February 6th, 2008 • 10:02
Questions
1. How many minutes after Romney eventually drops out will Huckabee drop out?
2. How mad will Democrats be if Obama wins more regular delegates, but Clinton takes the nomination thanks to superdelegates?
Craig
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Feb 6th 2008 • 12:02
by Tom Grover
Mitt should drop out today to make Huckabee look like a fool. If Mitt drops today, and the Huckster drops his candidacy as well it’s confirmation that he was in it to spite Mitt despite that BS he said last night about being back in the race. If the Huckster were to stay in after Mitt drops he would be forced to attack John McCain, who he has a man crush on- but he won’t – and will thus once again look like a FOOL.
Feb 6th 2008 • 14:02
by Anonymous
Agreed. I’ll especially enjoy it when Huck isn’t tapped as McCain’s veep or any other significant administration position. You got used Huckabee.
At least he did God’s will by keeping the heathen Mitt Romney and his Jesus-is-Satan’s-brother crowd out of the White House.
Feb 6th 2008 • 15:02
by David
1. He won’t drop out until McCain agrees to announce him as his running mate (some people might think this has already happened). This means that he must hope that McCain agrees very quickly or it will look ugly as they campaign against each other.
2. Obama supporters will be furious while Clinton supporters will say “that’s poltics.”
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Feb 8th 2008 • 21:02
by Pursuit of Liberty » Blog Archive » Keeping the Race Alive
[...] Ever since Romney ended his bid for the Republican nomination I have seen much commentary on how Huckabee would need to end his bid soon to preserve his chances at being selected as the VP on the McCain ticket. I have seen one article suggesting the reverse. The logic is interesting and plausible: How can a longer primary campaign good for Mr. McCain? So long as it’s civil, it keeps him in the news as a winner in Republican primaries, and provides a forum for Mr. McCain to continue traveling the country and spreading his message in a relaxed, unthreatening political environment. Think of it as the heavyweight boxing champion drawing TV coverage for workouts with his sparring partner. . . [...]