“Slow and steady” quickly becomes a losing campaign strategy when potential donors and voters are forced to wait for a candidate’s website to load. That may have been the case for former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, whose campaign website mikehuckabee.com crashed multiple times in the hours surrounding the official announcement of his presidential bid on Tuesday — a stumble that likely cost the Republican both visitors and support, and set a new low bar for 2016 election tech.
Earlier on Tuesday, the Huckabee website was functioning and running a countdown clock set to the former governor’s announcement speech. At the time of the scheduled event, the website’s first major glitch appeared as a 503 service error. Huckabee’s official Twitter account pinned a tweet at the top with a link and a call to action letting people know where to watch the event live. But the tweet remained pinned long after the announcement ended, suggesting that no one was updating the site in real time.
With his candidacy less than 30 minutes old, Huckabee had forced some digital natives off the Internet and in search of a TV screen.
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