Republican presidential hopeful Mike Huckabee, unable to get the coveted endorsement of the anti-abortion group National Right to Life Committee, is turning to his buddy Chuck Norris for some help.
Norris, well known for his martial arts moves and movies, endorsed Huckabee last month and is now helping the former Arkansas governor raise money as he tries to gain some ground on the Republican front-runners.
“Mike has a heart for helping others and will fight for the causes of the citizens of this country,” Norris said in the pitch to supporters. “Mike doesn’t abandon his values for what’s expedient.”
Huckabee has typically polled in the low double digits or high single digits but came in second in the Iowa Straw Poll this summer (though Rudy Giuliani and John McCain did not participate). He has drawn support from conservatives upset that Giuliani supports abortion rights and Mitt Romney once did.
Huckabee “doesn’t fear offending Christian leaders who give up their values in pursuit of electing their ‘team leader’ just like everyone else,” Norris said.
Norris appeared to be taking a chop at Christian evangelical leader Pat Robertson, who last week endorsed Giuliani even though Giuliani supports abortion rights and gay rights.
Photo credit: Reuters/Joshua Roberts

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[...] another Huckabee-related note, the former governor has garnered perhaps the highest-powered endorsement of the campaign season for far — one that’s sure to register like a roundhouse to the head [...]
- Posted by Wheelhouse Online » Blog Archive » You’re messing with the wrong guy[...] raises an important question: Where would Chuck Norris be most effective in a Huckabee cabinet? Secretary of Defense? Secretary of State? National [...]
- Posted by Roundhouse kickin’ the terrorists « CashewChuck knows that Americans will be STRONGER if Huckabee’s elected. Here’s why:
Mike Huckabee’s ardent support ( http://snipurl.com/fthuckabeeonirs) for the FairTax Act of 2007 (HR 25 / S 1025) ( http://snipurl.com/irsgone ) represents a power shift of massive proportions in America. It lays out a practical ideal of voluntary tax payment, based on a substantial level of taxpayer choice that the plan affords. Since FairTax untaxes basic necessities (up to socially-accepted levels of poverty-level spending), what is taxed is marginal, and/or desired or preferred, on a broader base of retail products and services. This is to say that the taxpayer may, under the FairTax, choose to purchase used products and avoid paying the tax. And, to the extent desired, the taxpayer may choose to self-perform certain services rather than pay for them. This will stimulate do-it-yourself education, improve citizens’ self-reliance; indeed the FairTax represents the possibility of ushering in a new “can-do citizen psychology” that would accrue to greater demands for government accountability - truly, a cultural sea change.
Government is the “necessary glue” that enables the social fabric to cohere. It does this by effecting “rules” that ostensibly provide members with equitable access to wealth and resources. It also must provide ostensibly equitable enforcement of those rules in order to mitigate threats to the social fabric. It is unrealistic to believe that the structures of a national government can be supported on donations, thus the need for taxes. Naysayers love to characterize anything purporting to be a “fair tax” as an oxymoron - but it is not true. The idea of fairness has to do with equitable sharing in the cost by all members who depend upon the social fabric for food, shelter, clothing and post-necessity economic enterprise. And, because of the shift of power from politicians and special interests under an enacted FairTax, the elected will find it more difficult to both enlarge government, and implement any dual system of taxation. FairTax strategist, Dennis Calabrese, discusses how the FairTax repeals the income tax ( http://snipurl.com/repealsinctax ), how it does away with the IRS ( http://snipurl.com/doesawaywithirs ), and how it addresses other aspects ( http://snipurl.com/ftvideofaqs ) of frequent concern to skeptics.
The FairTax has a much greater opportunity for success to operate as a “self-regulating” mechanism because of increased visibility. One finds that the current system, ostensibly regulated by the Internal Revenue Code, is in fact poorly regulated because of continually increasing complexity (the effect of “tax favors” from politicians, through lobbyists, to favored corporations and other special interests) stemming from the desire by those holding government position to steer public behavior using tax code “carrots.” We have seen how 100 years of this type of behavior has eroded the Nation’s currency and the purchasing power of working family incomes. “Visionist,” Tom Frey believes the current tax system will soon simply collapse ( http://snipurl.com/incometaxcollapse ); and economist Laurence Kotlikoff heralds that - short of enactment of FairTax (or an otherwise unlikely change in spending habits) - the U.S. will shortly facing an irrevocable economic breakdown ( http://snipurl.com/meltdowninprogress ). (Kotlikoff believes that passage of the FairTax can stave off the economic ruin we’re facing, but would be surprised to see it happen.)
Frey and Kotlikoff may be right on both counts, and we may not be able to successfully evoke change; but shall we not try?
Mike Huckabee believes we should. ( http://snipr.com/scrapthecode )
(Permission granted to republish, in whole or part. -Ian)
- Posted by Ian