one and had made this decision.

It’s the sort of gambit that will instantly trigger cynicism among the political class, especially given the confusion that surrounded the move.

Charmaine Yoest, a top aide to the former governor, said after the press conference that she didn’t know about Huckabee’s decision to not air the ads until shortly before the event and that there hadn’t been time to take down the signs.

But, surrounded by reporters in a hallway outside the conference room, she wouldn’t say exactly when she found out about the decision. “This is an evolving strategy,” Yoest admitted before leaving.

We’ve all seen some very cheap stunts over the years, but they’re not usually this cheap and not this transparent. Reporters covering the campaign have their faults, but they’re not idiots, and Huckabee just insulted their collective intelligence.

Joe Klein concluded, “That sound you hear rumbling out of Des Moines appears to be a monumental implosion.”

a haggard-looking Huckabee

Ted was there?

Sorry.

Reporters covering the campaign have their faults, but they’re not idiots, and Huckabee just insulted their collective intelligence.

I have to say, I can understand why a candidate might assume the average reporter is NOT smarter thant he average bear. However, I do agree that it was a cheap stunt. Especially from an o-so-pious chap like Huckabee.

Man, these guys make me sick but I can’t stop watching their antics.

  • “to prove that he had actually cut one”

    Yeah, he cut one all right.

    This is the kind of story the bobblehead media likes, no substance, no fact checking, just some goofy crap that the lowest common dufus can “understand”. They’ll probably manage to tie it back into the haircut bullshit.

  • OOOOOHHHH I despise this guy. What a jerk. He’s taken the “I wouldn’t say this about my opponent, but I’ve heard…” thing way too far. He had to show the ad to the press so they knew he had the guts to make one??? Then still pretended to take the high road??? He’s been rattling on about how evil Mitt is for days and called him a liar. He’s gotten personal and you can’t unring that bell. He’s a hypocrite in addition to being totally unqualified. I used to think that a vote for Huckabee was a vote for Giuliani, I now think it’s a vote for a conniving ignoramus with no moral core. He’s a Pharisee in the worst way. I hope he just goes away.

  • Hey, Bush got the country to believe we needed to start a war in order to be at peace. Trying to get people to believe patent, obvious nonsense merely demonstrates Huckster’s qualifications to be the GOP nominee. It’s what they do. If the press liked Huck, this would be reported as an act of breathtaking genius.

    I kinda like the “See, I have the attack ad right here. See it? But, because I’m a nice guy, I’m not gonna run it. Nope. Not gonna do it. That’s how nice I am, because, see, it’s right here, where I say that Romney is a dog and all. You can see that, right? (Do you need a clip? We can get you a clip.) So you’ll know what I’m NOT running.”

    Sure, it’s not Orwellian on the level of “we don’t torture”, but hey, he’s on a budget.

  • Look, it’s easy to run against Romney for the Republican nomination.

    Just keep showing Romney’s flip-flops and finish with:

    “What does Mitt Romney really believe?”

    A more blatant query about whether Romney is really “one of us” might be necessary to kick it home.

    Either one subtly or not-so-subtly reminds people that Romney is a Mormon *and* a slick opportunist.

  • Per Huck a month ago, divine providence was responsible for his surge in the Iowa polls. So much for the power of Huck’s god. Even she can’t sell this idiot.

  • Guy was never ready for prime time. Main surprise here is that it took so long.

    Corporate America doesn’t want to hand the keys to this rube. He’ll go down hard.

    Say hello to cannon fodder Republican Nominee Mitt.

  • Thanks for this post, CB. This is the best laugh I’ve had all day.

    “You won’t hear ME saying that my opponent is a lying snake-in-the-grass. It won’t be ME talking about his weird religion, or wondering if he’ll be taking orders from the Utah Prophets. Nope. I’m taking the high road.”

  • Huckabee told the assembled crowd of reporters, which I’ve been told was pretty big, that he and his campaign had already finished the attack ad, sent it local TV stations, and announced the press conference to unveil it … and then Huckabee had an epiphany this morning. — CB

    My guess is that the “epiphany” was prompted by him sending the ad to the local TV stations and finding out that, due to a veritable blizzard of political ads from other candidates, all of which ads were to be run right now, the stations were now charging double or triple of what it had been two weeks ago. Or, that they were just turning some of them down flat, no matter how much money a candidate was willing to shell out, as in an earlier thread Zeiteist said that a 2min spot by Clinton had been turned down.

    So, the canny huckster figured “when life hands you a lemon…” and tried to spin the situation as a righteous move of his own. Such peasant “shrewdness” is quite common among the semi-educated (and home-skooled), it plays well in such audience and such audience is what he’s used to. He misunderestimated the reporters; quite an understandable mistake.

  • Huckabee said his staff hadn’t known of his decision until minutes before the event

    OMG, it’s not just Huck! His staff isn’t taking bathroom breaks (see previous post)!

  • Driving home from work this afternoon, I heard on NPR that Huck had announced he was pulling his negative ads. Then, not an hour later, the local station aired one — a negative Huck ad, not a news story about ads being pulled. I don’t know if it was “the” ad, the one he showed the reporters, but in it Huck mentions McCain and, repeatedly, Romney by name.

  • “Reporters covering the campaign have their faults, but they’re not idiots…”

    Are we sure? They did agree to attend a press conference knowing that it was all about unveiling a new attack ad. What kind of scoop were they hoping for??

  • >But, surrounded by reporters in a hallway outside the conference room, she wouldn’t say exactly when she found out about the decision. “This is an evolving strategy,” Yoest admitted before leaving.

    Charmaine’s job before joining Huckabee was working at the Family Research Council. Since when does she believe in evolution?

  • “I am too principled to run attack ads.”
    Mike Huckabee.

    “I am not a crook.”
    Richard Nixon.

    “I’m really a nice guy.”
    Attila the Hun.

    Well, you know the old saw—if it smells like sh*t and it draws flies like sh*t, it’s probably isn’t a steaming cup of hot cocoa and a warm chocolate chip cookie!

  • On the news this evening, the reporter was filmed asking Huckabee if it wasn’t a bit disingenous of him to announce that he had an attack ad that he wasn’t going to run,and then to show it to a roomful of reporters with 60 cameras in the room, knowing it was going to go out to TV news. Huckabee responded that if he hadn’t shown the ad, they’d be asking him where it was.

    The way it ended up being reported was with a tone of the media – every bit as tired of the horse race as the candidates – feeling punk’d – and they’re pissed about it.

    And they were universally agog over the statement by the campaign that they would not rule out negative ads in the future.

    I’m telling you, it’s going to be Romney.

  • In the words of Dana Carvey, imitating Johnny Carson, “This is some funny, funny stuff.” But consider a couple of possible scenarios that might have led to this event. First, it is Huckabee and his cronies that are responsible for most of the anti-Mormon robocalls, mailings and, likely, push-polls. That costs money–perhaps not a lot of money, but it does cost a pretty penny. Second, Huckabee has picked up his fundraising since taking over the lead in Iowa and SC, but he’s still short on cash. Rudy’s spending like there’s no tomorrow and Romney is lending himself more money than Forbes, but Fred and Huck are floating much closer to zero than they can afford to. With money tight, NH and SC coming up–and SC still close (and all those robocalls to pay for), Huck’s campaign suddenly realized that they cannot afford the Iowa ads. Since most polls put him ahead, they just might take a risk and skip the spots–and pray that reporters share the message they got from Huck. Talk about campaigning on the cheap!

    Look, Huck is a crazy Christianist, he’s full of crap and is stupid to boot. The best strategy the campaign can come up with is STFU! But that will not fly as voters will get suspicious of a silent candidate, so they have to try something else.

  • I was going to say something negative about the Huckster. But upon reflection I am too nice a guy to do that. Just in case you don’t believe me..HUCK SUCKS.

  • Just as big a screw-up at that press conference was Huckabee’s staff fumbling with the audio for 3 or 4 minutes. That was priceless. Could you imagine a Huckabee staff at a White House Press Conference?

    This seals the fate of populist Social Con(artist) Mike Huckabee. And we libertarian Republicans are breathing a huge sigh of relief. Now we can nominate a Fiscal Conservative like Mitt Romney or Rudy Giuliani who can unite all the factions of the GOP, instead of some “fiscally liberal/socially conservative” guy from Arkansas.

    Libertarians for Giuliani at http://www.mainstreamlibertarian.com

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