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Sunday, March 09, 2008
David R. Stokes :: Townhall.com Columnist
Thank You, Mr. Huckabee
by David R. Stokes
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In August of 1976, Republicans met in Kansas City’s Kemper Arena to nominate Gerald R. Ford for a presidential term in his own right, after a long and hard-fought battle with Ronald Reagan. It had been a close race, bearing some similarity to what is transpiring in the camp of the Democrats this year; at least in the sense of being a horse race careening toward the wire.

Reagan was in the crowd when President Ford gave his acceptance speech. It was a better than average performance for Ford, who was not known for his eloquence or for being a particularly animated speaker. That evening he was clearly upbeat and savoring his victory and the moment.

Following the address and during the usual post-speech floor demonstration, Mr. Ford went back to the podium and invited Mr. Reagan to the platform.  Reagan, at first, didn’t seem to understand, and had a look on his face that would become familiar to Americans a few years later when, as President, he would step off Marine One and walk toward the White House; the thumping of helicopter blades giving him cover for not hearing questions shouted by reporters.  But he eventually made his way from his seat in the distance to center stage.

The Great Communicator most commonly read his thoroughly prepared speeches (and was occasionally mocked for this, being called “the ACTING President”), but Mr. Reagan could, in fact, speak eloquently on cue in an impromptu situation. That night in Kansas City is a case in point.

I remember watching this on television and found myself thinking what I suspect millions of others were also wondering: “And, we didn’t nominate this guy, why?”

I felt a little like that last Tuesday night as I listened to Mike Huckabee’s remarks to his supporters telling them that he was dropping out of the race. His generous and eloquent phrases were upbeat and encouraging, and his obvious gift for communication came through loud and clear. He thanked his supporters, as was appropriate. Equally appropriate, in my opinion, is an acknowledgement of gratitude to Mr. Huckabee for a job well done.

So…Thank you, Mr. Huckabee, for conducting a positive and people-centered campaign.

Thank you, Mr. Huckabee, for doing this on a shoestring budget and with a comparatively small staff.

Thank you, Mr. Huckabee, for reminding us that it is possible to be conservative without being spitting mad all the time.

Thank you, Mr. Huckabee, for talking about the unborn and the pro-life issue.

Thank you, Mr. Huckabee, for having the guts to suggest that the IRS should be abolished (do we sense an audit in Mike’s future?).

Thank you, Mr. Huckabee, for keeping your word – you stayed in as long as you promised, and you left decisively without dragging it out for media attention and personal purposes. Continued...

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About The Author
David R. Stokes is a minister, writer, and broadcaster. His weekly talks at Fair Oaks Church in Fairfax, Virginia and host of Loud on Purpose, heard Monday to Friday in Washington, D.C. on WAVA 105.1 fm.
 
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What civil discourse
Townhall must be owned and operated by Mormons, atheists, secularists, liberals. That would be fine if comments from these camps consisted of facts, logic, courtesy, and civil discourse. But the majority of what one reads is not the least informative, interesting, or even pleasant. So much is negative, vitriolic, caustic, resentful, intolerant, hateful, and just plain mean.

Qweenie, PC and friends repeat the same thing over and over again with such un-Christian name-calling that any useful information is lost in a vat of venom. Their favorite words are bigot and liar. Great way to shine a positive light on Christianity. I expect some who read such comments would become atheists in order to not be associated with such hard-hearted, mean-spirited people.

Observer could stand to remove the rose colored glasses while reading Judicial Watch and others. I've read JW newsletters for a long time. Good stuff, but they got lazy on the Huckabee corruption you cite. Judicial Watch did no independent research on that; they merely repeated assertions of Club for Growth. The Club for Growth was paid to do this "research" on Huckabee. Who paid? Mr. Romney. Do your own research to find the facts amidst the hype. The charges, as has been pointed out extensively, were all found to be unfounded and frivolous filed by disgruntled Democrats. As to Novak, Coulter (and Hewitt, Limbaugh, Hannity whom you didn't mention), they present opinions, not facts. They are not investigative journalists, they merely opine. Did you believe Coulter when she called Edwards the "f" word?

Good grief . . . and good bye!


To Observer/Listener/Follower
Observer, your suspicion about my reasons for supporting Huckabee is absolutely wrong. It has nothing to do with church whatsoever. I don't even attend church, and if I did, it wouldn't be a Baptist congregation.
As I have pointed out again and again, I support him because of his stands on the issues I feel are vital to the future of this country. I support him because he has executive experience. Because he's the best communicator we've seen in the GOP since Reagan...but not because he's Christian.
As Yt_Knight said, is it really hard for you to believe allegations (outrageous ones, many of them) were made against a dyed-in-the-wool Republican governor in an overwhelmingly Democrat state?
(I'm sure you won't listen to me, anyway, because I'm not a voice on the radio, directing your next move...but you should.)
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