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December 26, 2007
http://www.americanfr...
The media elite is having a honeymoon with Mike Huckabee. As an ordained
Southern Baptist minister, Huckabee is the darling of evangelical
Christians, but why would the major media, dominated by atheists and
agnostics who are traditionally hostile to evangelicals, suddenly
undergo this conversion?
Media?s Masters Adore Huckabee
By Michael Collins Piper AFP
Many good conservatives are said to be captivated with the former
governor of Arkansas ?Mike Huckabee, not that other former Arkansas
governor, William Jefferson Clinton.
It seemed as if just at the moment Texas populist Ron Paul was beginning
to make waves, with even The Washington Post reporting Paul's
grass-roots campaign threatened, in the Post's words, to "upend"
the
Republican presidential primary campaign,the mass media began focusing
on Huckabee, whom they had previously ignored.
For his own part, Huckabee has said he can support any of his Republican
competitors with the notable exception of Paul. As governor, and until
running for president, Huckabee strongly supported amnesty for illegal
aliens and called for extending health and welfare benefits to them. He
also raised taxes many times as governor.
There is good reason to believe powerful backstage forces are behind the
Huckabee "surge," and some observers suspect Huckabee is being
promoted
by the media's owners precisely to redirect attention away from Paul's
burgeoning grass-roots campaign.
That Huckabee was governor of Arkansas may point toward "special"
backing. Arkansas has long been a fiefdom, an outpost, of the New
York-based Rockefeller family whose satellites in Arkansas, such as the
Stevens banking empire, which backed Bill Clinton, now supporting Huckabee.
One of the Rockefeller brothers, Winthrop, was elected governor of
Arkansas as a Republican in the 1960s with the backing of a young Bill
Clinton, a liberal "Democrat for Rockefeller." Then, although many
Huckabee fans and foes alike seem to have forgotten it, while Huckabee
was governor, Rockefeller's son, Winthrop Jr., was Huckabee's lieutenant
governor, only to die prematurely of a blood disorder.
Should there be any doubt Huckabee is oriented toward cold, hard power
politics, he recently told The New York Times Magazine that he takes his
foreign policy leads from such seemingly diverse forces as liberal New
York Times columnist Thomas Friedman and "neo-conservative" power
broker
Frank Gaffney.
Although these Huckabee gurus are ostensibly "different," they have
one
thing in common: all are hard-line supporters of Israel, with Gaffney
having been one of the key propagandists promoting U.S. involvement in
Iraq and now touting the need for a U.S. attack on Iran.
Washington insiders have not failed to note that Huckabee has received a
boost from big names in the Establishment media, ranging from
influential liberal columnists such as longtime Democratic operative
Donna Brazile to David Broder, undisputed dean of the "elite"
columnists.
These media figures (and others) tout Huckabee as a likeable fellow, a
hard-driving "winner" who could add a lot to the GOP ticket, if not
as
its presidential nominee, certainly in the second slot.
While evangelical Christians are delighted that Huckabee, a former
Baptist minister, advertises himself as a "Christian leader," the
fact
Huckabee seems to be getting an unusually favorable welcome from the
major media is intriguing. The media has never promoted Christian
"leaders" unless those "leaders" had the implicit backing
of the elite
behind-the-scenes owners of the media.
All told, there's clearly more to the Huckabee phenomenon than meets the
eye.
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