I will vote for Mike Huckabee Tuesday

February 17, 2008

Please feel free to forward the following message from Joe Fuiten to the people on your personal lists.

Dear Friends,

I already voted for him in the Caucus.  On Tuesday, I am going to vote for Mike Huckabee a second time. I will do so in spite of the virtually impossible odds of his winning. For me it will be a kind of last act to show the Republicans and the country that Evangelicals are a substantial force in America.  I hope you will do the same.

When our primary is over and the time is right, I will almost certainly throw my support behind John McCain.
   
To you that already support McCain:

My vote for Huckabee on Tuesday will seem like a pointless act. It might be, but I want one more distinctive showing of conservative and Evangelical action.
   
To you that have joined me in supporting Huckabee:

My inclination to later support McCain might seem like a betrayal of what we have worked for these past months. If and when I announce for McCain, I will tell you the positive reasons why I may do that. 

At this point, I will just note that Huckabee has not attacked McCain and McCain has not attacked Huckabee. Even with the election controversy here in Washington State, McCain’s people have not added to the controversy. I appreciate how they have handled that. In the end, it is in our best interest if value voters and Republicans work together.

You should also know that our State Republican Chairman Luke Esser has my full support. I think he has been fair and even-handed.

Herein lies our greatest battle:

It would appear that Barack Obama is winning on the Democratic side. Click here to read an article from Investor’s Business Daily, which will give you a bit of background. Obama’s religion is raising a lot of questions. It shows what we are likely to be up against in the coming months.

Please don’t hesitate to contact me if you have any questions or concerns.

Sincerely,

Joe Fuiten
 
P.S. I am sure you know that even if you caucused, you can also vote in the Primary.  Please be sure to check the box on your ballot envelope just above your signature. It is where you are required to indicate your party affiliation.  If you don’t check the box your vote will not be counted!

P.S.S.  If you are a Pastor or church or class leader, please remember the election in your public prayers this Sunday.
 
 
 
Dr. Joseph B. Fuiten is the senior pastor of Cedar Park Church in Bothell, Washington, and he is the former president of Positive Christian Agenda. Currently, Pastor Fuiten serves on the Board of Directors for the Family Policy Institute of Washington, an associate organization of Focus on the Family.  
 


Weird things going on in WA State

February 11, 2008

Why was the Republican party so quick to declare John McCain the winner of Saturday night’s primary election in Washington State? With 13% of the votes yet to be tallied, the call went for McCain, who was ahead of insurgent rival Mike Huckabee by just 1.8% of the votes cast.

By the time they awaited the results of the Washington contest, the American people had already learned some shocking news. Huckabee had destroyed McCain in Kansas and was projected the winner in Louisiana. A win in Washington would make it an embarrassing clean sweep over the party’s newly-anointed leader. Did this factor into the decision to prematurely call the race for McCain?

On Meet the Press, Huckabee called described the chain of events this way:

Josh Marshall and the TPM crew have been all over this one. So far, the most compelling rationale they’ve unearthed to explain the quick declaration is that the State’s Republican Party chair, Luke Esser, just got really excited. Let’s see what Huckabee’s legal team can find out.

Huckabee’s pressure has forced the state to resume counting the rest of the ballots. Don’t expect a concession speech until the last vote is tallied, and maybe not even then.


Huckabee’s Actually Done Some Math of His Own

February 11, 2008

From CBS News’ Joy Lin:

LYNCHBURG, VA. — It may be miracles he’s espousing, but Mike Huckabee’s done a little math of his own. Even if he might not be able to attain 1,191 votes necessary to win, he’s banking on the possibility John McCain can’t either.

“If John McCain doesn’t get 1,191 delegates, this goes to the convention, all bets are off,” Huckabee told reporters. “And after the first ballot anybody can end up being the nominee.”

So what if Karl Rove went on CBS’ Face the Nation saying it’s implausible that Huckabee will get the numbers necessary to win the nomination. Huckabee’s response: “Karl Rove has also maxed out personal contributions to John McCain … The fact the opposing team has their cheerleaders and band blowing songs against me hardly motivates me to quit. It only motivates me to play harder.”

For Huckabee, the game is not over.

“I’m really not very persuaded by the party officials and the party establishment who come out now and are saying ‘Oh, well John McCain has 700 delegates, we oughta just quit,’” said Huckabee.

“When they wrote the rules, it said you had to have 1,191. So why did they write the rules for that game of play and now want to change the rules, that’s crazy. And so, you know, I’m playing by the rules that were written for me and I’m not trying to make them and I’m not trying to break them, so we’ll continue doing it.”

Referencing Hillary Clinton’s tearful moments in recent months, Huckabee said, “If I cried and whined every time someone ignored me in this, I’d quit a year ago. But you have to realize that in every stage of this, there’s yet to be a time when the pundits said, Huckabee’s the guy to pull this off…I’m enjoying it if no other reason than to just intimidate the daylights out of all the other people who feel like they have it figured out.”

Following what he called an “overwhelming” win in Kansas and “shocking” victory in Louisiana, Huckabee said he felt “confident” going into Virginia.

“When [your opponents] really don’t think you have a chance, they ignore you. When they say bad things about you, they fear you. So the fact that I’m being asked to leave and all these things are being said, it’s an extraordinary honor. I don’t necessarily enjoy it, but I sure appreciate it.”


Huckabee won’t concede state; GOP resuming delegate count

February 10, 2008

The state Republican Party is resuming its count from Saturday’s caucuses after presidential candidate Mike Huckabee’s campaign expressed outrage over what it said was a race called too early.

In a news release, Huckabee’s campaign said there were “obvious irregularities” in the state’s Republican caucuses and that it is sending lawyers to explore “all available legal options regarding the dubious final results.”

According to that tally, Arizona Sen. John McCain won about 26 percent of delegates, Arkansas Gov. Huckabee won 24 percent, Texas Rep. Ron Paul finished with 21 percent, and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who has dropped out of the race, got 17 percent. Most of the rest were non-committed.

Huckabee’s campaign takes issue with the fact that Washington state Republican Party Chairman Luke Esser called the race with 87 percent of the precincts counted. At that point, McCain was ahead of Huckabee by 242 delegates out of the 13,000 counted. The Huckabee campaign contends there were another 1,500 or so delegates apparently not counted.

“This was an error in judgment by Mr. Esser,” a news release from the Huckabee campaign said. “Washington Republicans know, from bitter experience in the 2004 gubernatorial election, the terrible results that can come from bad ballot counting.”

Esser said Sunday afternoon that the Republican Party was going to try to get as “close as we can to 100 percent” in the vote count, and may have more numbers by later today. But Esser doesn’t believe counting more votes will change the outcome.

“We’re eager to give everybody the same level of confidence in the numbers as we have,” he said.

Esser said their last county report on Saturday came shortly before 10:15 p.m., at which point they had 87.2 percent of precincts reporting. That’s when they did an analysis, saying: “Let’s take every county where Huckabee is beating McCain, and double the margin of victory,” Esser said. “And then take every county where McCain is winning and cut in half that margin of victory. Even if you assume that, Sen. McCain still holds on.

“That’s when we said we’re confident that Sen. McCain’s lead was going to hold up,” Esser said. “I would have done the same for Gov. Huckabee if he had the same margin and the same underlying dynamics as Sen. McCain.”

Esser said he spoke Sunday with Pastor Joseph Fuiten of Bothell, who’s heading Huckabee’s volunteer effort in this state. According to Esser, Fuiten said Huckabee supporters reported some voting irregularities. Esser said the party would investigate those allegations. Fuiten could not be reached for comment.

Esser said he didn’t have a figure for the number of people who attended the Republican caucuses, since he asked workers to focus on the delegate elections.

Saturday’s caucuses will determine only a portion of the 40 Republican delegates who will go on to the Republican National Convention. Caucuses at various levels will determine 18 of those delegates; 19 will be based on the state primary election on Feb. 19. The three remaining positions are “automatic” delegates — the state party chairman and two national-committee members.

<!– var TFSMFlash_VERSION=6; var TFSMFlash_WMODE=”transparent”; var TFSMFlash_OASCLICK=”http://ads.nwsource.com/RealMedia/ads/click_lx.ads/www.seattletimes.com/local/L20/2084403072/Middle3/Seattle/WWTD-PI-300-default/wwtd_tunda0807mr_1a2.html/52696e31396b6138317741414247726b?http://www.tmsbuyatoyota.com/deeplinks/wwn10/zipcodeentry.aspx?siteid=WWN10_CCAA_SEAT_TUN807300″; var TFSMFlash_SWFCLICKVARIABLE=”?clickTAG=http://ads.nwsource.com/RealMedia/ads/click_lx.ads/www.seattletimes.com/local/L20/2084403072/Middle3/Seattle/WWTD-PI-300-default/wwtd_tunda0807mr_1a2.html/52696e31396b6138317741414247726b?http://www.tmsbuyatoyota.com/deeplinks/wwn10/zipcodeentry.aspx?siteid=WWN10_CCAA_SEAT_TUN807300″; var TFSMFlash_SWFFILE=”http://c6.edgesuite.net/RealMedia/ads/Creatives/Seattle/WWTD-PI-300-default/wwtd_tunda0807mr_1a.swf/1200397263″+TFSMFlash_SWFCLICKVARIABLE; var TFSMFlash_IMAGEALTERNATE=”http://c6.edgesuite.net/RealMedia/ads/Creatives/Seattle/WWTD-PI-300-default/wwtd_tunda0807mr_1a.jpg/1200397263″; var TFSMFlash_OASALTTEXT=”Click Here”; var TFSMFlash_OASTARGET=”_blank”; var TFSMFlash_OASPROTOCOL=”http://”; var TFSMFlash_OASDIM=”WIDTH=’300′ HEIGHT=’250′”; var TFSMFlash_OASADID=”ad_banner”; document.write(”); –> on error resume next MM_FlashCanPlay = ( IsObject(CreateObject(“ShockwaveFlash.ShockwaveFlash.” & MM_contentVersion)))Ron Paul’s campaign is also not conceding the state.

Maureen Moore, Washington state coordinator for the Ron Paul campaign, said her candidate “did wonderful — a lot more wonderful than what’s being reported.”

On the Democrats’ side, more than 200,000 people — a record number — turned out for the state caucuses, which resulted in Illinois Sen. Barack Obama winning about 68 percent of the delegates, New York Sen. Hillary Clinton winning about 31 percent, and the rest choosing either “uncommitted” or “other.”

Final numbers will be released by 5 p.m. Monday, said Kelly Steele, spokesman for Washington State Democrats.

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2004175292_webhuckabee10.html


Huckabee Speech to CPAC

February 10, 2008

Part 1:

Part 2:

Part 3:

Part 4:


Washington Precint Caucuses on the 9th!

February 8, 2008

 I found this article at WA4Huckabee website, which is linked on our blogroll.   http://washingtonstate4huckabee.blogspot.com/.
Please find out where your Precint is, and go to it and VOTE FOR MIKE HUCKABEE!!  It is very important now that there is a good chance that Huckabee, Romney and McCain will most likely all go to the convention.  There, we have to make sure to elect Delegates that like Huckabee.  Please vote and bring a friend with you!

Participating in Caucuses and Conventions

Getting to Your Republican Precinct Caucus

Caucuses will be held on Saturday, February 9th, 2008, at 1:00 p.m.

What are precincts?

  • Washington is split up into 49 legislative districts and 39 counties.
  • Each legislative district is then broken down further into smaller areas called precincts.
  • Your precinct number may look like this (Example: 02-034) which means you’re in the 2nd district, 34th precinct.


How do I know what precinct I live in?

  • The quickest and easiest way to find out is to check your voter registration card.
  • If you can’t find your registration card, call either your GOP district leader or county party headquarters, and ask which precinct you live in. Attached is a list of phone numbers for each county GOP HQ, and each GOP county chairperson.


How do I find out where the caucuses are meeting?

Close to the caucuses, you should contact your county chairperson and ask where your caucus meeting is going to take place. Usually it will be in a school or some other public building, like a fire station or library, (or even someone’s house) and it will start at 1 p.m., so be about a half hour early so you can get signed in.


What Happens at the Caucus


Where is my precinct?

With more than one precinct in the same building, each table will probably have a piece of paper on it somewhere indicating which precinct is at that table. Just sit down at the table that has your precinct number on it, even if you’re the only one there.


OK, now what?

  • All your time leading up until 2 p.m. will be spent primarily on voting on specific aspects of the party platform. (Party Platform—a statement of where a political party stands on each major issue of the day.)
  • Most likely you’ll simply have papers to fill out with different choices for what you want represented in the party’s platform for each issue. For example, you’ll be able to choose whether the Republican Party will be pro-tax or anti-tax, and things like that.
  • If you’re not sure about what you’re doing, ask your PCO (who will be in charge of things, if he/she is there), or whoever is in charge of your table, or ask the PCO at another table if no one at your table can help you, or you by chance happen to be the only one from your precinct actually present.

What about delegates?

  • From 2 p.m. on, you and the people at your table will elect certain people to go as delegates to the county convention. (Delegates commit to attend the county convention and there nominate local candidates and elect delegates to the state convention) The paperwork provided will inform you as to how many delegates you can elect from your precinct.
  • Any voter from the precinct can be a delegate, whether he/she is actually at the caucus or not.
  • First, delegates will be nominated. You can volunteer to be a delegate, and you will represent the Presidential candidate of your choice (Mike Huckabee).
  • You do not have to say which Presidential candidate you want, but you do want to make sure any delegates you elect are also for your candidate (Mike Huckabee) as well.

What’s so important about the delegates?

  • In short, this is where we can win.
  • As I mentioned earlier, the delegates elected at the caucuses will attend the county convention later in the year, and they will choose delegates to go to the state convention.
  • At the state convention, the delegates all vote on which candidate they want to nominate for President. The candidate who gets the most votes gets all 11 of Washington’s delegates, who will represent him at the Republican National Convention.
  • The Presidential candidate who wins the most delegates will be the official nominee for the Republican Party, and will face off against the Democrat nominee in the general election in November 2008.
  • If you want Mike Huckabee to win, you must make sure you vote for delegates in your precinct who are also for him, so they can represent him at your county convention. Strongly consider becoming a delegate yourself.


Check these websites:

http://www.wsrp.org/default.aspx

http://www.piercegop.org/index.htm

Let’s win this state for Mike Huckabee!!


Caucus in Washington State

January 28, 2008

Republicans in Washington State!  Please find out where your local precinct caucus is being held and vote there.  For more info on the Precint Click Here.

For those of you that live in the Puget Sound up area, there is a Planning Session for the up coming Precint on Camano Island in Island County.  The location is 133 Melissa St, Camano Island.  It will be at 7:00pm.  For more info call 360-387-4567 and ask for Dick. 
If you live in this area or know someone that does, please attend!

To find out more go to http://wsrp.org/About/Default.aspx?SectionID=115

 Thanks!  Go Mike Huckabee!


Leadership

January 26, 2008


What is Huckonomics?

January 26, 2008

The following was written by guest blogger Donovan Quinn of The Huck Report.In order to understand Huckonomics, one must comprehend basic economics.

In a nutshell, the science of economics deals with scarcity. If a person were capable of producing everything that he could ever need or desire without any assistance from anyone else, then he would never buy or sell anything. Instead, he would stay at home and live contented with all of his stuff.

The very fact that marketplaces exist is concrete evidence that no man is an island. I need things from other people just as other people need things from me. The marketplace is merely the place where my surplus time and material is matched with your want or need in a reciprocal transaction. In other words, I will scratch your back if you scratch mine.

Sometimes, though, the marketplace does not always work. I may be a wheat farmer with excess grain while you may be a baker who needs grain. Clearly, I have what you need to make your bread. However, if I do not need your bread, then what can you offer me in exchange for my grain? Absolutely nothing! In a complete vacuum, our bilateral transaction could never happen. Nevertheless, if a third person who wants your bread could also provide me with farm implements, then we could create a multilateral transaction: (1) I will give you my wheat if (2) you give him your bread and if (3) he gives me his surplus farm equipment. Basically, I scratch your back, you scratch his back, and he scratches mine. With just a little bit of collective effort and coordination, we all have our needs met by simply bartering our goods and services to each other.

Read the rest of this entry »


Phone Calls for Mike Huckabee

January 25, 2008

I got this email from the Huckabee Campaign today.

I am in Little Rock going over our campaign plan for Florida while Governor Huckabee prepares for the debate in Florida this evening on MSNBC at 9 PM ET.  Our plan calls for every Huckabee supporter to get involved in helping us identify and turnout Huckabee supporters in Florida and the Super Tuesday states.  Let me explain.

Late yesterday afternoon we launched an online phone bank designed to give campaign supporters, no matter where you live, the ability to help identify Huckabee supporters in Florida and then turn them out to vote.  Our plan is to use this same online phone bank to help us make calls into the Super Tuesday primary states as well.

Prior to votes being cast in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina, hundreds of volunteers made phone calls from our campaign headquarters in each of these states.  These phone calls helped us turn out our supporters and led us to victory in Iowa and a strong second place finish in South Carolina.

We believe that as we head into Florida and the Super Tuesday states, we need to build beyond our volunteer phone bank in Orlando and nationalize our voter outreach efforts.  That’s where you come in… we need your help to make personal appeals to voters in Florida to ask for their support of Governor Huckabee.  The online phone bank is a great, easy to use tool that we created to help us nationalize our effort.  We have identified over 200,000 Florida voters we would like to contact by Sunday at 8pm.

Will you contact 10 voters on Governor Huckabee’s behalf?  25 voters?  50 voters or more?  To get started you must join the Rangers (free!) hereIf you are already a Ranger you can login here.

We have provided short, telemarketing scripts for you to use.  Each call will take no longer than 30 seconds of your time.  By using our online phone bank tool you will be able to access real voter records and mark them in the database as Huckabee supporters after you contact them.  These identified voters can then be easily pulled together and called again prior to the January 29 Florida primary vote, encouraging them to turn out and vote.  Nationalizing this effort will give us the ability to contact more potential Huckabee voters than our Orlando phone bank is able to do.

Will you help us make calls before Sunday at 8pm?  We are counting on your support.

All hands on deck.  Please make at least one call today for our team.  To get started you must join the Rangers (free!) hereIf you are already a Ranger you can login here.

Thank you in advance for your support.

 Chip Saltsman