Huckabee Tries to Gloss Over Ark. Record
Nov
28, 3:12 AM (ET)
By
ANDREW DeMILLO
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) - Mike Huckabee's presidential rivals are
pointing to chinks in his record as Arkansas' governor - from ethics complaints
to tax increases to illegal immigration and his support for releasing a rapist
who was later convicted of killing a Missouri woman.
The Republican presidential candidate has plenty to champion from
his 10 1/2 years as governor - including school improvements and health
insurance for the children of the working poor. But his record has rough edges,
and Huckabee has a habit of playing fast and loose with it.
Other campaigns for the GOP nomination, watching Huckabee's rise
in polls in Iowa, are starting to mine his past for political fodder. Take
ethics, for example.
"People are starting to contact us and they're saying we want
everything on Mike Huckabee," says Graham Sloan, director of the state's
Ethics Commission.
What they'll find is 436 pages of documents chronicling Huckabee's
various tangles with a commission he's derided as a political tool of Democrats.
It's a panel that has held proceedings 20 times on the former governor and
lieutenant governor.
But the Ethics Commission files don't cover everything, and this
year - anticipating criticism - Huckabee's campaign set up a "truth
squad" to push his side of various stories. It often offers, at best, an
incomplete account of his record.
On major issues:
_The truth squad says the only finding by the Arkansas Ethics
Commission that Huckabee accepted a gift improperly was tossed out by a state
court. In fact, the panel investigated 16 complaints against Huckabee and found
five violations. Only one, for accepting a $500 canoe from Coca-Cola, was
tossed out.
Two of the complaints against Huckabee pertain to unreported gifts
- the canoe and a $200 stadium blanket received by his wife, Janet. Two stem
from cash the governor or his wife received but did not initially report. The
panel also ruled in 2003 that Huckabee's campaign violated state law when it
used its funds to pay for an event during the summer of 2002 called Gospel Fest
During his tenure, Huckabee accepted 314 gifts valued overall at
more than $150,000, according to documents filed with the Arkansas secretary of
state's office. (He accepted 187 gifts in his first three years as governor but
was not required to report their value.)
_Huckabee has consistently understated his role in the parole of
rapist Wayne DuMond, who had been convicted in the 1984 rape of a distant
cousin of former President Clinton.
Two months after taking office, Huckabee stunned the state by
saying he questioned DuMond's guilt and that it was his intention to free the
rapist, who had been castrated by masked men while awaiting trial. Huckabee
said then he had "serious questions as to the legitimacy of his
guilt" and acknowledged later that he had met with DuMond's wife about the
case while he was lieutenant governor. Two months after ascending to the
governor's office, Huckabee met with the woman again.
The ex-governor now blames his predecessor for making DuMond
parole eligible - Jim Guy Tucker commuted a life-plus-20 years sentence to 39
1/2 years - but distances himself from his role in DuMond's release. Huckabee
met privately with the state parole board, and two members have said he
pressured them for a vote.
"He made it obvious that he thought DuMond had gotten a raw
deal and wanted us to take another look at it," former board member
Charles Chastain said in 2001. "Some board members who were usually very
tough about letting people out ... (later) voted in favor of him, and seemed
eager to."
On his campaign Web site, Huckabee says the parole board was made
up entirely of Democrats appointed by Clinton and Tucker. It doesn't mention
that Huckabee reappointed board member Railey Steele days before he voted with
three other members to set DuMond free. DuMond was later convicted of killing a
woman in Missouri and died in 2005.
_Huckabee likes to say he was tough on taxes in Arkansas, noting a
$100 million tax cut in 1997 that until this year was Arkansas' largest. When
asked about a fuel tax increase he backed in 1999, Huckabee says incorrectly
that he joined 80 percent of Arkansas voters in approving it.
Huckabee in 1999 supported a $1 billion highway bond program,
including costs for interest and lawyers' fees, but the question on the ballot
was only whether the state could take on the debt, not how Arkansas would pay
for it. Huckabee had signed the fuel tax increase two months earlier.
Shortly after taking office, Huckabee took a four-day trip by bass
boat along the Arkansas River to tout a 1/8th-cent sales tax increase for
outdoor programs. (Two nature centers now carry the names of Huckabee and his
wife.) Taxes went up $40 million in the months before the $100 million tax cut
Huckabee touts.
Other taxes went up as Arkansas changed its property tax system
and made improvements to its school system.
_Huckabee's recent strong stand on immigration, including an
intolerance toward companies that employ illegal immigrants, runs counter to
the image he crafted in his final years in office. He was battling
conservatives within his own party who were pushing for stricter state-level
immigration measures.
Huckabee opposed a Republican lawmaker's efforts in 2005 to
require proof of legal status when applying for state services that aren't
federally mandated and proof of citizenship when registering to vote. Huckabee
derided the bill as un-American and un-Christian and said the bill's sponsor
drank a different "Jesus juice."
That same year, Huckabee failed in his effort to make children of
illegal immigrants eligible for state-funded scholarships and in-state tuition
to Arkansas colleges. At the time, Huckabee said he didn't understand the
opposition to it.
"It hurts me on a personal as well as a policy level to think
that we are still debating issues that I kind of hoped we had put aside in the
1960s, maybe at the latest the '70s, and yet I understand people have deep
passions about things usually they don't fully understand," Huckabee said.