While Hillary Clinton had her hands full Thursday with 11 hours of questioning before the House Select Committee on Benghazi, another presidential candidate, Mike Huckabee, was having quite the busy day himself:
Chris Stevens died, Hillary Clinton lied, and the Obama administration tried to cover it up. Time to tell the truth! #Benghazi
— Gov. Mike Huckabee (@GovMikeHuckabee) October 22, 2015
Better odds: @HillaryClinton telling the truth in her #BenghaziCommittee testimony or that Nigerian prince wiring me money? #Benghazi
— Gov. Mike Huckabee (@GovMikeHuckabee) October 22, 2015
.@HillaryClinton giving candid assessment on #Benghazi as likely as @RealDonaldTrump & Rosie O'Donnell paddle-boating the Potomac together
— Gov. Mike Huckabee (@GovMikeHuckabee) October 22, 2015
And for the pièce de résistance:
.@HillaryClinton coming clean to #BenghaziCommittee seeming abt as likely as me getting a Che Guevara tattoo on small of my back! #Benghazi
— Gov. Mike Huckabee (@GovMikeHuckabee) October 22, 2015
Unsurprisingly, that last one inspired quite a few Twitter users to offer up their own interpretations of what the former Arkansas governor and Republican presidential hopeful might look like with some ink. But a mock Photoshop contest was probably not what Huckabee had in mind when he fired off no fewer than nine colorful tweets about the Benghazi hearing Thursday, and another one for good measure Friday morning. He also gave an exclusive interview to Breitbart News, suggesting that had Clinton communicated with slain Ambassador Chris Stevens as much as she did with friend and former aide Sidney Blumenthal, “then those four Americans might not be dead today.”
With the Iowa caucuses a little over three months away, Huckabee has yet to have his moment. His poll numbers are bad (though not bad enough to bump him from the mainstage at next week’s CNBC debate.) And he’s way behind in the GOP money race, having raised just $1.24 million — the lowest out of all the 10 candidates who’ve made a top-tier debate this year.
RELATED: GOP candidates ding Hillary Clinton during Benghazi hearing
Given those challenges, it’s understandable then to see Huckabee now dabbling with a bit of political theater, to say the least. A former Baptist pastor, Fox News pundit, and author of several books, Huckabee knows how to speak in soundbites to get a good headline — particularly when it comes to social issues. Most recently, he’s picked a fight with Rainbow Doritos, criticized President Obama’s treatment of the pope as “classless,” and staged a highly dramatic scene outside a Kentucky jail for the release of anti-gay marriage Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis. Like Donald Trump, Huckabee has also been a consistent source of entertainment on Twitter, although he hasn’t proven to be quite as politically adept at it as the real estate mogul.
Yet with the summer “silly season” long gone and the presidential field beginning to winnow, this latest Benghazi rant begs a serious question: Is Mike Huckabee still making a genuine play for the White House, or just trolling the candidates who are?
The Huckabee camp, for its part, insists it’s the former.
“Everything’s going just how we figured it would go,” J. Hogan Gidley, Huckabee’s senior communications advisor, told MSNBC.
“Our team is savvy enough and experienced enough to be able to shift strategy if we need to. But right now, we’re doing the right things,” he added.
That strategy, said Gidley, is centered around building a robust ground organization in Iowa and South Carolina — two early primary states where Huckabee hopes to shine. In 2008, Huckabee won the Iowa caucuses by a wide margin, thanks in large part to broad support among evangelicals. At this point eight years ago, notes Gidley, Huckabee was similarly behind in polling and fundraising numbers. And while he only pulled in 3% support among likely GOP caucus-goers in a new Des Moines Register/Bloomberg Politics poll out this week, Huckabee also scored a key endorsement from a prominent grassroots conservative activist in the Hawkeye State, Pastor Terry Amann, his second in the last two months.









