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Showing posts with label Mike Huckabee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mike Huckabee. Show all posts

Sunday, March 4, 2018

Conservatives Not Wanted In Country Music? Is That The Message?

Huckabee’s Resignation Letter From CMA Will Have His Haters Even More Ticked Off

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Mike Huckabee just showed country music what class really looks like.
The former Arkansas governor, two-time GOP presidential contender, and protective father of White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders was already a lightning rod for the fury of the left because of the accomplishments of a lifetime.
But when he stepped down Thursday from the Country Music Foundation Association’s board of directors after backlash from some industry loudmouths who objected to his conservative views, Huckabee had to have infuriated his critics even more by proving he has two things the liberals who infest the entertainment industry in America never will — a rock-solid belief in his own convictions, and the courage to carry them out.
“If the industry doesn’t want people of faith or who hold conservative and traditional political views to buy tickets and music, they should be forthcoming and say it,” Huckabee wrote in a resignation letter published on his website, under the apt title “Hate Wins.”
“Surely neither the artists or the business people of the industry want that.”

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Maybe some do.
The announcement of Huckabee’s appointment to the CMA Foundation’s board Wednesday stirred an immediate outcry from vocal elements inside the industry over his well-known conservative views.
“Huckabee speaks of the sort of things that would suggest my family is morally beneath his and uses language that has a profoundly negative impact upon young people all across this country,” Owen wrote in an email to the CMA’s CEO and the foundation’s director, according to The Tennessean.

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“Not to mention how harmful and damaging his deep involvement with the NRA is. What a shameful choice.”
Actually, what was shameful was the overwrought reaction from liberals like Owen and his ilk.
But Huckabee critics, hung up a political agenda that often amounts to a fetish for gay sex under the guise of matrimony and restricting the constitutional rights of American citizens, think that record isn’t good enough.
RELATED: Huckabee Hits Anti-Christian Attacker With Hilarious Tweet
Or, as Huckabee put it in his letter: “Now someone who has never met me threatens to wreck valuable programs of the CMA Foundation because of a personal contempt for my faith and politics.”
It’s a disgraceful state of affairs when one of the leading institutions of country music, a genre born in the deeply Christian culture of rural America, bows to the shrill protests of a vocal minority at the cost of losing the services of a man with a record like Huckabee’s.
As Lauren DeBellis Appell, a one-time deputy press secretary for conservative Pennsylvania Republican Sen. Rick Santorum and former communications director for the Senate Republican Policy Committee, wrote in a commentary piece for Fox News:
“What’s ludicrous is that Huckabee’s role on the CMA Foundation would have had nothing to do with his conservative views. It would have had everything to do with his passion for music and how it shaped his life, and how he wanted to help kids use music to do the same in their lives.”
Of course, the liberal outcry over Huckabee’s appointment had nothing to do with his passion for music and everything to do with his conservative views – views that would have been absolutely normal in the country music world until about the day before yesterday.
But for Huckabee’s haters, the most infuriating part of his bow-out had to be the quiet nobility that came at the end. They’re the words of a man who knows what his principles require, and has a record of taking action because of it. Huckabee helped countless Arkansas children get an exposure to music they might otherwise never have received, but it’s not good enough for some liberal loudmouths in country music today.
“I wish you nothing but good will and success at reaching students across America who need music as much as I did,” Huckabee wrote. “At the end of the day, I’m not worth the fight, but the kids are. Never stop fighting for THEM!”
That’s what class looks like. And there was a time not so long ago, when country music didn’t need to be shown it.
Please like and share this story on Facebook if you think country music needs to get back to its roots!
What do you think of Mike Huckabee's letter? Did he convey his thoughts effectively?

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Is Trump's Lead Expanding Or Will McCain Comment Doom His Campaign, We Believe The Former Is True.

Poll: Donald Trump takes double-digit lead over the GOP presidential field




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Donald Trump is soaring over his GOP rivals in a new nationwide Washington Post/ABC News poll conducted amid his controversial comments about Sen. John McCain’s (R-Ariz.) “war hero” status.
According to the just-released poll, Trump — with 24 percent support among likely Republican voters — holds a comfortable, double-digit lead over nearest competitor Scott Walker, who captures 13 percent support.
Jeb Bush, Mike Huckabee, and Sen. Marco Rubio round up the top 5 with 12, 8, and 7 percentage points of support, respectively. Sen. Rand Paul, meanwhile, sits in sixth place with 5 percentage points.
Despite his seemingly frontrunner-like numbersand a significant 20 point bump since the lastWashington Post/ABC News poll was taken in May, the poll’s authors said Trump suffered a considerable drop following his remarks about McCain on Saturday.
“He was a war hero because he was captured,”Trump told host Frank Luntz during the 2015 Family Leadership Summit in Ames, Iowa. “I like people who weren’t captured.”
According to ABC News, support for Trump during the first three nights of polling held steady at 28 percent, but dropped into single-digit territory on Sunday following his comments about McCain, who was a prisoner of war in Vietnam.

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Obama Crap Trade Agreement Is Secret Document Which Means It Is NOT Good For America.

image: http://www.wnd.com/files/2015/06/abe-japan-obama.jpg
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Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and President Obama discuss the Trans-Pacific Partnership at a press conference in April at the White House.
NEW YORK – Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee declared Monday to WND in simple terms why he opposes the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement that President Obama wants to move through Congress with “fast-track” authority.
“I’m not a globalist, I’m an American,” Huckabee told WND. “As president, I will do everything in my power to protect the American worker first.”
As WND reported Friday, U.S. Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., called on Obama to let the public see the closely guarded contents of the deal, which the senator called the creation of a “nascent European Union.”
“For far too long,” Huckabee told WND, “the American workers have been getting punched in the gut because of unbalanced trade deals that forgo congressional scrutiny, ignore the law, and drive wages lower than the Dead Sea.”
The former Arkansas governor said what’s worse is “that most members of Congress who say they ‘support’ Obamatrade admit they haven’t even been to the secret room to read this secret deal.”
Only lawmakers and certain senior staff are allowed to read the text kept in the secured room in the basement of the U.S. Capitol.

Huckabee expressed concern the Republican leadership in Congress was siding with Obama in the effort to pass so-called Trade Promotion Authority legislation, which would allow passage of trade deals such as the TPP on a simple majority vote that limits discussion and bars amendments.
“I have no idea why Republicans in Congress think we can trust this president to negotiate Obamatrade,” said Huckabee, referring to the term used by some to describe the package of “fast-track” authority and the TPP and other trade deals.
“President Obama can’t be trusted to negotiate a deal on a secondhand Subaru, let alone a trillion-dollar trade deal like TPP,” he said.
“Obama is an expert at using chaos, controversy, and the threat of economic Armageddon to advance his liberal agenda, kill jobs and hurt American workers,” Huckabee said.
“The last time we rushed something through Congress without knowing what was in it was Obamacare.”
He said Congress “should stand against this president’s secret trade deal and stand for the American worker – who’s been crushed for far too long.”

Democrat opposition
Despite Obama’s advocacy, the TPP is opposed by most Democrats in the House. Top labor unions contend the deal will result in the loss of millions of American jobs.
In the Senate, Democrats initially blocked Trade Promotion Authority, but it passed 62-37 last month, with only five Republicans voting no. The no votes were Sessions and Sens. Susan Collins of Maine, Mike Lee of Utah, Rand Paul of Kentucky and Richard Shelby of Alabama.
Along with Huckabee, among the likely and declared candidates for the Republican presidential nomination in 2016, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, former Sen. Rick Santorum, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., Carly Fiorina and Dr. Ben Carson have voiced opposition to TPP.
In support of TPP are former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Sens. Sens. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.
Meanwhile, Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., is pressuring House GOP leadership – particularly Majority Leader Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif. – to delay plans to move Obamatrade quickly through the House, Breitbart News reported Monday.
Hunter raised some of the same concerns Sessions brought to Obama’s attention Friday, asking that any vote on fast-track authority be delayed until the president makes public the TPP text and information regarding a commission established by the deal that wields international authority.
Earlier Monday, as WND was first to report, Huckabee said China’s hacking of the sensitive personal information of 4 million federal employees – the largest theft of government data in American history – requires a retaliatory strike.
He noted Adm. Mike Rogers, director of the National Security Agency and commander of U.S. Cyber Command, testified to Congress in March that adversaries attack the United States with little fear of retaliation
“What will it take for President Obama to open his eyes? The way you deal with a bully on the playground is to punch them in the face and put them on the ground because the only thing they respect is power,”” said Huckabee.

Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2015/06/huckabee-uncorks-on-obamatrade/#tZcBTtf5tLWV874F.99

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Is It Time For A Dark Horse To Rise In Republican Presidential Race?

New Experience For GOP: No Heir Apparent

June 3, 2014 by  
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Republican Elephant
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NEW ORLEANS (MCT) — Republicans show little enthusiasm for anyone as their top spokesman, let alone 2016 Presidential candidate.
Picking a leader is a new dilemma for modern Republicans. For decades, their next presumptive Presidential candidate had been the person last elected President or Vice President, or the one who came closest to winning the nomination.
Not in 2016. There’s no logical front-runner, and polls show a cluster of well-known names bunched together.
For three days last week, 1,500 delegates to the Republican Leadership Conference sized up the prospects. Most came away unexcited. A straw poll was largely inconclusive. Senator Ted Cruz of Texas inched out physician Ben Carson, with Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky a distant third.
Only 35 percent of delegates voted, and many of the big 2016 names — Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, Governor Chris Christie of New Jersey, former Governor Jeb Bush of Florida and former Governor Mike Huckabee of Arkansas — did not appear here.
Richard Brown, a retired oil and gas executive from Rockwall, Texas, offered the typical response. He checked off Carson’s name, but said, “Frankly, I didn’t like any of those people for President.” Carson was his choice because “he’s an honorable man.”
MaryAnn Riley, a Spartanburg, S.C., activist, also was not pleased. She and Brown stood together near the ballot, ticking off reservations about nearly everyone.
Paul? “I’m not comfortable with him. There’s something about him,” said Riley.
Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal? “Kind of moving to the middle,” said Brown.
How about Cruz? “I like how he’s doing exactly what he said he’d do,” Brown said. “But on a national basis, I’m not sure he could get away with that.”
That kind of talk was everywhere. Bush? “Too early for another Bush. We need at least four more years,’ said Sherry Barnes, an Augusta, Ga., attorney.
People know intellectually what they want: someone firmly committed to conservative principles on economics and limited government.
Most also want a winner, someone who can attract swing voters not bound to any firm ideology. The highlight of one session was former Republican National Committee Chairman Haley Barbour, who offered sobering advice. Be tolerant and be willing to compromise.
“Purity is the enemy of victory,” he said.
Passion, though, drives politics as much as strategy; and other experts here stressed stirring the grass-roots masses with a “get-government-off-our-backs” message as the way to win. Rail against the Affordable Care Act, allow responsible people to own guns and cut back on government regulations and taxes, they urged.
In short, the activists here want a tactician who also can lead a pep rally. It won’t be party Chairman Reince Priebus, respected for his efforts to expand the party’s base. Nor will it be 2012 Presidential nominee Mitt Romney. He’s more the elder statesman and campaign pitchman, stumping hard for State candidates and having some success.
The next voice of the party tried to emerge at the conference, but no one really did.
Jindal, who will headline South Carolina’s Silver Elephant Celebration in Columbia Friday, swung hard against the Common Core. Education officials and governors helped develop the standards for English and math for use throughout elementary and secondary school.
“There is something fundamentally wrong when the bureaucrats, when the Federal government especially, thinks they know best and they don’t need to listen to parents,” he said.
Cruz spent Saturday headlining a prayer breakfast, meeting and greeting dozens of delegates and then firing them up in a half-hour speech. He stressed the political power of the grass roots.
Former Presidential candidate Rick Santorum stressed reaching out to working class voters, saying, “The real wellspring of the Republican Party is in middle America, blue-collar America.” Another failed 2012 hopeful, Governor Rick Perry of Texas, got a polite response with his call for returning more power to the States.
No one sparked much chatter in the halls. The talk was more a yearning for fresh faces. Carson gets a lot of mentions; and his minions have been the most active of any potential candidate, stopping people to engage them and handing out bumper stickers.
Cheryl Frazier, a Winnfield, La., insurance broker, had no qualms about Carson’s lack of government experience. “He’s lived in the United States all his life. I’m sure he knows the system,” Frazier said.
People floated other names. Glenda Pollard, a Baton Rouge, La., real estate agent, was impressed with Representative Trey Gowdy of South Carolina, who will chair the new House committee investigating the 2012 Benghazi attacks.
Riley liked Governor Scott Walker of Wisconsin, who survived a recall election in 2012 after standing up to the state’s labor unions.
There’s simply no consensus on who’s next for the party, or even who its chief voice is now.
“We have to be behind one person,” said Pollard, “but right now, there’s not a perfect candidate.”
–David Lightman
McClatchy Washington Bureau