Thursday, February 07, 2008

Exposing the Huckabee/McCain/Paul Scandal

Mike Huckabee won the West Virginia GOP primary fair-and-square. At least, that's what he'd like you to believe. While his tactics Tuesday may have been legal, they certainly were not ethical. Isn't he supposed to be the candidate of morals?

Here's how it went down:

To win the West Virginia caucus, a candidate had to have at least 50% of the vote. After the first vote, the numbers looked like this:

375 - Huckabee
176 - McCain
118 - Paul
464 - Romney

Mitt had 47% of the vote. Clearly the winner, yet not enough to take the victory. So what did Huckabee do? He hired Ron Paul supporters to come to his camp so he could beat Romney. In exchange, Huck promised to give Paul a cut of his delegates--three to be exact.

As for Mr. McCain, his campaign simply told his supporters to not vote for him and instead vote for Huck. Here we see a picture of an embarrassed McCainer showing her true colors.

So in a nutshell, Huckabee cut a back-room deal with Paul, while McCain played the dirty game of politics shamelessly.

The second vote looked like this:

524 - Huckabee
479 - Romney
11 - McCain

So basically, it took all three candidates to beat Romney.

When asked about his scandal, Huck said:

“I have not talked to Senator McCain or people on his staff about West Virginia. You know, every time we win something, somebody tries to figure out a way to explain it away. Truth is people voted for me. They had a chance to vote for somebody else. And when they didn’t vote – when their candidate -- either John McCain or Ron Paul didn’t get the votes on the first ballot and they had to pick somebody else, they picked me. It’s as simple as that. I think it shows that when this party wants to come together, it looks to somebody they know can carry the message. People in WV believed I can do it. Yesterday, Mitt Romney was saying don’t be a whiner. Yesterday, he was against whining. Today, he’s for whining. So I think we just need to say we won WV and he’ll just have to deal with it.”

Notice how he doesn't mention Ron Paul. While it's possible that McCain instigated his own role in the scandal, Huckabee definitely approached Paul with the deal. Paul's campaign spokesperson said this:

"We struck a deal with the Huckabee people. They came to us and dealt with us honorably and with respect. And so we told them that if Dr. Paul didn't make it through the first round, that we would go for their man. They pledged us three delegates to the republican national convention."

So Huckabee may not have "talked to Senator McCain or people on his staff," but he certainly did conspire with Paul. On top of that, he was able to avoid lying about it while still not acknowledging his shady trick.

Mr. Huckabee, you may have won the West Virginia nomination, but we'll always know who the real winner was.

(To watch a newscast on the event, click here. Select the 6pm coverage.)

2 comments:

Nate said...

Very interesting... I never heard about the paul conspiracy. I thought that because he came in fourth that by convention rules he was excluded from the vote. Is that not the case?

I would love a source for the quote you got.

Thanks for your support and insights.

Seth Hill said...

Yes, Paul was excluded from the second round, but the people who voted for him in the first round had to choose a new candidate for the second. So Huckabee promised them 3 delegates if they would all vote for him. Paul's campaign likes collecting small amounts of delegates where they can.

Click the link at the bottom of the post. It will take you to the story straight from the local West Virginia news network.