A couple of points concerning Cockburn:
His piece on Huckabee is consistent with his long standing tendency to fawn over figures on the far right. Remember when he was fawning over leaders of the militias back in the 1990s? And in the same article he manages to fawn over Ron Paul as well, so this article was a two-for. And Cockburn despite his own history as a progressive journalist, is quite capable of writing or talking in such a manner as to remind us (as if we didn't already know) that Evelyn and Aubrey Waugh were cousins of his.
Nevertheless, Cockburn is correct concerning Huckabee's record as governor, that Huckabee often took relatively progressive stances on certain economic issues and sometimes on criminal justice issues too. However, as a presidential candidate he is running as the candidate for the far right, not as a progressive. However, I suspect that Cockburn does not really care, since in his view (which he has stated on more than one occasion), whatever stirs the pot will inevitably do some good, even if it is someone from the far right who is doing the stirring.
Jim F. -- Doug Henwood <dhenwood at panix.com> wrote: <http://www.counterpunch.com/cockburn12222007.html>
December 22 / 23, 2007
Libs Fume Over Taco Bell and Target Vouchers Mike Huckabee's Ascending Chariot
By ALEXANDER COCKBURN
[...]
But Huckabee should not be dismissed as simply the creature of the Christian fundamentalists who play a very significant role in the Republican primaries and who are currently hoisting him in the polls. Of course they like Huckabee for all the obvious reasons, and because the alternatives are the Mormon Romney or Giuliani, who's hopped from wife to wife, shared an apartment with a male gay couple and favors abortion.
But on many substantive matters, demonstrated during his ten years as the governor of Arkansas, Huckabee was often a progressive, with enlightened views and a record of substantive executive action on immigration, public health, education of poor kids and the possibility of redemption for convicted criminals. In his ten years as governor, Huckabee commuted the sentences of, or outright pardoned, over 1,200 felons including a dozen murderers. This was a courageous and unparalleled display of enlightenment in a country whose interest in rehabilitation is near zero. As Huckabee said in answer to Mitt "throw away the key" Romney, should a woman convicted of check-kiting when she was 17, have this criminal offense prevent her from getting a job thirty years later?
[...]
From reading the furious brayings of Matt Taibbi in Rolling Stone, you'd think Huckabee was the Emperor Bokassa, of the Central African Republic, crowned on a golden throne, wearing a Roman toga embroidered with a hundred thousand pearls, then driving off in a coach pulled by six white horses flown from Paris.
Try as they may, dustrakers like Taibbi have a hard time showing Huckabee was anything more than a piker in the perks department.
[...]
Huckabee's single rival as a genuinely interesting candidate is another Republican, Ron Paul.... ___________________________________ http://mailman.lbo-talk.org/mailman/listinfo/lbo-talk
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