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God's Politics

Huckabee Got it Right

by Alan Bean 12-09-2009

Mike Huckabee is done as a presidential contender.  That’s the word on the street.  When you commute a burglary sentence in 2000 and the guy shoots four police officers to death nine years later, you’re political toast.

But ex-Governor Huckabee refuses to back down.  Fact is, he says, Maurice Clemmons didn’t go to prison for rape and murder back in 1989; he was in for burglary.  For that he was given a virtual life sentence.   That didn’t make a lot of sense to the Huckabee.  Would a stupid white kid from a good family get a sentence like that for a crime like that?

So the governor commuted the sentence.  This gave Clemmons an opportunity to make his case to the Arkansas parole board.  The board looked at Huckabee’s reasoning and thought it made a lot of sense.

Objectively, it was the wrong decision.  Maurice Clemmons turned out to be a heartless psychopath — the kind of guy that guns down police officers for sport.

Did Mike Huckabee know that back in 2000?  Was there any way of knowing?

Here’s how the presidential hopeful put the case when he appeared on The View:

The easy thing to do, and frankly the politically expedient thing to do, is to say no to every last one of them. That’s the easy thing. And you’ll always cover your rear end if you do that. Because nobody will ever say, ‘Oh you should have let these people out.’

But the reason we have executive clemency in our system of justice is because there are sentences that are disproportionate, there are times when the justice system failed. And our Founding Fathers were smart enough to create checks and balances, so that no one branch of government was able to act independently of the other two.

Conservative pundits and politicians aren’t buying this argument.  Americans, the reasoning goes, feel comfortable with politicians who never pardon anyone or commute any sentence for any reason.

The sad case of Michael Dukakis keeps coming up.  Dukakis granted a furlough to Willie Horton and the man found a strange way to show his appreciation.  But the knockout punch came during the 1988 presidential debates when the Massachusetts governor was asked what he would do if his wife was raped and murdered.  Dukakis said he was opposed to the death penalty under any circumstances.  That answer, viewed in the context of the Horton furlough, killed the Dukakis candidacy.

At least that’s the prevailing wisdom.  But what if political ineptitude cost Dukakis the 1988 election?

For instance, what if the governor had prefaced his answer with this: “If my wife was raped and murdered, I would want to tear the killer’s heart out with my bare hands.  That’s the natural human response and I suspect you would feel the same way.  But our system of justice wouldn’t allow me to decide the fate of the man who killed my wife.  Our legal system is driven by justice, not personal vengeance.”

Vengeance can be good politics, no doubt about that.  But so can justice.  Mike Huckabee thought a life sentence for a single burglary was a vengeful sentence and thus inconsistent with the foundational principles of American judicial system.  Eleven years of prison time for a single criminal act in which no one was injured was a just and sensible sentence.

Those calling for Huckabee’s head on a platter argue that no sentence should ever be commuted because every prisoner might turn out to be a bloodthirsty psychopath.  Follow that logic to its natural conclusion and every sentence would be a life sentence.  Suppose you get pulled over by a traffic cop when you’ve had one too many.  How do we know you won’t drive drunk again?  And next time you might take an innocent life.  So, just to be on the safe side, you spend the rest of your natural life in prison.

That would be a safe penalty, but it would turn America into a bizarre police state where half of us are locked up and the other half are in the corrections field.

Liberals don’t like Huckabee because he is a person of faith who would erase the line between church and state; conservatives think the ex-governor takes the Jesus-thing a bit too far.  Me, I like the Baptist preacher from Arkansas because he’s a Christian disciple and tries to live accordingly.

That isn’t a political endorsement; I disagree with the Huckster on a myriad of issues.  But he did the right thing back in 2000.   When the folks in Washington state put Maurice Clemmons back on the street the man had already revealed his violent nature.  That’s what you call a bad decision.

It will be interesting to see how the Clemmons affair impacts the nation’s political future.  But I doubt the people grieving the senseless deaths of four good officers in Tacoma, Washington are giving the matter a lot of thought.

Alan Bean is the executive director of Friends of Justice. Click here to read his blog.

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  • Of course, being thrown in prison for life for having one too many on the road would have meant that George II would never have been able to be President...

    More seriously, definitely not life imprisonment, but a much stricter policy on drunk driving is needed, and George II demonstrates how the world can change when we don't apply justice to egregious offenses like his.
  • ElrondPA
    Maybe Huckabee should have lobbied for a lesser sentence than life, instead of letting him out.

    Actually, that's what he did. He commuted Clemmons' 108-year sentence for crimes committed as a 16-year-old to 47 years. That made him eligible for parole, which he received, but parole was a separate step from the commutation.
  • godsgal
    Every time I hear Huckabee talking without needlessly attacking Democrats, I like him and think he would not be bad if he was the next Republican president in 2016. Then he gets on the road to please tea partiers and the fringe right and says the most ridiculous things ever and I lose hope all over again.

    He needs to make up his mind, I believe he is the only sane Republican candidate, I would support. He genuinely cares about minority issues and I'm one. Genuinely converses with the likes of Sharpton and Jon Stewart on abortion and made him admit he's in the middle.
  • ourfoundingtruth
    You mean like Founding Father John Witherspoon; an ordained preacher?

    Maybe Huckabee should have lobbied for a lesser sentence than life, instead of letting him out.
  • Joe_Allen_Doty
    Mike Huckabee is done as an ordained Southern Baptist Church minister, too.

    I don't trust those who were involved in professional ministry for the LORD and they leave that to go into politics.
  • NC77
    I heard him explain it on another news venue. He believed he was acting within the guidelines of the law at the time. He feels genuine remorse and has regret for the decision (in my opinion) and doesn't try to dimiss the fact he made a mistake. Nevertheless, it will be used against him if he runs for President, whether it is viewed as the right or the wrong decision.
  • dlowen
    I believe there are a number of factors that should disqualify Governor Huckabee as President of the United States, primarily his belief that the US Constitution should be changed to literally mirror the Bible. However, I agree that pardoning Clemmons was the correct decision, and that there was no way that he or anyone else could have known that Clemmons would some years later become unhinged and commit mass murder.

    It seems to be a case of the party who lives by the sword, dying by the sword. Willie Horton was just one brick in the wall of what was termed by objective observers as the dirtiest campaign ever run. RNC Chairman and GHW Bush campaign coordinator, Lee Atwater, later apologized to Governor Dukakis saying, "fighting Dukakis, I said that I 'would strip the bark off the little b*****d' and 'make Willie Horton his running mate.'" and "In part because of our successful manipulation of his campaign themes, George Bush won handily."
  • Ngchen
    In terms of letting people out of prison, well yes the safe thing to do would be to never do it; however practicalities such as cost do impose a check on how far such a tactic can be carried. And yes, it takes courage to do something which can end up being unpopular. My fondest recent example: Conservative Republican John Duncan (TN-2) voted against the Iraq War, and was against the surge as well based on his opposition to unnecessary foreign involvement. He pointed out such are actually conservative virtues. Of course we can imagine how the hawks treated him then, especially when being a hawk was popular. Leadership at times is pushing and voting for what one believes is right, in spite of unpopularity. We don't govern by referenda for this precise reason.
  • Ngchen
    I remember reading at electoral-vote.com (a site that tracks US National elections set up by an ex-pat professor in Europe) how Huckabee lost because ultimately, the real king-makers of the Republican party would never tolerate someone who's not sufficiently pro-business. Huckabee's record in Arkansas of raising taxes to improve education was considered anathema to the business wing; hence they sunk him.
  • I almost never see any discussion of how political parties can engage in public issues beyond what government does.

    That's because their job is winning elections.

    Why, for instance, cannot a united effort to reduce abortions come out of a unity of pro-life persons in the two parties that set the table for leaders from varied sectors to create a comprehensive reduction strategy??

    For two reasons.

    1) It takes a lot of effort and nuance to reach across the aisle and do something constructive. By contrast, it's a lot easier, especially for fund-raising purposes, to "go negative" against the other guy.

    2) If the abortion issue were really solved right now the conservative movement would, frankly, be put out of business. It counts on abortion remaining legal to rally people to its side and then feeds them their doctrine; consequently, truly dealing with abortion from that perspective is counterproductive.
  • letjusticerolldown
    I too liked Huckabee. I wish he would get out of the Fox world--unless he is willing to demonstrate a willingness to take on some of the ridiculous behavior on the network. His taking the heat and making the case on this issue is at least a glimmer of light.

    I wish there a leader on both sides that would join in something like the Sojo Justice Revivals--and really seek a mobilization of Christians to public engagement--who could really affirm the need for engagement in both parties--for a Christian liberalism and conservatism.

    In all the conversation about religion and government--I don't know if I have ever seen a discussion about how we bring our faith into the political parties versus how we bring it into government. Further, I almost never see any discussion of how political parties can engage in public issues beyond what government does.

    Why, for instance, cannot a united effort to reduce abortions come out of a unity of pro-life persons in the two parties that set the table for leaders from varied sectors to create a comprehensive reduction strategy?? Is it possible that we end up with such a divided and paralyzed government because at the political base we are not walking issues out in unity on the ground. At best we say, "Well, we'll all try to advance a pro-life political platform in our party."
  • Huckabee actually appeared last month at one of the independent mega-churches in my area, which is quite conservative -- I think he may have even preached -- and the place was packed. (Of course, Oliver North appeared there earlier this year.)
  • kansasmennonite
    I ws for Huckabee too until at the national convention he said the same ol rhetoric against the democrats. Really turned me off.

    If you want to see a society who incarcerates people who might commit a crime check out the video Minority Report starring Tom Cruise. Interesting movie.
  • Nathan Bedford
    Sometimes, the principles that we apply to evaluate candidates are sacrificed on the altar of expediency. During the 2008 Republican Primaries, Huckabee should have been the "natural choice" for the Republicans. He's a Baptist preacher and none of the details about this pardon were part of the equation. So what happened? Reverend Robertson, who is a strong advocate of being the husband of one wife rallied his troops around the thrice-divorced ex-mayor, Guliani. The famous radio talk-show host who seems to have trouble keeping a wife begins lobbying for the one guy running who really lives out his principles. With the votes split between his potential rivals, McCain sneaks is with the (unlikely) win.

    So how will these latest revelations influence the race in 2012? I think that Huckabee is still a viable candidate for two reasons:
    (1) This issue got aired early - by 2012, it'll be an old story.
    (2) Conservative Christians are very forgiving when it comes to one of their own. Brother Swaggart is still preaching on TV, ORU survives the scandal at the top, and the folks out west are still financing the plastic surgeries for their idols.
  • Lord_Voldemort
    comment withdrawn -- may repost later.
  • Huckabee lost to McCain in large part because there was no "true" conservative candidate to rally around (McCain certainly wasn't) and that vote was split; however, any Republican would have gotten skunked in the general election anyway.
  • Me, I like the Baptist preacher from Arkansas because he’s a Christian disciple and tries to live accordingly.

    Amen.

    This is one reason Huckabee would have been one of the few conservative Republicans I would ever have considered voting for. I get the impression that he's not so infected by right-wing dogma that he won't consider cases on the merits -- he was even sympathetic to Jeremiah Wright.
  • nuclearferret
    Gov. Dukakis was an abysmal candidate for many reasons; Willie Horton, despite the breathlessness of those who hate Republicans, was irrelevant to the final outcome.

    Gov. Huckabee falls into the same category. As much as some might like to think his decision will end his presidential future, keep in mind this guy lost to JOHN McCAIN, for goodness' sake!
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