By Ralph Z. Hallow
March 25, 2008
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."
Religious broadcaster Pat Robertson backed Rudolph W. Giuliani; American Value President and former presidential hopeful Gary Bauer endorsed Sen. John McCain; and Family Research Council President Tony Perkins remained neutral, even as Mr. Huckabee was wowing their supporters and winning the values voter straw polls they organized.
Mr. Huckabee said his foreign-policy views were misunderstood by evangelical leaders who criticized him for not comprehending the direness of the "Islamo-fascist" threat.
Their criticism and even antagonism still leave him bemused, and he said it was "like playing the Whack-a-Mole pizza-parlor game" in trying to shoot down their objections.
"I was the one person who talked about this being a theological war, not just a geopolitical war [because] it was unlike a traditional war over borders and boundaries," he says.
Mr. Bauer says Mr. Huckabee "ran an honorable campaign, but in spite of his successes I saw no evidence that he could bring together the three main parts of the Reagan electoral constituency — defense, economic and social conservatives.
"If he asked my advice, it would be to try to do that in the months and years ahead," he said.
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