WINTERSET, Iowa — When Mike Huckabee gave a rousing “good morning” to about two-dozen potential caucus-goers at Northside Café in Winterset last week, the response from the crowd was so peppy it seemed to even surprise the candidate.
“It’s like you’ve been to church before,” laughed Huckabee, who received just two percent support from GOP caucus-goers in Sunday’s NBC/WSJ/Marist poll of Iowa Republicans.
With the likes of Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and even Donald Trump swooping into Iowa and largely garnering the backing of evangelicals, the coalition that fueled Huckabee’s unlikely 2008 caucus win isn’t reuniting to boost the former Arkansas governor’s reprise campaign.
Yet Huckabee’s RV continues to motor across the Hawkeye State.
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Huckabee is in the midst of a month-long trek through the state, where he intends to hold 150 campaign events before the caucus on Feb. 1.
But unlike the surging Cruz, who wrapped up a six-day Iowa swing this weekend trailed by a bus of reporters and 20 caravanning staffers (including Huckabee’s recently-departed communications director, Alice Stewart), Huckabee is plucking away — town to town — with a humble team of four, and a noticeable limp from his knee surgery in November.
“I’m taking enormous amounts of Vitamin C and Vitamin D,” Huckabee told the group inside the café last weekend, losing his voice and picking up a glass of water. “–B, E, F and G. And it doesn’t seem to work a whole lot.”
After months of diligent campaigning, Huckabee has yet to see the bump in the polls with just three weeks left to gain viability.
“I wouldn’t be out here busting it if I didn’t think there was some real pathway to make this work,” Huckabee insisted to NBC News aboard his RV, holding onto hope that his commitment to retail politicking through Iowa will pay dividends, venting that “last time I checked, nobody’s voted yet.”
“If this state can be won without retail politics, in the next four-year cycle it won’t be a retail politics state anymore,” Huckabee said.
A report last month suggested Huckabee’s candidacy had taken on a new agenda – to siphon off Cruz voters to aid Rubio’s bid.
Huckabee emphatically rejected that notion.
“Why would I do that? I mean, that makes no sense at all,” Huckabee said. “And I just think that people – even with single digit IQs, slightly above vegetation of broccoli – will know that that story is utter nonsense with no basis of even remote reality much less common sense.”
Huckabee took his rejection of the theory a step further, airing his grievances with the race and candidacies of both Cruz and Rubio.
“They’ve never been in the position where they had to make the decision that a chief executive of a government had to make,” Huckabee said, adding: “If the presidency is an entry level job for which there is no particular prerequisite of experience, and you can pretty much pick a name out of a phone book as long as someone can make a pretty good speech and could study and learn a few issues, then, yeah, anybody can do it.”
Asked by NBC News if one of the governors running is more qualified to be the party’s nominee, Huckabee said “absolutely.”
“If knowing what the job is matters, then absolutely I would say that,” Huckabee said.
“My point, ‘Guys, these guys have been in Washington. If you want to hold someone accountable or responsible, they have a lot more of their fingerprints on Washington than me,’” he added.
Huckabee wasn’t reminiscing about his 2008 Iowa victory during his latest campaign swing.








